Wyndham Clark heard it all day from the Shinnecock Hills crowd. Fans shouted for his golf ball to go in the bunker and the rough. One was ejected after yelling: “Don’t choke, Wyndham!”
He quieted them with a 52-foot putt to tap-in range for his second U.S. Open title in four years, avoiding the worst collapse in tournament history after his six-stroke lead dwindled to one.
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Wyndham Clark celebrates after a birdie on the 16th hole during the final round of the U.S. Open golf tournament at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club in Southampton, N.Y., Sunday, June 21, 2026. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)
Wyndham Clark hits from the bunker on the eighth hole during the final round of the U.S. Open golf tournament at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club in Southampton, N.Y., Sunday, June 21, 2026. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)
Wyndham Clark greets fans during the final round of the U.S. Open golf tournament at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club in Southampton, N.Y., Sunday, June 21, 2026. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)
Wyndham Clark reacts to his shot on the ninth hole during the final round of the U.S. Open golf tournament at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club in Southampton, N.Y., Sunday, June 21, 2026. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)
Oh, how this anybody-but-Wyndham crowd would've relished that.
New York loves a winner, but the one these fans really wanted to see on Sunday was Scottie Scheffler, who was chasing the career Grand Slam, or Sam Burns, who lost by a stroke. Not Clark.
Call it backlash for him damaging a locker in a fit of rage at Oakmont Country Club while missing the cut last year in the U.S. Open. Or for saying on TV that being surrounded by kids playing in the Masters Par 3 Contest was “great birth control." Or even for winning his first U.S. Open title in 2023 over fan favorites Rory McIlroy and Rickie Fowler.
Or maybe the folks spending their Father's Day at Shinnecock just wanted to see a little drama after Clark built leads of two, four and six strokes after each of the first three days.
“Man, they definitely didn’t want me to win,” Clark said.
On Saturday, he complained that fans had largely deserted the course by the time he was finishing his third round. On Sunday, he might’ve wished they had stayed home.
It's rare for a golfer in the lead at a major championship — or any golfer for that matter — to be the subject of such derision. It happened to McIlroy at the Ryder Cup last September at Bethpage Black, also on Long Island, but that was a team competition. McIlroy was the star of the winning European side and U.S. fans went overboard in letting him have it.
Clark said he tried to see himself in an “underdog” role on Sunday, as he did in 2023.
“Anytime someone said something negative to me, I replaced it with something positive,” Clark said. “Some of it’s self-deserved. I kind of brought it on myself, but I also get it, too. Scottie was going for the career Grand Slam, and it hasn’t happened very often.”
Even so, the animosity appeared to rattle Clark early in his round. He bogeyed the second, sixth and seventh holes as fans threw their support behind Scheffler. They cheered Clark's mistakes while showering Scheffler with affection — even serenading the four-time major champion, who turned 30 on Sunday, with “Happy Birthday."
It was “Get in the bunker!” for Clark and “We love you Scottie!” for Scheffler, who tied for fourth at even par.
“You like seeing the fans cheer for you. I think sometimes it can get a little too much when, you know, balls are kind of going off greens and you start hearing cheers,” Scheffler said. “That felt a bit much to me.”
Anti-Clark fans cheered when he flared a shot under a pair of trash containers on the fourth hole and again when his shot on the seventh hole landed in a bunker.
“Wyndham gonna lose 'em,” a man said as Clark walked to his ball on 10.
“Get in the fescue!” a fan yelled after he teed off on 13. When his second shot landed on a precarious part of the green, the crowd chanted “Go! Go! Go!” and gleefully roared as the golf ball rolled off the back.
Clark won over the crowd, at least for a moment, on the 16th hole — punching out from the tall grass and pumped his fist after nailing a 24-foot birdie putt to go to 5-under par. For the moment, he held a two-stroke lead and the crowd's hopes of a different winner were fading.
But the taunts returned on the next hole as Clark backed off of his 8-foot par putt and then missed it. As Clark walked to the 18th tee, scratching his head with his hat in hand, a fan in the grandstand sang “Under Pressure."
“Yeah, it was tough, but I’m proud of myself that I battled through,” Clark said. “I mean, things really could have gotten away from me. I stood tough. Yeah, I would have liked to have won by more, but as long as you win, it doesn’t matter.”
Associated Press writers Doug Ferguson and Eddie Pells contributed to this report.
