USGA Accepts Record 10,187 Entries into 123rd U.S. Open at The Los Angeles Country Club
Total eclipses mark established in 2014; defending champion Fitzpatrick among 11 exempt champions

LIBERTY CORNER, N.J. (April 13, 2023) – The United States Golf Association (USGA) has accepted a record 10,187 entries, including 15 champions, for the 123rd U.S. Open Championship at The Los Angeles (Calif.) Country Club’s North Course. The U.S. Open will be held at the club for the first time on June 15-18, 2023.

The number of entries eclipses the total of 10,127 accepted for the 2014 U.S. Open at Pinehurst Resort & Country Club’s Course No. 2. It is the 11th consecutive time and the 14th time overall that entries have surpassed the 9,000 mark, and just the second time entries have exceeded 10,000. The USGA accepted entries for the 2023 U.S. Open from golfers in all 50 states, including 1,282 from host state California, as well as Puerto Rico, the District of Columbia and 87 foreign countries.

 

“The U.S. Open is unique in major championship golf in that the qualifying process provides thousands of professional and amateur golfers with diverse backgrounds from around the world the opportunity to follow their dream and earn a place in the field,” said USGA Chief Championships Officer John Bodenhamer. “We look forward to returning to Los Angeles for the first time in 75 years, welcoming the 156 players to the championship and showcasing The Los Angeles Country Club.”

 

Matt Fitzpatrick, who joined four-time champion Jack Nicklaus as the only golfers to have won the U.S. Open and U.S. Amateur at the same venue when he triumphed at The Country Club in Brookline, Mass., last June, leads a total of 52 players who are fully exempt into the field (see list below).

 

Joining Fitzpatrick are 10 other U.S. Open champions who are fully exempt from having to qualify: Bryson DeChambeau (2020), Dustin Johnson (2016), Martin Kaymer (2014), Brooks Koepka (2017, 2018), Rory McIlroy (2011), Jon Rahm (2021), Justin Rose (2013), Jordan Spieth (2015), Gary Woodland (2019) and Tiger Woods (2000, 2002, 2008).

 

Local qualifying, conducted over 18 holes at 109 sites in 44 U.S. states and Canada, will take place between April 17-May 22. Those players who advance out of local qualifying will join a group of locally exempt players in final qualifying, which will be conducted over 36 holes at 10 U.S. and three international sites. Final qualifying returns to England for the first time since 2019 on May 16, while two qualifiers are set for May 22, one in Texas and one in Japan, and 10 are scheduled on Monday, June 5: two in Ohio and one each in California, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, New Jersey, North Carolina, Washington and Canada.

 

Four U.S. Open champions – Geoff Ogilvy (2006), Lucas Glover (2009), Graeme McDowell (2010) and Webb Simpson (2012) – are registered for the 123rd championship and are exempt into final qualifying. McDowell is scheduled to play in Dallas, Texas, on May 22, while Ogilvy, Glover and Simpson will attempt to qualify on June 5; Ogilvy and Glover in Columbus, Ohio, and Simpson in Toronto, Canada.

 

To be eligible, a player must have a Handicap Index® not exceeding 1.4, or be a professional. Eric Spencer, a 51-year-old amateur from Bloomfield, Mich., submitted his entry just 15 seconds before the deadline of 5 p.m. EDT on April 12. Benjamin Knott, a 32-year-old amateur from Boston, Mass., was the first entrant on Feb. 22.

 

The number of fully exempt players will increase with the inclusion of the top 60 point leaders and ties from the Official World Golf Ranking®, as of May 22 and June 12. The winner of the PGA Championship (May 18-21) and any multiple winners of PGA Tour events that award a full-point allocation for the season-ending Tour Championship will also earn exemptions. Also, the top five players in the 2022-23 FedExCup Standings as of May 22 who are not otherwise exempt, will secure a place in the field.

 

Additionally, as part of a transitional plan for the return of final qualifying in Europe for the first time since 2019, U.S. Open exemptions will be awarded to the top two players from the 2022 DP World Tour Final Points List, who are not otherwise exempt, as of May 22, and the top player from the 2023 Race to Dubai Rankings, who is not otherwise exempt, as of May 22. Also, the exemption for the DP World Tour U.S. Open Qualifying Series will be modified from last year and the top two players from the series, who are not otherwise exempt, will earn exemptions. Those two players will be the top aggregate point earners from four DP World Tour events (DS Automobiles Italian Open, Soudal Open, KLM Open and Porsche European Open) that will be contested between May 4 and June 4.

 

The U.S. Open returns to Los Angeles for the first time since 1948, when Ben Hogan won the first of his four U.S. Opens with a 72-hole score of 276 (8 under par), two strokes better than Jimmy Demaret, at The Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades.

 

More information about the 2023 U.S. Open at The Los Angeles Country Club, including local and final qualifying schedules, is available at usopen.com.

 

The list of the 52 golfers who are fully exempt into the 2023 U.S. Open (as of April 13):

 

a-Sam Bennett

 

Viktor Hovland

 

a-Aldrich Potgieter

Keegan Bradley

 

Sungjae Im

 

Jon Rahm

Sam Burns

 

Dustin Johnson

 

Justin Rose

Patrick Cantlay

 

Martin Kaymer

 

Xander Schauffele

a-Ben Carr

 

Joohyung (Tom) Kim

 

Scottie Scheffler

Corey Conners

 

Brooks Koepka

 

Adam Scott

Joel Dahmen

 

K.H. Lee

 

Cameron Smith

Bryson DeChambeau

 

Shane Lowry

 

Jordan Spieth

a-Wenyi Ding

 

Hideki Matsuyama

 

Scott Stallings

a-Mateo Fernandez de Oliveira

 

Denny McCarthy

 

Sepp Straka

Tony Finau

 

a-Matthew McClean

 

Justin Suh

Matt Fitzpatrick

 

Rory McIlroy

 

Sahith Theegala

Adam Hadwin

 

Phil Mickelson

 

Justin Thomas

Brian Harman

 

Francesco Molinari

 

Aaron Wise

Padraig Harrington

 

Collin Morikawa

 

Gary Woodland

Tom Hoge

 

Joaquin Niemann

 

Tiger Woods

Max Homa

 

J.T. Poston

 

Cameron Young

Billy Horschel

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

BOLD - U.S. Open champion

 

 

 

 

a-amateur

 

 

 

 

About the USGA
The USGA is a nonprofit organization that celebrates, serves and advances the game of golf. Founded in 1894, we conduct many of golf’s premier professional and amateur championships, including the U.S. Open and U.S. Women’s Open. With The R&A, we govern the sport via a global set of playing, equipment, handicapping and amateur status rules. The USGA campus in Liberty Corner, New Jersey, is home to the Association’s Research and Test Center, where science and innovation are fueling a healthy and sustainable game for the future. The campus is also home to the USGA Golf Museum, where we honor the game by curating the world’s most comprehensive archive of golf artifacts. To learn more, visit usga.org.

For further information: Brian DePasquale, USGA Communications, bdepasquale@usga.org