Expect The Best Golfers to Once Again Be Identified At Oakmont

Scottie Scheffler hits his tee shot on the ninth hole during the third round of the Tour Championship golf tournament, Saturday, Aug. 31, 2024, in Atlanta.
(AP Photo/Jason Allen)

OAKMONT, Pa. โ€“ Just over a half-century ago, in the midst of a U.S. Open which would later be dubbed, โ€œThe Massacre at Winged Foot,โ€ USGA championship chairman Sandy Tatum offered what has become the most definitive description of this tournament. โ€œOur objective is not to humiliate the best players in the world,โ€ he said. โ€œItโ€™s to identify them.โ€

That line has developed into a mantra of sorts for those who currently preside over the U.S. Open and this weekโ€™s 125th edition of the tournament at Oakmont Country Club will undoubtedly identify the best players once again, but itโ€™s hardly alone in promoting that delineation these days.

If thereโ€™s a recent trend in major championship golf, itโ€™s that the bygone era of surprise winners โ€” from Rich Beem to Shaun Micheel, Ben Curtis to Y.E. Yang โ€” has given way to a world where the only surprise is which superstar will be identified as the champion.

The last six majors have been captured by Scottie Scheffler (twice), Xander Schauffele (twice), Bryson DeChambeau and Rory McIlroy, four of the gameโ€™s most elite players, if not the absolute best. Their pre-tournament odds have ranged from 4/1 to 20/1, with the average hovering right around 10/1.

Most notably, there isnโ€™t a longshot outlier in the bunch.

Not that weโ€™re too far removed from a couple of โ€˜em. Wyndham Clark and Brian Harman both won from triple-digit prices two years ago, though at 32nd and 26th on the Official World Golf Ranking, respectively, they were hardly surprises like those listed above.

In fact, if we consider that Jimmy Walker and Danny Willett were in their primes back in 2016, there hasnโ€™t been an off-the-radar major champion in the past decade, unless we count Phil Mickelson, whose age and massive odds were offset by the fact that heโ€™d won five major titles already.

Thatโ€™s a stark contrast from the previous generation. We can make the case that during the first 10 years of this century, there were at least a half-dozen such players who โ€œshocked the worldโ€ โ€“ and that was during the Prime Tiger Woods era.

All of which should cultivate some weighty questions.

Check Your Promos

U.S. Open Odds Boost

You could earn a bigger potential payout when betting on U.S. Open odds this week!

Check your account today for a Token.

Is there such significant separation between the uppermost echelon and everyone else right now?

What is it about these setups which has allowed the cream to rise to the top?

Can a journeyman still win a major championship?

And most significantly โ€“ and simply:

Why is this happening?

Iโ€™ve allowed that last query to rattle around in my head over the past month, though Iโ€™m not sure Iโ€™m any closer to answering it than when I started.

Hereโ€™s the laziest explanation (which doesnโ€™t mean itโ€™s incorrect): The best players have continually won the recent majors because โ€“ get this! โ€“ theyโ€™re the best players.

I mean, thereโ€™s at least a little something to it. But it doesnโ€™t serve to explain why this hasnโ€™t always been the case unilaterally throughout history and what would have caused it to change.

Then thereโ€™s this: With the four majors moved to consecutive months in 2019, thereโ€™s now less time for every player to prepare for the specific elements of each one.

โ€œI kind of equate some of the major tests to, like, the majors in tennis you’re playing on a different surface,โ€ Scheffler said Wednesday. โ€œYou’ve got grass, clay and then the hard court, and it’s a different style of game. The U.S. Open compared to the Masters is a completely different type of test.”

Thatโ€™s fair โ€“ and completely viable โ€“ but again, this isnโ€™t anything new. Moving the PGA Championship to May mightโ€™ve streamlined the major season, but itโ€™s tough to suggest that it offered any quantifiable benefits to the best players.

Letโ€™s try this one: If weโ€™re seeking to find whatโ€™s changed at the majors in recent years, then it would be advisable to consider whatโ€™s changed in professional golf. Iโ€™m insinuating, of course, the division between golfโ€™s entities, specifically the PGA Tour and LIV Golf.

While the negatives of failing to have all the gameโ€™s top players competing against each other on a regular basis have been magnified, one of the lone positives is that itโ€™s brought even more relevance to the majors. As each tour is flooded with shortened-field, free-money events, the four biggest tournaments have taken on greater importance โ€“ especially for the biggest names, perhaps more determined than ever to bring their best stuff to the brightest spotlight.

Whatever the case โ€“ and maybe itโ€™s more pattern than trend โ€“ donโ€™t expect it to stop this week. On one of the worldโ€™s most difficult tests of golf, it only makes sense that the best players will once again be identified.ย 

Split First Bet Offer FBO March Matchups 1080x610
About the Author

Jason Sobel

Read More @JasonSobelGolf

Jason Sobel is a Brand Ambassador for BetMGM. He joins after six years with Action Network. Prior to Action, Jason spent a total of 17 years in two stints at ESPN (1997-2011; 2015-18) and four years at Golf Channel (2011-15). He also currently works as a host for "Hitting the Green" on SiriusXM PGA Tour Radio and contributes to the channel's on-site coverage during major championships. He's won four Sports Emmy awards, more than a dozen Golf Writers Association of America accolades and has earned an honorable mention in the Best of American Sportswriting series.

Jason Sobel is a Brand Ambassador for BetMGM. He joins after six years with Action Network. Prior to Action, Jason spent a total of 17 years in two stints at ESPN (1997-2011; 2015-18) and four years at Golf Channel (2011-15). He also currently works as a host for "Hitting the Green" on SiriusXM PGA Tour Radio and contributes to the channel's on-site coverage during major championships. He's won four Sports Emmy awards, more than a dozen Golf Writers Association of America accolades and has earned an honorable mention in the Best of American Sportswriting series.