Western Open

Western Open
Tournament information
LocationLemont, Illinois
Established1899
Course(s)Cog Hill Golf & Country Club
(Dubsdread Course)
Par71
Length7,309 yards (6,683 m)[1]
Organized byWestern Golf Association
Tour(s)PGA Tour
FormatStroke play
Prize fundUS$5,000,000
Month playedJuly
Final year2006
Tournament record score
Aggregate267 Scott Hoch (2001)
267 Tiger Woods (2003)
To par−21 as above
Final champion
Trevor Immelman
Location map
Cog Hill G&CC
Location in the United States
Cog Hill G&CC
Location in Illinois

The Western Open was a professional golf tournament in the United States, for most of its history an event on the PGA Tour.

The tournament's founding in 1899 actually pre-dated the start of the Tour, which is generally dated from 1916, the year the PGA of America was founded. The Western Open, organized by the Western Golf Association, was first played in September 1899 at the Glen View Club in Golf, Illinois, the week preceding the U.S. Open. At the time of its final edition in 2006, it was the third-oldest active PGA Tour tournament, after The Open (1860) and U.S. Open (1895). The tournament was held a total of 103 times over the course of 108 years. The event was not held in 1900, 1918 (World War I), and 1943–45 (World War II). Players from the U.S. won the tournament 77 times, followed by Scotland with fifteen wins. Walter Hagen had the most victories with five, and seventeen others won the event at least twice. The champions' list includes two amateurs: Chick Evans in 1910 and Scott Verplank in 1985.

Beginning in 2007, the Western Open was renamed the BMW Championship, the penultimate event of the FedEx Cup playoff series. Played with the PGA Tour's point system as the sole qualification standard, it is no longer open to amateurs.

Title sponsorship was introduced in 1987, and included Beatrice, Centel, Sprint, Motorola, Advil, Golf Digest, and Cialis.

History

The Western Open, founded and run by the Western Golf Association, was first played in 1899 in Illinois at the Glen View Club in Golf, a northern suburb of Chicago[2] Like the U.S. Open, in its early days it was almost exclusively won by immigrant golf professionals from the British Isles, most of whom gained full citizenship to the United States. In its early decades it was widely regarded as one of the premier golf tournaments in the USA, along with other notables of the day like the North and South Open, the PGA Championship and the Shawnee Open.

The Western Golf Association was, in some ways, and for some years, something of a rival to the United States Golf Association, especially in the midwestern and western sections of the country.[3]

From the event's inception through 1961, it was played at a variety of midwestern locations, as well as places such as Arizona (Phoenix), Utah (Salt Lake City) and California (San Francisco, Los Angeles). In 1923, it was held in Tennessee at the Colonial Country Club in Memphis.[2]

Beginning in 1962, the Western Open settled within the Chicago metropolitan area and was held at a variety of courses through 1973. In 1974, it found an annual home at the Butler National Golf Club in Oak Brook, a western suburb. It was played here through 1990, when the PGA Tour adopted a policy of holding events only at clubs which allowed minorities and women to be members.[4][5] It moved in 1991 to Cog Hill Golf & Country Club in Lemont, southwest of Chicago.[4][6] A 72-hole public complex, its Dubsdread Course hosted the Western Open for sixteen editions, through 2006.[2]

In 1899, the prize fund was $150, and Willie Smith's winner's share was fifty dollars. The purse in 2006 was $5 million, with $900,000 to the final winner, Trevor Immelman.

During the second round of the 1975 tournament on Friday, June 27, Lee Trevino and Jerry Heard were struck by lightning on the 13th green of Butler National while waiting out a rain delay.[7][8][9] Also struck at other parts of the course were Bobby Nichols, Jim Ahern, and Tony Jacklin.[10][11][12]

BMW Championship

In 2007, the Western Open was renamed—and changed in terms of invitational criteria—to the BMW Championship, part of the four-event FedEx Cup Playoff Series. The Western Golf Association continues to run the tournament. The BMW Championship is the last FedEx Cup playoff event before The Tour Championship

