Buick Open

Buick Open
Tournament information
LocationGrand Blanc, Michigan
Established1958
Course(s)Warwick Hills Golf and Country Club
Par72
Length7,085 yards (6,479 m)
Tour(s)PGA Tour
FormatStroke play
Prize fundUS$5,100,000
Month playedJuly/August
Final year2009
Tournament record score
Aggregate262 Robert Wrenn (1987)
To par−26 as above
Final champion
Tiger Woods
Location map
Warwick Hills G&CC
Location in the United States
Warwick Hills G&CC
Location in Michigan

The Buick Open was a PGA Tour golf tournament from 1958 to 2009. In 2007, the tournament was held at the end of June, a change from its traditional spot between The Open Championship and the PGA Championship. Regardless, many prominent players used it as a "tune-up" for the subsequent major.

For the event's first decade, the Buick Open Invitational was played at Warwick Hills Golf and Country Club in Grand Blanc, Michigan. After 1969, professional golf events in the area fell off the PGA Tour schedule and a series of pro-ams and other similarly unofficial events took place, mostly at Flint Golf Club in Flint, Michigan.

Flint native, and PGA touring professional Larry Mancour had returned to Michigan to play in the Buick Open and stayed to build the Grand Blanc Golf Club. He then added nine holes at the Flint Elks Golf Club where he remained the professional for 20 years. He rescued the Buick Open when General Motors dropped sponsorship of the tournament. With local Buick dealers Mancour started the Little Buick Open in 1969. It drew players and fans and led to the rebirth of the Buick Open in 1977.

The Buick Open officially made its return to the PGA Tour in 1977 at the Flint Elks Club, and in 1978 the event returned to Warwick Hills G&CC, where it remained until its demise.

The Associated Press reported July 28, 2009, that General Motors would end its sponsorship of the Buick Open after the 2009 tournament, in order to devote its marketing resources to cars and trucks.[1] The PGA Tour replaced the tournament with the Greenbrier Classic at The Greenbrier in White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia.[2]

As in the 1970s, a series of pro-ams and other unofficial events now take place in Grand Blanc, with the AJGA's Randy Wise Open taking place at Warwick Hills and most pro-ams and a golf festival at the Jewel of Grand Blanc (the former Grand Blanc Golf Club).

In 2014, an unrelated tournament with the same name was started in China. The event is played on PGA Tour China.

In 2018, the former General Motors financing arm, now Ally Bank, returned to Warwick Hills to sponsor a PGA Tour Champions event, The Ally Challenge. Jim Furyk (2003, 2020) and Vijay Singh (2004, 2005, 2023) have won both events.

Long hitters

In its final years, the tournament was dominated by long hitters. Tiger Woods, Vijay Singh, Brian Bateman, and Kenny Perry combined for eight wins in its final nine years. Several other players ranked highly in driving distance finished second during that span, including Woods, Jason Gore, Geoff Ogilvy, Bubba Watson, and John Daly.[3]

Winners

Year Tour[a] Winner Score To par Margin of
victory
Runner(s)-up Winner's
share ($)
Buick Open
2009 PGAT Tiger Woods (3) 268 −20 3 strokes Greg Chalmers
John Senden
Roland Thatcher
918,000
2008 PGAT Kenny Perry (2) 269 −19 1 stroke Woody Austin
Bubba Watson
900,000
2007 PGAT Brian Bateman 273 −15 1 stroke Woody Austin
Jason Gore
Justin Leonard
882,000
2006 PGAT Tiger Woods (2) 264 −24 3 strokes Jim Furyk 864,000
2005 PGAT Vijay Singh (3) 264 −24 4 strokes Zach Johnson
Tiger Woods
828,000
2004 PGAT Vijay Singh (2) 265 −23 1 stroke John Daly 810,000
2003 PGAT Jim Furyk 267 −21 2 strokes Briny Baird
Chris DiMarco
Geoff Ogilvy
Tiger Woods
720,000
2002 PGAT Tiger Woods 271 −17 4 strokes Fred Funk
Brian Gay
Mark O'Meara
Esteban Toledo
594,000
2001 PGAT Kenny Perry 263 −25 2 strokes Chris DiMarco
Jim Furyk
558,000
2000 PGAT Rocco Mediate 268 −20 1 stroke Chris Perry 486,000
1999 PGAT Tom Pernice Jr. 270 −18 1 stroke Tom Lehman
Ted Tryba
Bob Tway
432,000
1998 PGAT Billy Mayfair 271 −17 2 strokes Scott Verplank 324,000
1997 PGAT Vijay Singh 273 −15 4 strokes Tom Byrum
Russ Cochran
Ernie Els
Brad Fabel
Naomichi Ozaki
Curtis Strange
270,000
1996 PGAT Justin Leonard 266 −22 5 strokes Chip Beck 216,000
1995 PGAT Woody Austin 270 −18 Playoff Mike Brisky 216,000
1994 PGAT Fred Couples 270 −18 2 strokes Corey Pavin 198,000
1993 PGAT Larry Mize 272 −16 1 stroke Fuzzy Zoeller 180,000
1992 PGAT Dan Forsman 276 −12 Playoff Steve Elkington
Brad Faxon
180,000
1991 PGAT Brad Faxon 271 −17 Playoff Chip Beck 180,000
1990 PGAT Chip Beck 272 −16 1 stroke Mike Donald
Hale Irwin
Fuzzy Zoeller
180,000
1989 PGAT Leonard Thompson 273 −15 1 stroke Billy Andrade
Payne Stewart
Doug Tewell
180,000
1988 PGAT Scott Verplank 268 −20 2 strokes Doug Tewell 126,000
1987 PGAT Robert Wrenn 262 −26 7 strokes Dan Pohl 108,000
1986 PGAT Ben Crenshaw 270 −18 1 stroke J. C. Snead
Doug Tewell
90,000
1985 PGAT Ken Green 268 −20 4 strokes Wayne Grady 81,000
1984 PGAT Denis Watson 271 −17 1 stroke Payne Stewart 72,000
1983 PGAT Wayne Levi 272 −16 1 stroke Isao Aoki
Calvin Peete
63,000
1982 PGAT Lanny Wadkins 273 −15 1 stroke Tom Kite 63,000
1981 PGAT Hale Irwin 277 −11 Playoff Bobby Clampett
Peter Jacobsen
Gil Morgan
63,000
Buick-Goodwrench Open
1980 PGAT Peter Jacobsen 276 −12 1 stroke Billy Kratzert
Mark Lye
45,000
1979 PGAT John Fought 280 −8 Playoff Jim Simons 27,000
1978 PGAT Jack Newton 280 −8 Playoff Mike Sullivan 20,000
Buick Open
1977 PGAT Bobby Cole 271 −17 1 stroke Fred Marti 20,000
1976 Ed Sabo 279 −9 Playoff Randy Erskine 12,000
1975 Spike Kelley 208 −8 1 stroke Randy Erskine
Jim Marshall
Mike McCullough
4,200
Flint Elks Open
1974 Bryan Abbott 136 −8 Playoff Joe Porter 2,000
Lake Michigan Classic
1973 Wilf Homenuik 215 −1 Playoff Jim Ferriell 3,200
Vern Parsell Buick Open
1972 Gary Groh 273 −15 2 strokes John Mahaffey 4,000
Buick Open Invitational
1970–1971: No tournament
1969 PGAT Dave Hill 277 −11 2 strokes Frank Beard 25,000
1968 PGAT Tom Weiskopf 280 −8 1 stroke Mike Hill 25,000
1967 PGAT Julius Boros (2) 283 −5 3 strokes Bob Goalby
R. H. Sikes
Bert Yancey
20,000
1966 PGAT Phil Rodgers 284 −4 2 strokes Johnny Pott
Kermit Zarley
20,000
1965 PGAT Tony Lema (2) 280 −8 2 strokes Johnny Pott 20,000
1964 PGAT Tony Lema 277 −11 1 stroke Dow Finsterwald 8,000
1963 PGAT Julius Boros 274 −14 5 strokes Dow Finsterwald 9,000
1962 PGAT Bill Collins 284 −4 1 stroke Dave Ragan 9,000
1961 PGAT Jack Burke Jr. 284 −4 Playoff Billy Casper
Johnny Pott
9,000
1960 PGAT Mike Souchak 282 −6 1 stroke Gay Brewer
Art Wall Jr.
9,000
1959 PGAT Art Wall Jr. 282 −6 Playoff Dow Finsterwald 9,000
1958 PGAT Billy Casper 285 −3 1 stroke Ted Kroll
Arnold Palmer
9,000

Notes

  1. ^ PGAT − PGA Tour.

References

  1. ^ "AP Source: GM to End Sponsorship of Buick Open". The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-07-28. (Defunct prior to 7/10)
  2. ^ "Greenbrier Classic Announcement". Bloomberg. 2009-08-05. Retrieved 2009-08-05.
  3. ^ "Buick Open Winners". Archived from the original on 2012-09-07. Retrieved 2008-06-23.