Sam Burns made his move at the US Open, and the margin for error at Shinnecock Hills just got a whole lot narrower. The Louisiana native rolled in a birdie at the par-five 16th during his fourth round, pulling within one stroke of leader Michael Clark. With the tournament tightening by the hole, Burns’ surge has transformed what looked like a procession into a race that now demands everyone’s attention.
A single swing shifts the leaderboard
On a course that has humbled stronger names all week, Burns found a wedge of daylight at the 16th. His approach settled 12 feet left of the pin, a shot that held its line despite the swirling 18-mph crosswind that had already claimed several other players’ hopes. The putt dropped—birdie secured in 1 minute 47 seconds of breath-holding tension. The moment shifted momentum, not just for Burns but for the entire field. Clark, who had been building daylight with steady pars, now faces a challenger with the confidence of a player who just erased a deficit in front of him. The psychology of a major is unforgiving; one player’s surge can freeze the rest.
Shinnecock Hills has again shown why it remains a stern test. The winds that swirled through the afternoon gusts made pars feel like victories and birdies like acts of defiance. Burns’ ability to navigate those conditions—especially on a hole where so many others have faltered—speaks to his growing comfort in the cauldron of a U.S. Open. His approach was the 11th-lowest-scoring shot of the day at that hole, a statistic that underscores how rare clean contact has been in these conditions.
Clark’s lead under pressure
Michael Clark entered the day with a two-stroke cushion, but golf’s most volatile currency—confidence—doesn’t respect margins. Burns’ birdie at 16 punctured that buffer, turning what had been a steady climb into a cliff-edge moment. Clark now knows that every subsequent shot could be watched through the lens of a potential challenger inching closer. His par at the 17th, a nervy two-putt from 30 feet, was the first sign that the weight of expectation was beginning to register.
The leaderboard is no longer a one-man show. The pressure shifts when the chasing pack starts breathing down your neck, especially on a course that has already exposed weaknesses in players who arrived with higher expectations. Clark’s next putts will be measured not just by their line, but by the length of Burns’ shadow over his shoulder. The defending champion’s par at the 18th will be the first real test of whether he can maintain his composure in the face of Burns’ relentless pursuit.
The final nine loom large
With just nine holes remaining, the US Open enters its most unpredictable phase. Shinnecock’s closing stretch is notorious for dramatic swings—players who seemed secure have melted, and those who appeared out of it have clawed their way back. Burns’ charge has given the back nine a new narrative: one where the title is still up for grabs, and every putt could tilt the balance. His approach at the 16th was the highest-percentage play available, but the putt was the difference between hope and history.
The question now is whether Clark can steady himself under the weight of Burns’ pursuit, or whether the Louisiana man’s momentum will carry him all the way to his first major championship. The leaderboard is fluid, the greens are firm, and the wind shows no sign of easing. This is where reputations are forged—or undone. Clark’s final round average on par-4s this week is 3.92; Burns’ is 3.81. Those fractions will decide who blinks first.
One thing is certain: Sam Burns is no longer an afterthought. He’s the player who made Michael Clark look mortal.
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