Martin Kaymer returned to the elite in golf with a U.S. Open victory that ranks among the best.
A forgotten star for two years while building a complete game, Kaymer turned the toughest test of golf into a runaway at Pinehurst No. 2 on Sunday to become only the seventh wire-to-wire winner in 114 years of the U.S. Open.
Kaymer closed with a 1-under 69 — the only player from the last eight groups to break par — for an eight-shot victory over Rickie Fowler and Erik Compton, the two-time heart transplant recipient and the only player who even remotely challenged the 29-year-old German.
So dominant was Kaymer that no one got closer than four shots over the final 48 holes.
Only a late bogey kept Kaymer from joining Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy as the only players to finish a U.S. Open in double digits under par. He made a 15-foot par putt on the 18th hole, dropping his putter as the ball fell into the center of the cup, just like so many other putts this week.
“No one was catching Kaymer this week,” Compton said, who earned a trip to the Masters next April. “I was playing for second. I think we all were playing for second.”
This U.S. Open really ended on Friday.
Kaymer set the U.S. Open record with back-to-back rounds of 65 to set the pace at 10-under 130. After a 10-foot par save on the second hole, Kaymer belted a driver on the 313-yard third hole. The ball landed on the front of the green and rolled to the back, setting up a two-putt birdie.
And he was on his way.
Fowler, in the final group of a major for the first time, fell back quickly with a double bogey on the fourth hole. Compton birdied the eighth hole and got within four shots until he took bogey on the par-3 ninth, and Kaymer followed in the last group with an 8-iron to 4 feet for birdie.
Kaymer finished at 9-under 271.
He won his second major — the other was the 2010 PGA Championship at Whistling Straits in a three-man playoff — and this one wasn’t close.
“Martin was playing his own tournament,” Fowler said.
Kaymer joined Seve Ballesteros, Ernie Els, Woods and McIlroy as the only players to win two majors and be No. 1 in the world before turning 30 since the world ranking began in 1986. He is the fourth European in the last five years to win the U.S. Open, after Europeans had gone 40 years without this title.
It’s a rebirth for Kaymer, who only last month captured The Players Championship.
Kaymer reached No. 1 in the world in February 2011, only to believe that he needed a more rounded game. His preferred shot was a fade. Kaymer spent two hard years, a lot of lonely hours on the range in Germany and his home in Scottsdale, Arizona.
The big payoff came at Pinehurst No. 2.