Winners

Year Winner Score To par Margin of
victory
Runner(s)-up Venue Location
Cialis Western Open
2006 Trevor Immelman 271 −13 2 strokes Mathew Goggin
Tiger Woods
Cog Hill Lemont, Illinois
2005 Jim Furyk 270 −14 2 strokes Tiger Woods Cog Hill Lemont, Illinois
2004 Stephen Ames 274 −10 2 strokes Steve Lowery Cog Hill Lemont, Illinois
Western Open
2003 Tiger Woods (3) 267 −21 5 strokes Rich Beem Cog Hill Lemont, Illinois
Advil Western Open
2002 Jerry Kelly 269 −19 2 strokes Davis Love III Cog Hill Lemont, Illinois
2001 Scott Hoch 267 −21 1 stroke Davis Love III Cog Hill Lemont, Illinois
2000 Robert Allenby 274 −14 Playoff Nick Price Cog Hill Lemont, Illinois
Motorola Western Open
1999 Tiger Woods (2) 273 −15 3 strokes Mike Weir Cog Hill Lemont, Illinois
1998 Joe Durant 271 −17 2 strokes Vijay Singh Cog Hill Lemont, Illinois
1997 Tiger Woods 275 −13 3 strokes Frank Nobilo Cog Hill Lemont, Illinois
1996 Steve Stricker 270 −18 8 strokes Billy Andrade
Jay Don Blake
Cog Hill Lemont, Illinois
1995 Billy Mayfair 279 −9 1 stroke Jay Haas
Justin Leonard
Jeff Maggert
Scott Simpson
Cog Hill Lemont, Illinois
1994 Nick Price (2) 277 −11 1 stroke Greg Kraft Cog Hill Lemont, Illinois
Sprint Western Open
1993 Nick Price 269 −19 5 strokes Greg Norman Cog Hill Lemont, Illinois
Centel Western Open
1992 Ben Crenshaw 276 −12 1 stroke Greg Norman Cog Hill Lemont, Illinois
1991 Russ Cochran 275 −13 2 strokes Greg Norman Cog Hill Lemont, Illinois
1990 Wayne Levi 275 −13 4 strokes Payne Stewart Butler National Oak Brook, Illinois
Beatrice Western Open
1989 Mark McCumber (2) 275 −13 Playoff Peter Jacobsen Butler National Oak Brook, Illinois
1988 Jim Benepe 278 −10 1 stroke Peter Jacobsen Butler National Oak Brook, Illinois
1987 D. A. Weibring 207 −9 1 stroke Larry Nelson
Greg Norman
Butler National Oak Brook, Illinois
Western Open
1986 Tom Kite 286 −2 Playoff Fred Couples
David Frost
Nick Price
Butler National Oak Brook, Illinois
1985 Scott Verplank (a) 279 −9 Playoff Jim Thorpe Butler National Oak Brook, Illinois
1984 Tom Watson (3) 280 −8 Playoff Greg Norman Butler National Oak Brook, Illinois
1983 Mark McCumber 284 −4 1 stroke Tom Watson Butler National Oak Brook, Illinois
1982 Tom Weiskopf 276 −12 1 stroke Larry Nelson Butler National Oak Brook, Illinois
1981 Ed Fiori 277 −11 4 strokes Jim Colbert
Greg Powers
Jim Simons
Butler National Oak Brook, Illinois
1980 Scott Simpson 281 −7 5 strokes Andy Bean Butler National Oak Brook, Illinois
1979 Larry Nelson 286 −2 Playoff Ben Crenshaw Butler National Oak Brook, Illinois
1978 Andy Bean 282 −6 Playoff Bill Rogers Butler National Oak Brook, Illinois
1977 Tom Watson (2) 283 −5 1 stroke Wally Armstrong
Johnny Miller
Butler National Oak Brook, Illinois
1976 Al Geiberger 288 +4 1 stroke Joe Porter Butler National Oak Brook, Illinois
1975 Hale Irwin 283 −1 1 stroke Bobby Cole Butler National Oak Brook, Illinois
1974 Tom Watson 287 +3 2 strokes J. C. Snead
Tom Weiskopf
Butler National Oak Brook, Illinois
1973 Billy Casper (4) 272 −12 1 stroke Larry Hinson
Hale Irwin
Midlothian Midlothian, Illinois
1972 Jim Jamieson 271 −13 6 strokes Labron Harris Jr. Sunset Ridge Northfield, Illinois
1971 Bruce Crampton 279 −5 2 strokes Bobby Nichols Olympia Fields Olympia Fields, Illinois
1970 Hugh Royer Jr. 273 −11 1 stroke Dale Douglass Beverly Chicago, Illinois
1969 Billy Casper (3) 276 −8 4 strokes Rocky Thompson Midlothian Midlothian, Illinois
1968 Jack Nicklaus (2) 273 −11 3 strokes Miller Barber Olympia Fields Olympia Fields, Illinois
1967 Jack Nicklaus 274 −10 2 strokes Doug Sanders Beverly Chicago, Illinois
1966 Billy Casper (2) 283 −1 3 strokes Gay Brewer Medinah Medinah, Illinois
1965 Billy Casper 270 −14 2 strokes Jack McGowan
Chi-Chi Rodríguez
Tam O'Shanter Niles, Illinois
1964 Chi-Chi Rodríguez 268 −16 1 stroke Arnold Palmer Tam O'Shanter Niles, Illinois
1963 Arnold Palmer (2) 280 −4 Playoff Julius Boros
Jack Nicklaus
Beverly Chicago, Illinois
1962 Jacky Cupit 281 −3 2 strokes Billy Casper Medinah Medinah, Illinois
1961 Arnold Palmer 271 −13 2 strokes Sam Snead Blythefield Belmont, Michigan
1960 Stan Leonard 278 −10 Playoff Art Wall Jr. Western Redford, Michigan
1959 Mike Souchak 272 −8 1 stroke Arnold Palmer Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
1958 Doug Sanders 275 −13 1 stroke Dow Finsterwald Red Run Royal Oak, Michigan
1957 Doug Ford 279 −5 Playoff George Bayer
Gene Littler
Billy Maxwell
Plum Hollow Southfield, Michigan
1956 Mike Fetchick 284 −4 Playoff Doug Ford
Jay Hebert
Don January
Presidio San Francisco, California
