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1948 U.S. Open (golf)
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | 1948 U.S. Open |
| dates | June 10–12, 1948 |
| location | Pacific Palisades, California |
| course | Riviera Country Club |
| tour | PGA Tour |
| org | USGA |
| par | 71 |
| yardage | 7020 yd |
| field | 171 players, 57 after cut |
| cut | 148 (+6) |
| purse | $10,000 |
| winners_share | $2,000 |
| champion | USA Ben Hogan |
| score | 276 (−8) |
| previous | [1947](1947-u-s-open-golf) |
| next | [1949](1949-u-s-open-golf) |
|USA |USA California The 1948 U.S. Open was the 48th U.S. Open, held June 10–12 at Riviera Country Club in the northwest Los Angeles district of Pacific Palisades, California. Ben Hogan won the first of his four U.S. Open titles at the course that became known as "Hogan's Alley," as it was his third win at Riviera in less than 18 months. He had won the Los Angeles Open at the course in early 1947 and 1948. It was the third of Hogan's nine major titles; he had won his second PGA Championship a few weeks earlier. He was only the second to win both titles in the same year, joining Gene Sarazen in 1922. Later winners of both were Jack Nicklaus in 1980 and Tiger Woods in 2000.
Although Sam Snead held the lead by a stroke after 36 holes with a record 138, Hogan dominated the final two rounds, shooting 68-69 on Saturday for a total of 276 (−8), two shots ahead of runner-up Jimmy Demaret. Hogan decimated the U.S. Open scoring record (281 by Ralph Guldahl in 1937) by five strokes, The scoring record stood for 19 years, until bested by a stroke by Jack Nicklaus in 1967. Hogan's 8-under-par set a U.S. Open record that stood until 2000, when it was broken by Tiger Woods (12-under, broken by Rory McIlroy in 2011 at 16-under).
Eight months later, Hogan and his wife were involved in a serious automobile accident, a head-on collision with a Greyhound bus in west Texas. The injuries he sustained prevented a defense of his title in 1949 while he recovered. Hogan returned to competition and won the U.S. Open in 1950, 1951, and 1953. (He led after 36 holes in 1952, but finished third.)
Ted Rhodes became the first African-American to play in the U.S. Open since 1913. He opened with 70, made the cut, and finished in 51st place.
This was the first U.S. Open played on the West Coast; the first in the western U.S. was a decade earlier, in 1938 near Denver. The first major played on the West Coast was the PGA Championship in 1929, played at Hillcrest Country Club in Los Angeles. At the time, the course at Riviera was the longest ever for a U.S. Open at 7020 yd.
Babe Didrikson Zaharias became the first woman to attempt to qualify for the U.S. Open, but her application was rejected by the USGA. They stated that the event was intended to be open to men only.
Course layout
Main article: Riviera Country Club
| Hole | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | Out | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | In | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yards | 513 | 466 | 415 | 245 | 432 | 166 | 402 | 385 | 422 | **3,446** | 315 | 569 | 445 | 440 | 180 | 440 | 145 | 585 | 455 | **3,574** | **7,020** |
| Par | 5 | 4 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 4 | 4 | **35** | 4 | 5 | 4 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 3 | 5 | 4 | **36** | **71** |
Source:
Round summaries
First round
Thursday, June 10, 1948
| Place | Player | Score | To par | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| T1 | USA Ben Hogan | 67 | −4 | |
| USA Lew Worsham | ||||
| T3 | USA Ken Rogers (a) | 69 | −2 | |
| USA Sam Snead | ||||
| T5 | ZAF Bobby Locke | 70 | −1 | |
| USA Toney Penna | ||||
| USA Ted Rhodes | ||||
