OAKMONT, Pa. — Thriston Lawrence walked onto the 10th tee box at 2:20 p.m. to begin his second round at the U.S. Open with his name near the top of the front page of the leaderboard.
Nearly six hours and 73 shots later, the South African's name wasn't so high. And his round still wasn't quite over.
Welcome to Oakmont, where one of golf's toughest tests began with two — or three in the case of Lawrence and a handful of others still on the course when play was suspended at around 8:15 p.m. as a storm passed through — of the sport's longest days.
Lawrence was standing over a 4-foot par putt in the middle of a downpour for a 4-over 74 when the horn blew, 5 hours, 55 minutes after his scheduled tee time.
He turned to ask an official if he could putt out. When the answer came back ''no," he marked his ball and hustled with umbrella in hand to the clubhouse.
"Overall, I played nicely, but frustrating day because it felt like we were out there for seven hours,'' Lawrence said.
Close enough.
While the late dash of weather didn't help, the pace at the sprawling par-70 layout carved into a hilly slice of Western Pennsylvania so big it's divided by an interstate spared no one.