AP golf: https://apnews.com/hub/golf
Wyndham Clark celebrates after a birdie on the 16th hole during the final round of the U.S. Open golf tournament at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club in Southampton, N.Y., Sunday, June 21, 2026. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)
Wyndham Clark hits from the bunker on the eighth hole during the final round of the U.S. Open golf tournament at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club in Southampton, N.Y., Sunday, June 21, 2026. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)
Wyndham Clark greets fans during the final round of the U.S. Open golf tournament at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club in Southampton, N.Y., Sunday, June 21, 2026. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)
Wyndham Clark reacts to his shot on the ninth hole during the final round of the U.S. Open golf tournament at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club in Southampton, N.Y., Sunday, June 21, 2026. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)
REDWOOD CITY, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jun 22, 2026--
Zilliz, the company behind Milvus, the world's most widely adopted open-source vector database, today announced the public preview of Zilliz Vector Lakebase, a major Zilliz Cloud release that pairs the production vector database with a shared, lake-native data foundation.
This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260621822926/en/
Vector Lakebase keeps Zilliz Cloud's real-time vector search at the core — the engine Zillow, OpenEvidence, Exa, Filevine, MiniMax, and more than 10,000 enterprises and AI teams already rely on — and extends it with three new ways to operate on the same data: interactive discovery, large-scale batch analytics, and search directly on external data lakes. The result is a single data foundation in which every workload runs against a single logical copy of the data, with on-demand and batch jobs billed only when compute is active.
"Production vector search is and will remain at the heart of what Zilliz does — it's why thousands of teams choose Milvus and Zilliz Cloud, and it's getting faster and more cost-efficient every release," said Charles Xie, Founder and CEO of Zilliz. "Vector Lakebase is what we believe comes next: one data foundation where the same vectors can serve a production query, anchor a discovery session, and power a multi-petabyte training-data pipeline — without copies, migration, or a parallel stack."
Why a Single Data Foundation Matters
AI systems are no longer a single-query retrieval problem. They run as a continuous loop — serve, learn from feedback, mine and prepare better data, then serve again — and each turn typically requires separate systems for serving, exploration, and large-scale processing. Moving billions of vectors between those systems can take days. The cost and complexity are so high that many teams skip the loop altogether, leaving valuable data retrievable but never improved.
Vector Lakebase closes that gap with a zero-copy semantic data plane on shared lake-native storage: real-time serving, interactive discovery, and batch analytics all run against one logical copy of the data, scaling from gigabytes to petabytes.
"Teams asked for a way to keep their data in one place and run very different workloads against it — from real-time agent memory to overnight semantic deduplication," said Robert Guo, VP of Product at Zilliz and one of the architects behind Milvus. "Vector Lakebase delivers that through a unified storage layer on Vortex, tiered serving for the production path, and on-demand compute for everything else."
Five Capabilities on One Foundation
Together, these capabilities let AI teams consolidate what previously required parallel always-on serving clusters and separate batch systems onto one platform — with consistent indexes, versioned data, and compute that scales to zero between jobs.
Availability
Zilliz Vector Lakebase is available now in public preview on Zilliz Cloud, alongside Serverless, Dedicated, and BYOC deployment options across more than 30 regions on AWS, Google Cloud, and Microsoft Azure. New work email signups receive $100 in free credits at zilliz.com. Teams running serving, discovery, and analytics on separate stacks can contact the Zilliz team for a tailored walkthrough.
About Zilliz
Zilliz is a leading AI data infrastructure company and the creator of Milvus, the world's most widely adopted open-source vector database, with 44,000+ GitHub stars and over 100 million Docker pulls. Zilliz helps enterprises and AI startups make their unstructured data searchable, analyzable, and governable — turning text, images, audio, video, and more into a strategic asset for production AI.
Zilliz's technology centers on Milvus and Zilliz Cloud. Milvus is an open-source vector database purpose-built for 100-billion-scale vector search. Zilliz Cloud extends that foundation into a fully managed Vector Lakebase platform, combining the high-throughput, low-latency serving capabilities of vector databases with the openness, scalability, and economics of multimodal data lakes. Zilliz powers more than 10,000 enterprises and AI-native startups worldwide, including MiniMax, OpenEvidence, Filevine, Exa, Salesforce, and Read AI.
Headquartered in Redwood Shores, California, Zilliz is backed by leading investors, including Aramco's Prosperity 7 Ventures, Temasek's Pavilion Capital, Hillhouse Capital, 5Y Capital, Yunqi Partners, and Trustbridge Partners. Learn more at Zilliz.com.
Zilliz Launches Vector Lakebase, Extending the World's Most Adopted Vector Database into a Unified Data Platform for AI