Course Setup: “The USGA listened, unfortunately.”

That was Martin Kaymer's assessment of the course setup Saturday at Pinehurst where players felt the hole locations were pretty consistently as difficult as they could possibly be.

Ryan Lavner reports for GolfChannel.com.

But on Saturday, “I think they used the hardest pins they could possibly use on almost every hole,” Jordan Spieth (72) said. 

Said Matt Kuchar (71): “In practice rounds you guess where you think the pins will be and you kind of say, ‘Well, that’s too severe; they won’t put them there.’ And sure enough, that’s where the pin is. It seems to be year after year, and you should know better by now.”

Jim Achenbach has more extensive comments from Kuchar, who many times said he felt the course was teetering on the edge of going over the top.

Kuchar on Sunday's final round: "It (the course) teeters on unplayable … They've got it at the edge, and I'm sure they'll push the edge. I'm hoping a few pin placements are a little kinder tomorrow after they saw what went on today, but I'm not sure I'll get my wish."

Roger's Cart Driver Arrested For Brushing Highway Patrolman!?

Jeff Rude with the wacky story of Roger Maltbie's cart driver possibly giving a North Carolina Highway Patrolman's foot a love tap and getting arrested for it.

The driver has been Maltbie's on-course driver at Pinehurst U.S. Opens before.

“This is a new one,” Maltbie said walking down the 11th fairway. “I’ve been to a couple of rodeos and a county fair and I’ve never had this happen.”

Police said the driver was in the Moore County Jail on Saturday night in nearby Carthage.

Maltbie said he has been friends with the man since his rookie year on Tour. The North Carolinian also drove for Maltbie at the 1999 and ’05 U.S. Opens at Pinehurst.

One witness said the cart brushed the officer. It’s clear the mistake the driver made in not stopping when ordered. But it’s uncertain whether he knew a law officer was screaming for him to stop the cart.

Guide: 2014 U.S. Open Third Round This And That

I tore my self away from the excellent media dining--a few drips of heavy cream explains the sheer brilliance of the scrambled eggs and I believe I'm the first to report based on conversations with the chef--to walk Pinehurst this morning.

The setup team of Mike Davis, Jeff Hall, John Bodenheimer and championship committee chair Dan Burton were kind enough to share a few thoughts on what figures to be a lively day. The wind has shifted to a north wind, opposite of the southeast zephyr of the first two days. The par-4 7th tee is up 48 yards with a front right hole location supported by a backstop. That means drives on the left side or those driving almost past the green can wedge back to a pretty easy location. It's a 315-yard shot to the flag from the tee. The hole yardage is 371.

The par-5 tenth tee is also up significantly and again, downwind, so look for the course to give them fits early in the round and the birdie opportunities to arise starting around the 7th. The greens have plenty of moisture to make it through the forecasted winds and overall the course looks absolutely stunning. While it may look browned out on TV, I'm confident the women will get to play a comparable course next week (with a few more divots and ballmarks than normal).

Your third round starting times are here. Leader Martin Kaymer goes at, gulp, 3:25.

Do note the extremes pairing at 3:14 as pointed out by reader Lloyd: speedster Brandt Snedeker and slowster Kevin Na.

TV and Radio times here and don't forget the feature group and other digital options online.

Leaderboard.

Hole locations. Note the 7th.

With This Absurdly Good First 36 Holes, Martin Kaymer...

...from the USGA media notes...

  • Kaymer’s 36-hole total of 130 is the lowest score for the first 36 holes in a U.S. Open. The previous record was held by Rory McIlroy, who shot 131 in 2011 at Congressional.
  • His six-stroke lead tied the largest 36-hole lead in U.S. Open history. Tiger Woods (2000, Pebble Beach) and Rory McIlroy (2011, Congressional) also had six-stroke leads.
  • He became the sixth player in U.S. Open history to reach double digits under par. He joins Gil Morgan (1992), Tiger Woods (2000), Jim Furyk (2003), Ricky Barnes (2009) and Rory McIlroy (2011).
  • Kaymer joins Rory McIlroy (2011) as the only players to be double digits under par through 36 holes at a U.S. Open.
  • He reached double digits under par in 32 holes – the second-fastest in U.S. Open history. Rory McIlroy reached double digits under par in 26 holes in 2011 at Congressional.
  • Kaymer is the first player to open a major championship with consecutive rounds of 65 or better.
  • He ranks in the top five in all three major statistical categories: Fairways Hit (T-2, 25/28), Greens in Regulation (T-5, 26/36), and Total Putts (T-4, 54).
  • Kaymer has held a 36-hole lead on seven occasions. He has gone on to win four times, including the 2014 Players Championship.

Dave Kindred wrote about Kaymer's incredible start and post round comments and surmised...

This U.S. Open is his. Three players ever have led the Open by five shots or more after 36 holes. Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy and Willie Anderson all won the tournament. Kaymer leads this Open by six shots.

A snippet of Kaymer's post-round comments: