The Open Championship ended on this date in 1989 in the first four-hole aggregate playoff ever contested for golf’s oldest major, held for the 118th time, at Royal Troon in Scotland. Mark Calcavecchia won over Wayne Grady and Greg Norman.
In a remarkable battle featuring two global titans, Seve Ballesteros won the Open Championship on this date in 1984 after making a birdie on the 18th hole, just ahead of Tom Watson, who made a disheartening bogey from the fairway on The Road Hole 17th. Some speculate the outcome contributed to Watson’s inability to win another major in his prime years.
On this date in 1985, Sandy Lyle won the Open Championship at Royal St. George’s in Sandwich, England. He shot two over par overall and won by one shot over Payne Stewart, and three years later Lyle would win the Masters.
On this date in 1958, history was made for the PGA Championship and Dow Finsterwald. It was the first year the PGA was competed at stroke play after previously at match play. Finsterwald, a close friend of Arnold Palmer’s who was almost exactly the same age, won by two shots over Billy Casper at Llanerch Country Club in Havertown, Pennsylvania. It was also the first PGA played by Palmer and he tied for 40th.
On this date in 1981, The 110th Open Championship was won by Bill Rogers at Royal St. George's Golf Club in Sandwich, England. Rogers’ only major championship was won by four strokes over runner-up Bernhard Langer.
On this date in 1988, Seve Ballesteros won his third Open Championship, edging Nick Price by two at Royal Lytham and St. Annes. Seve shot 65 to beat the 54-hole leader Price. The championship was forced to finish on a Monday for the first time ever due to heavy rain on Saturday.
On this date in 1983, Tom Watson won his final major, his fifth Open Championship, at the age of 33. The victory came at Birkdale by one shot. Watson could have won the next year at St. Andrews but was edged out by Seve Ballesteros.
It’s been 10 years already since Australian Adam Scott, he of the picture-perfect swing, won the Masters for his first major victory. He is running out of prime years to win more. On this date he celebrates his 43rd birthday. Flawless as a ball striker, Scott has been held back in his career with inconsistent putting. Perhaps the slower greens at the Open Championship this upcoming week will help him.
At age 21, Bobby Jones won his first of four U.S. Opens on this date in 1923 when he beat Bobby Cruickshank in a playoff, 76-78, at Inwood Country Club in New York.
On this date in 1973, Tom Weiskopf won his only major, the Open Championship, in a 12-under-par performance at Troon Golf Club, three ahead of Johnny Miller and four up on Jack Nicklaus.
On this date in 1937, Charles Coody was born in Stamford, Texas. The sturdy 6-foot-2 golfer won the 1971 Masters, winning while occasionally tugging on his socks, a nervous habit of his akin to Arnold Palmer hitching up his pants.
On this day in 1969, Tony Jacklin ended an 18-year drought by an English golfer when he won the Open Championship by two shots at Royal Lytham & St. Annes. Jacklin shot four under par to beat Bob Charles of New Zealand, the Open winner of 1963, who was also the first left-handed major champion.
On Sunday, Honolulu, Hawaiian native Allisen Corpuz, 25, won the first U.S. Women’s Open played at Pebble Beach. On this date in 1960, there was another first for Hawaii. The 35th U.S. Amateur Public Links Championship began on this date in Honolulu on the Ala Wai Golf Course, making it the first USGA championship played outside the continental U.S.
On this day in 1971, Lee Trevino won an exciting Open Championship, shooting 278, one shot better than Taiwan’s Lu Liang-Huan and two better than English favorite Tony Jacklin. Mr. Lu was a unique crowd favorite who doffed his hat constantly in recognition of the applause he received for a spirited run at Royal Birkdale in Southport, England. The victory gave Trevino both the U.S. and Open titles that year, just the sixth person in golf history to win both in the same year.
On this date in 1965, Australian-born and eventual World Golf Hall of Famer Peter Thomson won his fifth Open Championship, winning at Birkdale with a score of 285, two ahead of Brian Huggett and Christy O’Connor, Sr.
On this date in 1933, Denny Shute won the Open Championship, at St. Andrews’ Old Course, winning a 36-hole playoff with fellow Yank Craig Wood by five shots.
On this date, English golf great Tony Jacklin turns 79, having been born in 1944. The World Golf Hall of Famer won two majors and was an influential figure in the Ryder Cup, as both a player and captain.
On this date in the 1931 U.S. Open, history was made when the longest playoff in championship history came to an end when Billy Burke won a playoff at Inverness. He and George Von Elm were tied after the then 36-hole playoff on July 5, and then played 36 more on this day. Burke barely won, 148-149. The 72 holes were the most playoff holes ever.
On this date in 1970, Donna Caponi won her second straight U.S. Women’s Open. Her 287 total of one-under-par overall was one better than two players at Muskogee Country Club in Oklahoma.
The Associated Press lede said it all about the event on this date in 1965: NORTHFIELD, N.J. - Carol Mann of Towson, Maryland., shaking off an attack of the jitters, beat out a rallying Kathy Cornelius by two strokes Sunday and won the Women's National Open Golf Championship with a 290 score that stamped her as the sport's new Mickey Wright. The 24-year-old, 6-foot-3 Maryland girl broke into tears after she ran in a four-foot putt for a birdie on the final for an even-par 72. Mrs. Cornelius, 32-year-old Rancho Sane Fe, Calif., mother who led through the first two rounds, had finished a few moments before with a 69 for 292. It was Miss Mann's second tournament victory in as many weeks and made her the leading contender for the throne vacated by the long-hitting Miss Wright.