Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

1947 Ryder Cup

Golf tournament in the United States


Golf tournament in the United States

FieldValue
nameRyder Cup
year1947
datesNovember 1–2, 1947
venuePortland Golf Club
locationPortland, Oregon
homeUSA
awayGreat Britain
homecaptainBen Hogan
awaycaptainHenry Cotton
homescore11
awayscore1
resultUnited States wins

|USA Golf Club |USA Oregon Golf Club The 7th Ryder Cup Matches were held November 1–2, 1947 at Portland Golf Club in Portland, Oregon, marking a resumption of the competition after a full decade. World War II forced cancellations from 1939 to 1945; the last competition was in 1937. The United States overwhelmed the British team, 11–1.

An invitation to renew the Ryder Cup was sent by the American P.G.A. in November 1946, which was accepted by the British P.G.A. the next month. However, it was not until August 1947 that the dates and venue were agreed.

The revival of the Ryder Cup in 1947 was initiated by Portland businessman Robert A. Hudson, who paid for the expenses of the teams and chaired the event. He even met the British team in New York City, threw a lavish party at the Waldorf Astoria hotel, and accompanied them on the four-day rail journey across the U.S. to Portland.

The course had hosted the stroke play Portland Open on the PGA Tour in 1944 and 1945, won by Sam Snead and Ben Hogan, and the match play PGA Championship in August 1946, won by Hogan.

The American team won all four matches on the opening day and continued to dominate by winning all but one singles match. The only British victory in the competition came when Sam King beat Herman Keiser 4 & 3.

Played in the Pacific Northwest in November in wind and rain, soft course conditions prevailed as a week-long rain preceded the event. The next several matches in the U.S. were played in more southerly venues.

Format

The Ryder Cup is a match play event, with each match worth one point. From 1927 through 1959, the format consisted of 4 foursome (alternate shot) matches on the first day and 8 singles matches on the second day, for a total of 12 points. Therefore, 6 points were required to win the Cup. All matches were played to a maximum of 36 holes.

Teams

Source:

This was the first of only two Ryder Cups for Hogan as a player and the second and final appearance for Byron Nelson, later the non-playing captain in 1965. Hogan was to be a non-playing captain in 1949 and 1967.

NameAgePrevious
Ryder CupsMatchesW–L–HWinning
percentage
Ben Hogan – captain350Rookie
Herman Barron370Rookie
Jimmy Demaret370Rookie
Dutch Harrison370Rookie
Herman Keiser330Rookie
Lloyd Mangrum330Rookie
Byron Nelson35121–1–050.00
Ed Oliver320Rookie
Sam Snead35111–0–0100.00
Lew Worsham300Rookie

In January 1947 the British P.G.A. appointed a selection committee of five. This committee included three ex-Ryder Cup players: Bill Davies, George Duncan and Charles Whitcombe. In early August they announced a list of 14 players from which the final 10 would be chosen. The winner of the News of the World Match Play would also be included in the list. Later in September two more players were selected: Green and Lees, to which would be added the winner of the Match Play Championship or Max Faulkner if the winner of that tournament should already be in the team or ineligible. The final place fell to Faulkner on September 26 when three of the semi-finalists in the Match Play Championship were already in the team and the fourth (Flory Van Donck, a Belgian) was ineligible.

The British team was accompanied by Commander R.C.T. Roe, Secretary of the British P.G.A., who acted as manager of the team. They left from Southampton for New York on the Queen Mary on October 18.

NameAgePrevious
Ryder CupsMatchesW–L–HWinning
percentage
ENG Henry Cotton – captain40242–2–050.00
SCO Jimmy Adams370Rookie
NIR Fred Daly360Rookie
ENG Max Faulkner310Rookie
ENG Eric Green390Rookie
ENG Reg Horne390Rookie
ENG Sam King36110–0–150.00
ENG Arthur Lees390Rookie
WAL Dai Rees34121–0–175.00
ENG Charlie Ward360Rookie

Saturday's foursome matches

GBRResultsUSA0Overall4
Cotton/LeesUSA 10 & 9**Oliver/Worsham**
Daly/WardUSA 6 & 5**Snead/Mangrum**
Adams/FaulknerUSA 2 up**Hogan/Demaret**
Rees/KingUSA 2 & 1**Nelson/Barron**
0Session4

18 hole scores: Oliver/Worsham: 6 up, Snead/Mangrum: 6 up, Adams/Faulkner: 2 up, Rees/King: 1 up.

