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SUB 60 HEADLINES

Wyndham Clark walked into Shinnecock Hills with a target on his back and walked out with his second U.S. Open trophy. Clark led after all four rounds, the first wire-to-wire U.S. Open winner since 2014, finishing at 4-under 276 to edge Sam Burns by one. The reward: a record $4.5 million from a record $22.5 million purse.

It was anything but comfortable. Clark took a six-shot lead into Sunday, then shot 73 and watched Burns claw within one. The dagger came at the par-5 16th, where Clark drained a 24-footer for birdie after scrambling out of the fescue. Burns had looks to force a playoff at 17 and 18 and missed both, dropping to his knees on the final green.

Scottie Scheffler, chasing the career Grand Slam on his 30th birthday, bogeyed his opening hole and never threatened, settling for T4 at even par. Tom Kim was the only other man under par, finishing solo third.

The story wasn't just the golf. The Long Island gallery turned on Clark all week, shouting "Get in the bunker!" on his tee shots and worse, with several fans ejected. Clark answered the only way that matters, then told NBC, "New York didn't really like me. I love you guys." Redemption, after a rough 2025, tastes pretty good.

LPGA TOUR

Miyu Yamashita grabbed her first U.S. win at the Meijer LPGA Classic, closing with a 64 to reach 17-under and beating Lottie Woad in a playoff after Woad lipped out a three-footer on the 72nd hole. The Japanese star birdied the 18th twice when it counted.

TRAVELERS UP NEXT

The Travelers Championship (June 25–28, TPC River Highlands) closes out the Signature Event season with a no-cut, 72-man field. Keegan Bradley defends. Scheffler is the favorite, McIlroy is skipping to prep for The Open, and Clark arrives with house money.

SOCIAL OF THE WEEK

A WORD FROM OUR PARTNER: Greenfield Robotics

Manufacturing Legend Backs Greenfield Robotics

Howard Dahl spent decades building the machines that feed America. His family invented the Bobcat skid steer. The air drills planting nearly every commodity crop globally? Those too. Now Dahl is manufacturing weed-cutting robots for Greenfield Robotics out of his Fargo factory, and he wrote his own check on top of it. 

Greenfield's current fleet is sold out, with over $1 million in total revenue and robots in the field since 2020. Chipotle’s venture arm and KingsCrowd Capital are also on board. The robots slice weeds with centimeter precision, replacing herbicides linked to environmental damage and rising health concerns among farmers. 

Greenfield is now in Test the Waters under Reg A+. Reserving shares today locks in a 5% bonus that can grow to 20% the week the round opens to the public.

Greenfield Robotics is Testing The Waters under tier 2 of Regulation A. No money or other consideration is being solicited, and if sent in response will not be accepted. No offer to buy the securities can be accepted and no part of the purchase price can be received until the offering statement filed by the company with the SEC has been qualified by the SEC. Any such offer may be withdrawn or revoked, without obligation or commitment of any kind, at any time before notice of acceptance given after the date of qualification. An indication of interest involves no obligation or commitment of any kind. “Reserving” shares is simply an indication of interest. There is no binding commitment for investors that reserve shares in this manner to ultimately invest and purchase the shares reserved of the company, or to purchase any shares of the company whatsoever.

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WINNERS FROM LAST WEEK: CORE FORE

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OFFICIAL WORLD GOLF RANKINGS: TOP 60

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