Rory McIlroy will get his bid for a historic seventh Major Championship under way in the company of two Ryder Cup team-mates at the U.S. Open on Thursday.
The United States' national championship is where McIlroy won his first Major in 2011 and he has recorded six top tens in his last seven starts at the event, including back-to-back runner-up heartache in 2023 and 2024.
If he were to win this week, he would pass Sir Nick Faldo as the European golfer with the most wins in the four Major era and he will start his campaign alongside runner-up at Shinnecock Hills in 2018 Tommy Fleetwood and another Ryder Cup winner in Ludvig Åberg from the tenth at 07.52.
McIlroy's win at the Masters in April was followed by US PGA Championship glory for Aaron Rai at Arominink and the Englishman tees off the tenth at 13.14 with fellow Wanamaker Trophy winners Collin Morikawa and Jason Day.
World Number One Scottie Scheffler is looking to complete the career Grand Slam and his quest for golfing immortality begins on the first at 08.14 with defending champion J.J. Spaun and U.S. Amateur winner Mason Howell.
Australian Adam Scott will make his own piece of golfing history 11 minutes earlier as he tees off in his 100th consecutive Major Championship alongside Harris English and Nick Taylor.
U.S. Senior Open champion Pádraig Harrington is playing just his second U.S. Open in 13 years and the oldest man in the field has been paired with the youngest as the 54-year-old tees off the first at 07.19 with 17-year-old amateur Miles Russell and Cam Smith.
A trio of former U.S. Open champions then play together late on day one, with Jon Rahm, Justin Rose and Jordan Spieth teeing off the tenth at 14.09.
To view a full list of tee times, click here.