US Open final round live: Australia's Adam Scott chasing golf history
Australia's Adam Scott will make golf history if he secures a second major victory at the US Open on Monday morning (AEST).
The 44-year-old Aussie started the final round one shot off the lead after shooting three-under 67 in the third round — he was only golfer not to be over par in any of the first three rounds.
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Scott has been remarkably consistent across a stellar pro career — the US Open is his 96th consecutive major — but the Aussie would desperately love a second major win to bookend his career.
Scott famously became the first and only Aussie to win the Masters in 2013 after he let a four-hole lead slip at the 2012 Open Championship.
If he wins the US Open at Oakmont, Scott will break the record for the longest ever gap between golf major wins (4,445 days), which currently stands at 11 years (4,026 days).
Adam Scott is chasing an incredible second major./AFP.
Scott's shaky start to final around
Adam Scott has teed off and has had a mixed start to his final round with two bogeys and a birdie.
He bogeyed the first and third holes, with his approach chip shot on the third leaving him a long way from the hole.
But Scott recovered on the par-5 fourth, nailing a massive putt from the edge of the green that nearly went in for eagle.
Scott moved to -2 and into a share of the lead after American Sam Burns bogeyed the fifth hole.
But Scott three-putted on the sixth hole to slip one shot back to -1.
Golf world cheering for Aussie
Golf fans around the world are hoping Adam Scott can somehow claim a victory that would cap off a superb career.
Golfer Cameron Percy wrote on X: 'If you're not cheering for Adam Scott tomorrow you're a bum…..there isn't a better human.'
Journalist Dan Rapaport said: 'Everyone on Tour is astounded that Adam Scott seems to gain 1-2 mph of ball speed every year as he moves deep into his 40s. A legendary figure in our sport who deserves a second major championship. What a massive day.'
Masters champion Trevor Immelman said: 'I'm pulling for Adam Scott this weekend.'
Scott said this weekend: 'Another major more would really go a long way in fulfilling my own self, when it's all said and done.'
US Open leaderboard
Sam Burns: 2-under
Adam Scott: 1-under
Viktor Hovland: Even par
J.J. Spain, Tyrell Hatton: 1-over

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She will play Rebecca Sramkova in the semi-finals. Dayana Yastremska will play Magda Linette in the other semi-final. Ukrainian Yastremska beat former US Open finalist Leylah Fernandez 6-3 7-6 (8-6) in the quarter-final. Linette downed top seed Clara Tauson 6-2 7-5 to book her spot in the last four. Katie Boulter's reign as the queen of Nottingham is over after she lost in the quarter-finals to McCartney Kessler. Boulter, fiancee of Australia's top-ranked men's tennis player Alex de Minaur, was gunning for a third successive Nottingham Open crown, having won in 2023 and 2024, but came unstuck against the world No.42 with victory in sight. The British No.2 was leading 4-3 with a break of serve in the final set, but lost the last three games to her American opponent, including her serve twice, to go down 6-3 3-6 6-4. That saw her 12-match winning run on her home court come to an end. "It was a really tight match, it was close,'' Kessler said. 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The British No.2 was leading 4-3 with a break of serve in the final set, but lost the last three games to her American opponent, including her serve twice, to go down 6-3 3-6 6-4. That saw her 12-match winning run on her home court come to an end. "It was a really tight match, it was close,'' Kessler said. "I wanted to stay within myself and keep playing my game, and luckily I came out on top. "We are both aggressive players, so there was a lot of shot-making. "I am trying to get as many titles as I can and put myself in the position to win titles. I am looking forward to the rest of the weekend." She will play Rebecca Sramkova in the semi-finals. Dayana Yastremska will play Magda Linette in the other semi-final. Ukrainian Yastremska beat former US Open finalist Leylah Fernandez 6-3 7-6 (8-6) in the quarter-final. Linette downed top seed Clara Tauson 6-2 7-5 to book her spot in the last four. 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The Advertiser
3 hours ago
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Faz gives it to us straight, there's no mucking around or no hiding here, he just tells you how it is. "There's no point in trying to sulk about it. If we bounce back quickly and try to get better every single day, this will only make us stronger and tighter." Aki's heavyweight centre partnership with Scotland's Australia-born Sione Tuipulotu generated the most excitement in selection ahead of the sold-out clash at Dublin's Aviva Stadium, but the combination failed to add up to the sum of its parts. While the Ireland powerhouse showed his strength as a carrier to surge over in the first half and Melburnian Tuipulotu had his moments with the ball in hand, together they were unable to link in the way the Lions were seeking and are unlikely to be used in tandem in the Test series. "We all know how Sione is as a player, he's class. The frustrating thing for me was I wasn't able to connect well with him," Aki said. "He's an unbelievable player and there's no excuses, we've got to get better as a partnership going forward. "Sione has been my roomy lately. He snores a fair bit at the moment, so he keeps me up at night! But he's a great man. "He speaks out loud, which is good because we need him to be himself. I just feed off him and he feeds off me. So it's brilliant, but we've just got to be better and keep learning together." Boss Farrell is demanding an improvement from his squad when they start preparing for their opening match against Western