From the late wave, past champ and former World No. 1 Dustin Johnson navigated a 2-under 34-34=68 in R1 of the 122nd U.S. Open in Brookline, Mass., to sit T7 on the board, two adrift of leader Adam Hadwin.
Johnson, the 2016 champ (Oakmont) as well as the 84th Masters champion last season, resigned from the PGA TOUR June 7th, competed in the first LIV event in London, and was subsequently suspended by the PGA TOUR. Along with being barred from competing in any future TOUR-sanctioned events, he was removed from the FedExCup standings, is considered a non-member now, and has dropped to 16th in the Official World Golf Ranking. The 37-year-old, who turns 38 in six days (June 22nd), played alongside Matt Fitzpatrick (68) and fellow former champ Webb Simpson (70) today, and outpaced two bogeys with four birdies on seven (of 14) fairways and eight greens in regulation. The U.S. Open is conducted by the USGA, whose CEO Mike Whan was asked in a pre-tourney presser yesterday (Wednesday) if he could envision a day where it would be harder for some folks doing different things (LIV Golf) to get into a U.S. Open, to which he replied, “I could. Will that be true? I don’t know, but I can definitely foresee that day.” Link to the USGA’s full presser is below.