Wyndham Clark Wins the 2026 US Open at Shinnecock Hills

A six-shot lead, a hostile gallery, and one of the more gripping Sunday finishes in recent major championship history.

The 126th US Open, played at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club in Southampton, New York, was always going to produce a story. Shinnecock has that effect. It punishes complacency, rewards the scrambler, and creates theatre on the final day. This year was no exception.

Wire to Wire — and Every Inch of It

Wyndham Clark entered Sunday’s final round six strokes clear. He shot a 73. He still won by one. That tells you more about Shinnecock Hills than it does about the champion.

Wyndham Clark with the US Open trophy at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club, Southampton, June 2026

Clark’s decisive quality all week was scrambling — 16 of 24 saves over four rounds. The most important came on the par-5 16th, when he drove into thick fescue, escaped, and holed a 25-foot birdie to re-establish a two-stroke lead. A three-putt bogey on the 17th reduced it to one. Two putts from 52 feet on the 72nd hole sealed it. Final score: 4-under 276, one ahead of Sam Burns. Clark became the ninth player in US Open history to go wire-to-wire — joining a list that includes Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy.

The Crowd and the Redemption

This win carries weight beyond the leaderboard. Clark had a difficult 2025, a season that included a well-documented incident at Oakmont and considerable reputation repair. He arrived at Shinnecock with a portion of the gallery openly against him — many rooting instead for Scottie Scheffler, world number one, chasing the career Grand Slam on his 30th birthday and Father’s Day. Clark handled the noise with composure. “Anytime someone said something negative to me, I replaced it with something positive,” he said. His father, Randall, having taken a red-eye from Denver to surprise his son on Sunday morning, was waiting by the 18th green. It was that kind of afternoon.

The Chasers

Sam Burns had the round of the day — a 67 — and came within a stroke of a playoff. He birdied four of his first eight holes in a charge that, at one point, appeared capable of overturning a seven-shot deficit.

Sam Burns in action during his final-round 67 at the 2026 US Open, Shinnecock Hills

Missed putts on both the 17th and 18th holes ended the run. It was his third consecutive top-ten finish at a US Open.

Scheffler finished tied fourth at even-par 280. The career Grand Slam remains unfinished business.

Scottie Scheffler on the course the final round, Father's Day, Shinnecock Hills

McIlroy, briefly in contention on Saturday, described the final day as the course “winning the battle.” Tom Kim, ranked 141st in the world and playing as a qualifier, finished a composed solo third at one-under — and earned his exemption into next year’s US Open at Pebble Beach.

What Shinnecock Demands

Shinnecock Hills rewarded one quality above all others this week: the ability to hold a game together when the course is actively working against you. Fescue rough that punishes the wayward shot. Greens fast enough to produce three-putts from anywhere. A wind that changes the arithmetic every hour. Clark’s answer to all of it was definitive.

If Sunday’s final round has put golf firmly back on the agenda — it tends to do that — there are courses rather more welcoming than Shinnecock’s fescue waiting across the Atlantic. Browse our Portugal golf holidays and play in the sunshine, where scrambling is entirely optional.

Welcome to the Ferragudo Golf Course

A New Algarve Parkland course with Character, History and Strategic Variety.

The Algarve’s reputation as one of Europe’s premier golf destinations continues to grow, and the arrival of Ferragudo Golf Course adds another compelling chapter to that story. Located in the Portimão area and developed under the umbrella of the Pestana Group, Portugal’s largest hotel and tourism operator, this new parkland layout introduces a refreshing blend of natural integration, strategic design, and historical character.

Ferragudo Golf Course tee-off and fairway

Rather than relying on dramatic elevation changes or heavy water usage, Ferragudo places its emphasis on routing, angles, and shot selection. The course is set comfortably within the Algarve landscape, where mature vegetation and natural contours frame a layout that feels both modern and timeless.

A Par-73 with Flexible Yardages

Ferragudo plays as a Par 73 and offers multiple teeing options to suit a wide range of golfers:

  • White Tees: 5,841 metres
  • Yellow Tees: 5,227 metres
  • Red Tees: 4,594 metres

This flexibility ensures the course can be enjoyed both as a championship test and as a more accessible resort-style round.

A Course Defined by Variety

One of Ferragudo’s defining strengths is the sheer variety of its holes. The routing avoids repetition, instead offering a sequence of short and long holes that demand constant adjustment in strategy. Players are required to think carefully about positioning, especially on approach shots where angles into greens are often more important than raw distance.

Ferragudo Golf - a course with variety

Water is notably scarce throughout the round, used sparingly to maximum effect. In fact, it only comes into play on the closing hole — the Par 5 18th (Stroke Index 6) — where a lake guards the approach to the green, providing a dramatic finishing risk-reward decision.

History Embedded in the Landscape

Perhaps the most distinctive visual and architectural feature of Ferragudo Golf Course is its integration of historic ruins across the property. These remnants of the past are not merely decorative; they form part of the course identity and visual rhythm.