Force next Saturday at Perth's Optus Stadium. "We won't sugar-coat this. We need to be honest because if we're not honest, how do we gain trust with each other?" Farrell said. "Losing hurts, especially in this jersey. We need to find the solutions pretty quickly and be honest with ourselves because some good has to come from this." Ireland centre Bundee Aki insists the British and Irish Lions must recover rapidly after seeing their goal of completing an unbeaten tour of Australia thwarted even before arriving Down Under. The Lions slipped to a 28-24 defeat against Argentina in Dublin on Friday as they lost their tour opener for the first time since 1971, albeit against dangerous opponents whose surgical finishing demonstrated why they are ranked fifth in the world. Andy Farrell's men flew off to Perth on Saturday and have four weeks to find the improvements needed to turn their ambitious but error-strewn performance into a formula capable of toppling the Wallabies. "Faz set out the aim for us to win every single game. To not be able to come out with the result that we wanted in the first has got to be one of those things that we learn from quickly," Auckland-born Aki said. "We're adults, we're old enough to be able to take it on the chin and move on quickly. Faz gives it to us straight, there's no mucking around or no hiding here, he just tells you how it is. "There's no point in trying to sulk about it. If we bounce back quickly and try to get better every single day, this will only make us stronger and tighter." Aki's heavyweight centre partnership with Scotland's Australia-born Sione Tuipulotu generated the most excitement in selection ahead of the sold-out clash at Dublin's Aviva Stadium, but the combination failed to add up to the sum of its parts. While the Ireland powerhouse showed his strength as a carrier to surge over in the first half and Melburnian Tuipulotu had his moments with the ball in hand, together they were unable to link in the way the Lions were seeking and are unlikely to be used in tandem in the Test series. "We all know how Sione is as a player, he's class. The frustrating thing for me was I wasn't able to connect well with him," Aki said. "He's an unbelievable player and there's no excuses, we've got to get better as a partnership going forward. "Sione has been my roomy lately. He snores a fair bit at the moment, so he keeps me up at night! But he's a great man. "He speaks out loud, which is good because we need him to be himself. I just feed off him and he feeds off me. So it's brilliant, but we've just got to be better and keep learning together." Boss Farrell is demanding an improvement from his squad when they start preparing for their opening match against Western Force next Saturday at Perth's Optus Stadium. "We won't sugar-coat this. We need to be honest because if we're not honest, how do we gain trust with each other?" Farrell said. "Losing hurts, especially in this jersey. We need to find the solutions pretty quickly and be honest with ourselves because some good has to come from this."


Perth Now
4 hours ago
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Aki keen for Lions to learn lessons for Australia tour
Ireland centre Bundee Aki insists the British and Irish Lions must recover rapidly after seeing their goal of completing an unbeaten tour of Australia thwarted even before arriving Down Under. The Lions slipped to a 28-24 defeat against Argentina in Dublin on Friday as they lost their tour opener for the first time since 1971, albeit against dangerous opponents whose surgical finishing demonstrated why they are ranked fifth in the world. Andy Farrell's men flew off to Perth on Saturday and have four weeks to find the improvements needed to turn their ambitious but error-strewn performance into a formula capable of toppling the Wallabies. "Faz set out the aim for us to win every single game. To not be able to come out with the result that we wanted in the first has got to be one of those things that we learn from quickly," Auckland-born Aki said. "We're adults, we're old enough to be able to take it on the chin and move on quickly. Faz gives it to us straight, there's no mucking around or no hiding here, he just tells you how it is. "There's no point in trying to sulk about it. If we bounce back quickly and try to get better every single day, this will only make us stronger and tighter." Aki's heavyweight centre partnership with Scotland's Australia-born Sione Tuipulotu generated the most excitement in selection ahead of the sold-out clash at Dublin's Aviva Stadium, but the combination failed to add up to the sum of its parts. While the Ireland powerhouse showed his strength as a carrier to surge over in the first half and Melburnian Tuipulotu had his moments with the ball in hand, together they were unable to link in the way the Lions were seeking and are unlikely to be used in tandem in the Test series. "We all know how Sione is as a player, he's class. The frustrating thing for me was I wasn't able to connect well with him," Aki said. "He's an unbelievable player and there's no excuses, we've got to get better as a partnership going forward. "Sione has been my roomy lately. He snores a fair bit at the moment, so he keeps me up at night! But he's a great man. "He speaks out loud, which is good because we need him to be himself. I just feed off him and he feeds off me. So it's brilliant, but we've just got to be better and keep learning together." Boss Farrell is demanding an improvement from his squad when they start preparing for their opening match against Western Force next Saturday at Perth's Optus Stadium. "We won't sugar-coat this. We need to be honest because if we're not honest, how do we gain trust with each other?" Farrell said. "Losing hurts, especially in this jersey. We need to find the solutions pretty quickly and be honest with ourselves because some good has to come from this."