U.S. Open 2019: Odds for Tiger Woods, favorites to win at Pebble Beach

Marc Lancaster

U.S. Open 2019: Odds for Tiger Woods, favorites to win at Pebble Beach image

Who wants to bet against Brooks Koepka these days? 

The oddsmakers certainly don't, with the two-time defending champion installed as the betting favorite ahead of this week's U.S. Open at Pebble Beach. 

In addition to taking the last two editions of the national championship at Shinnecock and Erin Hills, Koepka also has prevailed at the last two PGA Championships, winning last year at Bellerive and last month at Bethpage Black. 

There's no denying the 29-year-old's form, but he isn't a runaway favorite heading into the third major championship of the year. Dustin Johnson, Rory McIlroy and Tiger Woods are just behind him, leading a 156-player field set to tee off Thursday. 

Here are the updated odds to win the U.S. Open, via VegasInsider.com. Odds updated June 10 at 3:30 p.m. ET.

Updated 2019 U.S. Open odds

PlayerOdds
Brooks Koepka15/2
Dustin Johnson8/1
Rory McIlroy8/1
Tiger Woods9/1
Jordan Spieth16/1
Patrick Cantlay16/1
Justin Rose22/1
Jon Rahm25/1
Rickie Fowler25/1
Xander Schauffele25/1
Francesco Molinari28/1
Jason Day28/1
Justin Thomas28/1
Adam Scott33/1
Hideki Matsuyama33/1
Tommy Fleetwood35/1
Tony Finau35/1
Bryson DeChambeau45/1
Matt Kuchar45/1
Brandt Snedeker50/1
Paul Casey50/1
Phil Mickelson50/1
Shane Lowry50/1
Henrik Stenson55/1
Gary Woodland66/1
Marc Leishman66/1
Webb Simpson66/1
Martin Kaymer75/1
Sergio Garcia75/1
Bubba Watson80/1
Louis Oosthuizen80/1
Matt Wallace80/1
Patrick Reed80/1
Graeme McDowell90/1
Ian Poulter100/1
Emiliano Grillo125/1
Haotong Li125/1
Jim Furyk125/1
Keegan Bradley125/1
Kevin Kisner125/1
Kevin Na125/1
Matthew Fitzpatrick125/1
Tyrrell Hatton125/1
Aaron Wise150/1
Alex Noren150/1
Billy Horschel150/1
Branden Grace150/1
Byeong-Hun An150/1
C.T. Pan150/1
Cameron Smith150/1
Charles Howell III150/1
Danny Willett150/1
Erik Van Rooyen150/1
Jason Dufner150/1
Jimmy Walker150/1
Lucas Glover150/1
Luke List150/1
Rafa Cabrera Bello150/1
Rory Sabbatini150/1
Si Woo Kim150/1
Zach Johnson150/1
Daniel Berger175/1
J.B. Holmes175/1
Thomas Pieters175/1
Kiradech Aphibarnrat200/1
Lucas Bjerregaard200/1
Scottie Scheffler200/1
Thorbjorn Olesen200/1
Aaron Baddeley250/1
Abraham Ancer250/1
Chez Reavie250/1
Jhonattan Vegas250/1
Kyle Stanley250/1
Viktor Hovland250/1
Justin Harding300/1
Luke Donald300/1
Matthew Jones350/1
Anirban Lahiri400/1
Brian Stuard400/1
Chesson Hadley400/1
Ernie Els400/1
Kyoung-Hoon Lee400/1
Marcus Kinhult400/1
Oliver Schniederjans400/1
Adri Arnaus500/1
Alex Prugh500/1
Collin Morikawa500/1
David Toms500/1
Dean Burmester500/1
Luke Guthrie500/1
Nathan Lashley500/1
Nick Taylor500/1
Roberto Castro500/1
Ryan Fox500/1
Sam Horsfield500/1
Shugo Imahira500/1
Chan Kim600/1
Andreas Halvorsen750/1
Brandon Wu750/1
Brendon Todd750/1
Carlos Ortiz750/1
Chun An Yu750/1
Clement Sordet750/1
Devon Bling750/1
Joseph Bramlett750/1
Nick Hardy750/1
Patton Kizzire750/1
Sam Saunders750/1
Sepp Straka750/1
Tom Hoge750/1
Zac Blair750/1
Austin Eckroat1000/1
Billy Hurley III1000/1
Brett Drewitt1000/1
Callum Tarren1000/1
Cameron Young1000/1
Chandler Eaton1000/1
Charlie Danielson1000/1
Chip McDaniel1000/1
Cody Gribble1000/1
Daniel Hillier1000/1
Jovan Rebula1000/1
Julian Etulain1000/1
Justin Walters1000/1
Kevin O'Connell1000/1
Lee Slattery1000/1
Luis Gagne1000/1
Marcus Fraser1000/1
Matt Parziale1000/1
Matthieu Pavon1000/1
Michael Thorbjornsen1000/1
Mike Weir1000/1
Mikimu Horikawa1000/1
Renato Paratore1000/1
Rhys Enoch1000/1
Richard Lee1000/1
Rob Oppenheim1000/1
Stewart Hagestad1000/1
Brian Davis1500/1
Connor Arendell1500/1
Eric Dietrich1500/1
Hayden Shieh1500/1
Kodai Ichihara1500/1
Matthew Naumec1500/1
Noah Norton1500/1
Ryan Sullivan1500/1
Spencer Tibbits1500/1

 

Marc Lancaster

Marc Lancaster joined The Sporting News in 2022 after working closely with TSN for five years as an editor for the company now known as Stats Perform. He previously worked as an editor at The Washington Times, AOL’s FanHouse.com and the old CNNSportsIllustrated.com, and as a beat writer covering the Tampa Bay Rays, Cincinnati Reds, and University of Georgia football and women’s basketball. A Georgia graduate, he has been a Baseball Hall of Fame voter since 2013.