1955 Cary Middlecoff 272 −16 2 strokes Mike Souchak Portland Portland, Oregon
1954 Lloyd Mangrum (2) 277 −7 Playoff Ted Kroll Kenwood Cincinnati, Ohio
1953 Dutch Harrison 278 −2 4 strokes Ed Furgol
Fred Haas
Lloyd Mangrum
Bellerive Saint Louis, Missouri
1952 Lloyd Mangrum 274 −6 8 strokes Bobby Locke Westwood Saint Louis, Missouri
1951 Marty Furgol 270 −10 1 stroke Cary Middlecoff Davenport Pleasant Valley, Iowa
1950 Sam Snead (2) 282 −2 1 stroke Jim Ferrier
Dutch Harrison
Brentwood Los Angeles, California
1949 Sam Snead 268 −20 4 strokes Cary Middlecoff Keller Saint Paul, Minnesota
1948 Ben Hogan (2) 281 −7 Playoff Ed Oliver Brookfield Clarence, New York
1947 Johnny Palmer 270 −18 1 stroke Bobby Locke
Ed Oliver
Salt Lake City Salt Lake City, Utah
1946 Ben Hogan 271 −17 4 strokes Lloyd Mangrum Sunset Saint Louis, Missouri
1943–1945: No tournament due to World War II
1942 Herman Barron 276 −8 2 strokes Henry Picard Phoenix Phoenix, Arizona
1941 Ed Oliver 275 −9 3 strokes Ben Hogan
Byron Nelson
Phoenix Phoenix, Arizona
1940 Jimmy Demaret 293 +9 Playoff Toney Penna River Oaks Houston, Texas
1939 Byron Nelson 281 −2 1 stroke Lloyd Mangrum Medinah Medinah, Illinois
1938 Ralph Guldahl (3) 279 −5 7 strokes Sam Snead Westwood Saint Louis, Missouri
1937 Ralph Guldahl (2) 288 E Playoff Horton Smith Canterbury Beachwood, Ohio
1936 Ralph Guldahl 274 −10 3 strokes Ray Mangrum Davenport Pleasant Valley, Iowa
1935 Johnny Revolta 290 +6 4 strokes Willie Goggin South Bend South Bend, Indiana
1934 Harry Cooper 274 −14 Playoff Ky Laffoon Country Club of Peoria Peoria Heights, Illinois
1933 Macdonald Smith (3) 282 E 6 strokes Tommy Armour Olympia Fields Olympia Fields, Illinois
1932 Walter Hagen (5) 287 −1 1 stroke Olin Dutra Canterbury Beachwood, Ohio
1931 Ed Dudley 280 −4 4 strokes Walter Hagen Miami Valley Dayton, Ohio
1930 Gene Sarazen 278 −10 7 strokes Al Espinosa Indianwood Lake Orion, Michigan
1929 Tommy Armour 273 −7 8 strokes Horton Smith Ozaukee Mequon, Wisconsin
1928 Abe Espinosa 291 +3 3 strokes Johnny Farrell North Shore Glenview, Illinois
1927 Walter Hagen (4) 281 −1 4 strokes Al Espinosa
Bill Mehlhorn
Olympia Fields Olympia Fields, Illinois
1926 Walter Hagen (3) 279 −1 9 strokes Harry Cooper
Gene Sarazen
Highland Indianapolis, Indiana
1925 Macdonald Smith (2) 281 −7 6 strokes Leo Diegel
Johnny Farrell
Emmet French
Walter Hagen
Bill Mehlhorn
Youngstown Youngstown, Ohio
1924 Bill Mehlhorn 293 +5 8 strokes Al Watrous Calumet Homewood, Illinois
1923 Jock Hutchison (2) 281 −3 6 strokes Bobby Cruickshank
Leo Diegel
Walter Hagen
Joe Kirkwood, Sr.
Colonial Cordova, Tennessee
1922 Mike Brady 291 +3 10 strokes Laurie Ayton, Snr
Jock Hutchison
Oakland Hills Bloomfield Hills, Michigan
1921 Walter Hagen (2) 287 +3 5 strokes Jock Hutchison Oakwood Cleveland Heights, Ohio
1920 Jock Hutchison 296 +4 1 stroke Jim Barnes
Clarence Hackney
Harry Hampton
Olympia Fields Olympia Fields, Illinois
1919 Jim Barnes (3) 283 +3 3 strokes Leo Diegel Mayfield Lyndhurst, Ohio
1918: No tournament due to World War I
1917 Jim Barnes (2) 283 −5 2 strokes Walter Hagen Westmoreland Wilmette, Illinois
1916 Walter Hagen 286 −2 1 stroke Jock Hutchison
George Sargent
Blue Mound Milwaukee, Wisconsin
1915 Tom McNamara 304 +4 2 strokes Alex Cunningham Glen Oak Glen Ellyn, Illinois
1914 Jim Barnes 293 −3 1 stroke Willie Kidd Interlachen Edina, Minnesota
1913 John McDermott 295 −1 7 strokes Mike Brady Memphis Memphis, Tennessee
1912 Macdonald Smith 299 +11 3 strokes Alex Robertson Idlewild Flossmoor, Illinois
1911 Bobby Simpson (2) 2 and 1 Tom McNamara Kent Grand Rapids, Michigan
1910 Chick Evans (a) 6 and 5 George Simpson Beverly Chicago, Illinois
1909 Willie Anderson (4) 288 9 strokes Stewart Gardner Skokie Glencoe, Illinois
1908 Willie Anderson (3) 299 1 stroke Fred McLeod Normandie Saint Louis, Missouri
1907 Bobby Simpson 307 2 strokes Willie Anderson
Fred McLeod
Hinsdale Clarendon Hills, Illinois
1906 Alex Smith (2) 306 3 strokes Jack Hobens Homewood Flossmoor, Illinois
1905 Arthur Smith 278 2 strokes James Maiden Cincinnati Cincinnati, Ohio
1904 Willie Anderson (2) 304 4 strokes Alex Smith Kent Grand Rapids, Michigan
1903 Alex Smith 318 2 strokes Laurie Auchterlonie
David Brown
Milwaukee River Hills, Wisconsin
1902 Willie Anderson 299 5 strokes Willie Smith
Bert Way
Euclid Cleveland Heights, Ohio
1901 Laurie Auchterlonie 160 2 strokes David Bell Midlthian Midlothian, Illinois
1900: No tournament
1899 Willie Smith 156 Playoff Laurie Auchterlonie Glen View Golf, Illinois