Ferragudo Golf Tee and Chapel ruins

The most striking of these is an old chapel positioned at a natural crossroads of the layout, influencing play on holes 9, 10, 12, and 13. Plans have been suggested to restore this structure and repurpose it as a halfway house — a unique feature that could become one of the most memorable stopping points in Portuguese golf.

A Parkland Built for Shot-Making

Ferragudo is not a course that overwhelms with brute difficulty, but rather one that rewards thoughtful execution. The absence of heavy water hazards places greater emphasis on fairway positioning, controlled iron play, and creativity around the greens.

Ferragudo Golf Parkland Couse

The result is a layout that promises variety, rhythm, and constant decision-making — a course where no two holes feel the same, and where scoring depends as much on imagination as on power.

Final Impression

With its thoughtful routing, historic atmosphere, and strong integration into the Algarve landscape, Ferragudo Golf Course is positioned to become a notable addition to the region’s already impressive golfing portfolio.

It is a course that invites repeated play, not because it is overwhelming, but because it reveals itself differently with each round.

Ferragudo is not just another Algarve golf course — it is a new identity shaped by land, history, and design intelligence.

Ferragudo Golf Course is a welcome addition to an already strong Algarve portfolio — and reason enough to start planning a visit. Browse our Algarve golf holidays and see what the region has waiting for you.


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239 Starts. One Win. A comeback for the ages

Bud Cauley wins the 2026 RBC Canadian Open — eight years, several surgeries, and 239 starts after his career nearly ended on a residential street in Ohio.

There are comeback stories, and then there is Bud Cauley. On Sunday 14 June 2026, the 36-year-old American stepped onto the 18th green at TPC Toronto at Osprey Valley, parred the hole, and became a PGA Tour winner for the first time in his professional life.

Bud Cauley and Family happy tearsHe cried. His wife, Kristi, cried beside him. The crowd at the RBC Canadian Open, who had cheered him through a rainy, gripping final round, had earned a few tears of their own.

The Night That Changed Everything

On 1 June 2018, following a missed cut at the Memorial Tournament in Dublin, Ohio, Cauley was a passenger in a car that struck a culvert, went airborne, and hit a tree. He left the scene with a collapsed right lung, six broken ribs, a fractured left leg, and a concussion. The injuries were severe enough that simply surviving counted as a result. Returning to professional golf seemed, at certain dark moments, beside the point entirely.

He did return, in stages. He played again in 2019 and 2020, before complications — hardware placed in his chest during surgery, persistent pain, further procedures and an infection — forced him back off the Tour. From September 2020 to February 2024, Bud Cauley did not play a single tournament on the PGA Tour. Most players, in those circumstances, would have quietly moved on. Cauley did not.

239 Starts, One Win

His return at the 2024 WM Phoenix Open was, on its own, a story worth telling. What followed was the slow, methodical business of rebuilding a career. He finished 47th in the 2025 FedEx Cup standings, earning a place in all the signature events for 2026. A top-six at The Players Championship and a top-four at the Valspar Championship served notice that something was building. Then came Toronto.

Cauley entered the final round one stroke behind overnight leader Jackson Suber. The front nine was tense — a bogey at the ninth temporarily drew the field together, with Suber, Jimmy Stanger, and Matt Fitzpatrick all threatening.

Bud Cauley iron shot on 12th hole

Then the back nine happened. Birdies at 11, a chip-in from 93 feet at 12 to take the lead, another birdie at 13, and again at 15. Four birdies in five holes. A player who had never won on Tour looked, in those moments, entirely at ease. He closed with a five-under 65, finishing at 17-under 263 and winning by two strokes from a fast-finishing Fitzpatrick.

It was his 239th career start. Fifteen years after turning professional. Almost exactly eight years after the crash.

What the Numbers Leave Out

Golf statistics are good at recording what happened. They are less useful at capturing what it costs. Cauley had described the post-accident years simply: “Everything that could go wrong seemed to go wrong.” He credits meeting his wife Kristi to the period of forced stillness that followed. He became present in his children’s daily lives in a way a touring professional rarely can be. There is, running quietly through his story, the suggestion that the crash — as near-fatal and brutal as it was — eventually gave him something too.

Bud Cauley with trophy at press conference“With everything that our family went through when I was out,” he said beside the 18th green, “and then to have my first win when everyone’s here — it kind of seems like perfect timing.”

The Year of the Comeback

Cauley’s win sits in notable company in 2026. Gary Woodland won the Houston Open in March, less than three years after brain surgery. Anthony Kim ended a decade-long absence by winning on the LIV circuit in February. Golf, this year, has become a particularly persuasive argument for patience. Cauley’s victory qualifies him for The Open Championship at Royal Birkdale — an additional grace note on a day already full of them.

Life Is Short. Play More Golf.

Bud Cauley’s story is, at its core, about not taking any of it for granted. The round that matters, the tournament you have been meaning to play, the trip you keep postponing — they are not guaranteed. If his comeback teaches anything, it is that the time to go is now. The Algarve’s fairways are in summer condition. The tee times are there. Browse our Algarve golf holidays and book the week you have been putting off.


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