Sunday's singles matches

GBRResultsUSA1Overall11
Fred DalyUSA 5 & 4**Dutch Harrison**
Jimmy AdamsUSA 3 & 2**Lew Worsham**
Max FaulknerUSA 6 & 5**Lloyd Mangrum**
Charlie WardUSA 4 & 3**Ed Oliver**
Arthur LeesUSA 2 & 1**Byron Nelson**
Henry CottonUSA 5 & 4**Sam Snead**
Dai ReesUSA 3 & 2**Jimmy Demaret**
**Sam King**GBR 4 & 3Herman Keiser
1Session7

Individual player records

Each entry refers to the win–loss–half record of the player.

Source:

United States

PlayerPointsOverallSinglesFoursomes
Herman Barron11–0–00–0–0
Jimmy Demaret22–0–01–0–0
Dutch Harrison11–0–01–0–0
Ben Hogan11–0–00–0–0
Herman Keiser00–1–00–1–0
Lloyd Mangrum22–0–01–0–0
Byron Nelson22–0–01–0–0
Ed Oliver22–0–01–0–0
Sam Snead22–0–01–0–0
Lew Worsham22–0–01–0–0

Great Britain

PlayerPointsOverallSinglesFoursomes
Jimmy Adams00–2–00–1–00–1–0
Henry Cotton00–2–00–1–00–1–0
Fred Daly00–2–00–1–00–1–0
Max Faulkner00–2–00–1–00–1–0
Sam King11–1–01–0–00–1–0
Arthur Lees00–2–00–1–00–1–0
Dai Rees00–2–00–1–00–1–0
Charlie Ward00–2–00–1–00–1–0

Eric Green and Reg Horne did not play in any matches.

References

References

  1. Newland, Russ. (November 3, 1947). "U.S. 11-1 win most decisive". Miami News.
  2. (November 3, 1947). "Ryder loss brings 'beef'". Reading Eagle.
  3. "The Ryder Cup". ''The Times'', Wednesday, November 20, 1946; pg. 2; Issue 50613.
  4. "Ryder Cup Match in 1947". ''The Times'', Thursday, December 12, 1946; pg. 2; Issue 50632.
  5. "Ryder Cup Match in November". ''The Times'', Wednesday, August 13, 1947; pg. 2; Issue 50838.
  6. "The Ryder Cup". ''The Times'', Wednesday, August 14, 1947; pg. 6; Issue 50839.
  7. Achenbach, James. (September 27, 2010). "Hudson responsible for saving Ryder Cup".
  8. (1978). "Hall of Fame: Robert A. Hudson, Sr.". PNGA.
  9. Fagan, Robert. "The greatest Ryder Cup ever played and the man who saved it!". The A Position.
  10. (November 1, 1947). "Ryder Cup matches begin over rain-soaked coarse". Reading Eagle.
  11. Wood, Hal. (November 3, 1947). "British Ryder Cuppers smothered in singles play; lose Cup matches, 11-1". Eugene Register-Guard.
  12. "2016 Ryder Cup Media Guide".
  13. "Ryder Cup Selectors". ''The Times'', Friday, January 17, 1947; pg. 8; Issue 50661.
  14. In early September they announced the first seven members of the team: Cotton (captain), Daly, Rees, King, Adams, Ward and Horne. They also added two new names to the list of possible players (Arthur Lees and [[Laurie Ayton, Jnr]]), leaving nine or ten players competing for the remaining three places."Players for the Ryder Cup". ''The Times'', Friday, September 5, 1947; pg. 2; Issue 50858.
  15. "The Ryder Cup Team". ''The Times'', Saturday, September 20, 1947; pg. 2; Issue 50871.
  16. "M. Faulkner in Ryder Cup Team". ''The Times'', Saturday, September 27, 1947; pg. 6; Issue 50877.
  17. "Departure of Ryder Cup Team". ''The Times'', Monday, October 20, 1947; pg. 2; Issue 50896.
  18. "The Ryder Cup". ''The Times'', Monday, November 3, 1947; pg. 2; Issue 50908.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 1947 Ryder Cup — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report