References

  1. ^ "Scoreboard: PGA Tour". Eugene Register-Guard. July 10, 2006. p. D4.
  2. ^ a b c Lis, Walter (September 6, 2011). "Western Open Golf Tournament". ChicagoGolfReport.com. Retrieved June 11, 2016.
  3. ^ "History of the PGA Tour", by Al Barkow, 1989.
  4. ^ a b Hanley, Reid (September 12, 1990). "Western moves to Cog Hill". Chicago Tribune. p. 3, sec. 4.
  5. ^ "Western to move to Cog Hill". Los Angeles Times. Associated Press. September 12, 1990. Retrieved March 8, 2017.
  6. ^ Green, Bob (July 4, 1991). "Norman's entry helps Western". The Item. (Sumter, South Carolina). Associated Press. p. 3B.
  7. ^ Husar, John; Jauss, Bill (June 28, 1975). "Lightning fells 3 at Western Open". Chicago Tribune. p. 1, sec. 1.
  8. ^ Husar, John (June 29, 1975). "Heard may still play in Western". Chicago Tribune. p. 6, sec. 3.
  9. ^ "Trevino's survival a minor miracle". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). Associated Press. June 29, 1975. p. 1B.
  10. ^ "Trevino, two others survive lightning bolts". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). Associated Press. June 28, 1975. p. 1B.
  11. ^ "Lightning hits Trevino, 4 other golfers". Milwaukee Journal. press dispatches. June 28, 1975. p. 11.
  12. ^ "Lightning is a big shocker for 3 golfers". Miami News. Chicago Daily News Service. June 28, 1975. p. 3B.

41°40′37″N 87°57′07″W / 41.677°N 87.952°W / 41.677; -87.952