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1926 U.S. Open (golf)


FieldValue
name1926 U.S. Open
datesJuly 8–10, 1926
locationColumbus, Ohio
courseScioto Country Club
orgUSGA
formatStroke play − 72 holes
par72
yardage6736 yd
field148 players, 63 after cut
cut159 (+15)
purse$2,000
winners_share$500
*Awarded to runner-up*
championUSA Bobby Jones (a)
score293 (+5)
previous[1925](1925-u-s-open-golf)
next[1927](1927-u-s-open-golf)

Awarded to runner-up |USA |USA Ohio The 1926 U.S. Open was the 30th U.S. Open, held July 8–10 at Scioto Country Club in Columbus, Ohio. Noted amateur Bobby Jones, winner of the British Open two weeks earlier, won the second of his four U.S. Opens, one stroke ahead of runner-up Joe Turnesa.

After rounds of 70-79-71, Jones was three strokes behind third round leader Turnesa, who unraveled on the last nine on Saturday afternoon, with five bogeys in six holes. He managed to birdie the final hole for a 77 and 294 total for solo second (and the winner's share of the purse). Jones got off to a slow start, with bogeys at three of his first five holes, then birdied the 7th and ran off a streak of nine consecutive fours. Needing a par on the par-5 18th to tie (and force a playoff round), Jones hit a 310 yd tee shot, then followed with an approach to the green, leaving 15 ft for eagle. Two-putting for birdie, Jones carded a one-over 73 to best Turnesa by a stroke. and led after both of the first two rounds, but was ten over par on Saturday and was four strokes back, in a four-way tie for third.

Jones became the first player to win the U.S. Open and British Open in the same year, and he won both again four years later in 1930, during his grand slam year. Later double Open winners were Gene Sarazen (1932), Ben Hogan (1953), Lee Trevino (1971), Tom Watson (1982), and Tiger Woods (2000). While Turnesa never won a major, he did finish second twice and his brother Jim won the PGA Championship in 1952. Another brother, Willie, won the U.S. Amateur twice and the British Amateur once. In total, eight Turnesa brothers played on the PGA Tour.

This was also the first year since 1919 that the tournament was extended to three days, because of the number of entries and the size of the gallery. The first two rounds were now played over two days, Thursday and Friday, with a 36-hole cut. The final two rounds continued to be played on one day, Saturday. This format continued through 1964, except for the following year in 1927, when it was held Tuesday through Thursday (with a Friday playoff). The final round in 1959 was on Sunday due to weather delays.

Scioto was only ten years old at the time, and its club pro was George Sargent, the 1909 champion, who did not compete. It later hosted the Ryder Cup in 1931 and the PGA Championship in 1950. Scioto is also noteworthy as the club where Jack Nicklaus learned to play as a youth in the 1950s, under the tutelage of Jack Grout.

Round summaries

First round

Thursday, July 8, 1926

PlacePlayerScoreTo par
1USA Bill Mehlhorn68−4
T2USA Bobby Jones (a)70−2
USA John Junor
T4USA Al Espinosa71−1
USA Joe Turnesa
T6USA J.G. Collins72E
USA Pat Doyle
USA Leo Diegel
SCO Willie Macfarlane
USA Dan Williams

Source:

Second round

Friday, July 9, 1926

PlacePlayerScoreTo par
1USA Bill Mehlhorn68-75=143−1
2USA Joe Turnesa71-74=145+1
3USA Dan Williams72-74=146+2
T4USA Leo Diegel72-76=148+4
USA George McLean74-74=148
T6USA Jack Forrester76-73=149+5
USA Bobby Jones (a)70-79=149
T8USA Al Espinosa71-79=150+6
USA Chick Evans (a)75-75=150
USA Walter Hagen73-77=150
USA John Junor70-80=150
USA Willie Klein76-74=150

Source:

Third round

Saturday, July 10, 1926 (morning)

PlacePlayerScoreTo par
1USA Joe Turnesa71-74-72=217+1
2USA Bill Mehlhorn68-75-76=219+3
3USA Bobby Jones (a)70-79-71=220+4
4USA Willie Hunter75-77-69=221+5
5USA Leo Diegel72-76-75=223+7
T6USA Johnny Farrell76-79-69=224+8
USA Walter Hagen73-77-74=224
8USA Willie Klein76-74-75=225+9
T9USA Tommy Armour76-76-74=226+10
USA Macdonald Smith82-76-68=226
USA Dan Williams72-74-80=226

Source:

Final round

Saturday, July 10, 1926 (afternoon)

PlacePlayerScoreTo parMoney ($)
1USA **Bobby Jones** (a)70-79-71-73=293+50
2USA Joe Turnesa71-74-72-77=294+6500
T3USA Leo Diegel72-76-75-74=297+9188
USA Johnny Farrell76-79-69-73=297
USA Bill Mehlhorn68-75-76-78=297
USA Gene Sarazen78-77-72-70=297
7USA Walter Hagen73-77-74-74=298+1090
8USA Willie Hunter75-77-69-79=300+1280
T9USA Tommy Armour76-76-74-75=301+1368
USA Willie Klein76-74-75-76=301
USA Macdonald Smith82-76-68-75=301
USA Dan Williams72-74-80-75=301

Source:

Amateurs: Jones (+5), Evans (+14), Johnston (+21), MacDonald (+22), Shute (+28), Westland (+28).

Scorecard

Final round

Hole123456789101112131415161718
Par444345453445434435
USA Jones+5+5+6+6+7+7+6+6+6+6+6+5+5+6+6+6+6+5
USA Turnesa+2+2+3+3+4+4+3+3+2+2+2+3+4+5+5+6+7+6
USA Melhorn+3+3+4+5+6+6+6+6+6+6+7+9+8+8+8+9+9+9

Cumulative tournament scores, relative to par

Double Eagle --EagleBirdieBogeyDouble bogeyTriple bogey+

Source:

References

References

  1. (July 10, 1926). "Bobby Jones wins National Open golf title". Youngstown Vindicator.
  2. (July 8, 1926). "National golf championships open in Columbus". St. Petersburg Times.
  3. Krum, Morrow. (July 8, 1926). "148 tee off for Open golf title today". Chicago Daily Tribune.
  4. Pegler, Westbrook. (July 11, 1926). "Jones' victory comes after 18 hole duel". Chicago Sunday Tribune.
  5. Sixty, Billy. (July 11, 1926). "Jones wins National Open title by one stroke". Milwaukee Journal.
  6. Krum, Morrow. (July 9, 1926). "Melhorn's record 168 tops golf Open". Chicago Daily Tribune.
  7. (July 9, 1926). "Mehlhorn leads for Open title; Junor and Jones tied for second". Spokesman-Review.
  8. Krum, Morrow. (July 10, 1926). "Mehlhorn holds golf lead with 143". Chicago Daily Tribune.
  9. (July 10, 1926). "Bill Mehlhorn retains his lead in National Open golf tourney". Spokesman-Review.
  10. (July 7, 1926). "Scioto Golf Course". Eugene Guard.
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