EVENTS

USGA to ditch 18-hole U.S. Open playoff, switch to two-hole aggregate playoff

Published on
USGA to ditch 18-hole U.S. Open playoff, switch to two-hole aggregate playoff

The USGA is moving away from a playoff format that -- in this day and age -- made it one of a kind in major championship golf.
 
Previously, when two or more players were tied after 72 holes at a U.S. Open, the tournament was then decided in an 18-hole playoff the next day.
 
But that has all changed. 
 
On Monday, Mike Davis, Executive Director of the USGA, announced that beginning in 2018, ties will be broken with a two-hole aggregate playoff in all USGA Open championships.
 
That consists of the U.S. Open, U.S. Women's Open, U.S. Senior Open and U.S. Senior Women's Open.

RELATED: What if every U.S. Open playoff had only been a 2-hole, aggregate score?
 
Since the inception of the U.S. Open at Newport Country Club in 1895, there have been 33 playoffs. All have been at least 18 holes.
 
Here's video of Davis explaining the changes:

https://twitter.com/USGA/status/968166274969686021

With this move by the USGA, the Masters becomes the only men's major championship without an aggregate playoff.
 
Here are the playoff formats for each of the four majors now:
 
Masters: Sudden-death
U.S. Open: 2-hole aggregate score
Open Championship: 4-hole aggregate score
PGA Championship: 3-hole aggregate score