| T8 | USA Skip Alexander | 71 | −1 | |
| USA John Bass | ||||
| USA Charles Congdon | ||||
| USA John Dawson (a) | ||||
| USA Jimmy Demaret | ||||
| AUS Jim Ferrier | ||||
| USA Leland Gibson | ||||
| USA Herman Keiser | ||||
| USA Dave Killen | ||||
| USA Lloyd Mangrum | ||||
| USA Andrew Mills | ||||
| USA Jim Turnesa | ||||
| USA Marvin Ward (a) | ||||
| USA Gene Webb | ||||
| USA Al Zimmerman |
Source:
Second round
Friday, June 11, 1948
| Place | Player | Score | To par |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | USA Sam Snead | 69-69=138 | −4 |
| T2 | USA Ben Hogan | 67-72=139 | −3 |
| ZAF Bobby Locke | 70-69=139 | ||
| 4 | USA Jim Turnesa | 71-69=140 | −2 |
| T5 | USA Charles Congdon | 71-70=141 | −1 |
| USA Jimmy Demaret | 71-70=141 | ||
| USA George Schneiter | 73-68=141 | ||
| USA Frank Stranahan (a) | 72-69=141 | ||
| USA Lew Worsham | 67-74=141 | ||
| T10 | USA Herman Keiser | 71-71=142 | E |
| USA Joe Kirkwood, Jr. | 72-70=142 | ||
| USA Toney Penna | 70-72=142 |
Source:
Third round
Saturday, June 12, 1948 (morning)
| Place | Player | Score | To par | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | USA Ben Hogan | 67-72-68=207 | −6 | |
| 2 | USA Jimmy Demaret | 71-70-68=209 | −4 | |
| 3 | USA Jim Turnesa | 71-69-70=210 | −3 | |
| 4 | USA Sam Snead | 69-69-73=211 | −2 | |
| T5 | USA Charles Congdon | 71-70-71=212 | −1 | |
| ZAF Bobby Locke | 70-69-73=212 | |||
| USA Jug McSpaden | 74-69-69=212 | |||
| USA Lew Worsham | 67-74-71=212 | |||
| 9 | USA Smiley Quick | 73-71-69=213 | E | |
| T10 | USA Herman Barron | 73-70-71=214 | +1 | |
| USA Joe Kirkwood, Jr. | 72-70-72=214 |
Source:
Final round
Saturday, June 12, 1948 (afternoon)
| Place | Player | Score | To par | Money ($) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | USA **Ben Hogan** | 67-72-68-69=276 | −8 | 2,000 |
| 2 | USA Jimmy Demaret | 71-70-68-69=278 | −6 | 1,500 |
| 3 | USA Jim Turnesa | 71-69-70-70=280 | −4 | 1,000 |
| 4 | ZAF Bobby Locke | 70-69-73-70=282 | −2 | 800 |
| 5 | USA Sam Snead | 69-69-73-72=283 | −1 | 600 |
| 6 | USA Lew Worsham | 67-74-71-73=285 | +1 | 500 |
| 7 | USA Herman Barron | 73-70-71-72=286 | +2 | 400 |
| T8 | USA Johnny Bulla | 73-72-75-67=287 | +3 | 300 |
| USA Toney Penna | 70-72-73-72=287 | |||
| USA Smiley Quick | 73-71-69-74=287 |
Source:
References
References
- (June 11, 1948). "Riviera layout for Open championship". St. Petersburg Times.
- (June 13, 1948). "Ben Hogan sets mark, wins Open". Youngstown Vindicator.
- (June 10, 1948). "Worsham begins defense of National Open title". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
- (January 6, 1948). "Ben Hogan captures $10,000 Los Angeles Open meet". Daytona Beach Morning Journal.
- (June 13, 1948). "Ben Hogan sets record in taking U.S. Open". Palm Beach Post.
- (June 14, 1948). "Open golf win goes to Hogan". Spokane Daily Chronicle.
- Bartlett, Charles. (June 12, 1948). "Snead's 138 sets U.S. Open golf record". Chicago Daily Tribune.
- (June 12, 1948). "Snead takes Open golf lead with 138". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
- (June 13, 1948). "Hogan's 276 wins Open, smashes Guldahl mark". Miami News.
- (February 3, 1949). "Ben Hogan is seriously hurt as car, bus collide head on". Milwaukee Journal.
- Phlegar, Ben. (April 7, 1948). "The Babe 'Not Welcome' In National Open Play". [[The Telegraph Herald]].
- Bartlett, Charles. (June 11, 1948). "Hogan, Worsham tie at 67 for U.S. Open Lead". Chicago Daily Tribune.
- (June 12, 1948). "National Open golf scores". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
- Bartlett, Charles. (June 13, 1948). "Ben Hogan's record 276 wins U.S. Open". Chicago Sunday Tribune.
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