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1951 U.S. Open (golf)
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | 1951 U.S. Open |
| dates | June 14–16, 1951 |
| location | Bloomfield Hills, Michigan |
| course | Oakland Hills Country Club |
| South Course | |
| org | USGA |
| tour | PGA Tour |
| par | 70 |
| yardage | 6927 yd |
| field | 160 players, 55 after cut |
| cut | 152 (+12) |
| winners_share | $4,000 |
| champion | USA Ben Hogan |
| score | 287 (+7) |
| previous | [1950](1950-u-s-open-golf) |
| next | [1952](1952-u-s-open-golf) |
South Course |USA |USA Michigan The 1951 U.S. Open was the 51st U.S. Open, held June 14–16 at the South Course of Oakland Hills Country Club in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, a suburb northwest of Detroit. Ben Hogan won his second consecutive U.S. Open title, two strokes ahead of runner-up Clayton Heafner. Hogan missed the 1949 U.S. Open due to an automobile accident; this was his third title in his last three attempts.
The South Course, dubbed "The Monster," played exceptionally tough for the first three rounds. No player was able to break par the first two days, and Jimmy Demaret's 70 was the only score to equal par in Saturday morning's third round. Sam Snead owned the first round lead at 71 (+1), while Bobby Locke led after the second round at 144 (+4) and shared the lead with Demaret after the third at 218 (+8).
Two strokes back after a 71 in the third round on Saturday morning, Hogan played one of the finest rounds in U.S. Open history that afternoon. Even-par on the front nine, he birdied the 10th and 13th holes. After a bogey at 14, he responded with another birdie at 15. At the 72nd hole, Hogan hit his approach shot on the par-4 to 15 ft and sank the birdie putt to post a 67 (−3), the lowest round of the week, one of two sub-par rounds for the round (and championship). His 287 (+7) was two ahead of Heafner, who shot 69, the only other round under 70. At the trophy presentation, Hogan uttered the famous quote: "I'm glad I brought this course—this monster—to its knees."
This was the first U.S. Open that was notably toughened up by the USGA with narrow fairways and deep rough, attributing to "The Monster" nickname. The course also underwent a redesign by Robert Trent Jones prior to the championship, modifying the original Donald Ross design.
The South Course previously hosted the U.S. Open in 1924 and 1937; the winning score in 1937 was 281, sixteen strokes less than in 1924. It later hosted in 1961, 1985, and 1996, and the PGA Championship in 1972, 1979, and 2008.
Since Hogan repeated as champion in 1951, only Curtis Strange (1988, 1989) and Brooks Koepka (2017, 2018) have won consecutive U.S. Open titles.
Course layout
| Hole | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | Out | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | In | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| **Yards** | 440 | 510 | 200 | 448 | 437 | 350 | 381 | 458 | 216 | **3,440** | 448 | 407 | 566 | 169 | 447 | 392 | 405 | 194 | 459 | **3,487** | **6,927** |
| **Par** | 4 | 5 | 3 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 3 | **35** | 4 | 4 | 5 | 3 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 3 | 4 | **35** | **70** |
Round summaries
First round
Thursday, June 14, 1951
| Place | Player | Score | To par |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | USA Sam Snead | 71 | +1 |
| T2 | USA Al Besselink | 72 | +2 |
| USA Clayton Heafner | |||
| T4 | USA Sam Bernardi | 73 | +3 |
| USA Al Brosch | |||
| USA Sammy Byrd | |||
| USA Dutch Harrison | |||
| USA Charles Klein | |||
| ZAF Bobby Locke | |||
| USA Johnny Palmer | |||
| USA Smiley Quick | |||
| USA Paul Runyan | |||
| USA Denny Shute |
Source:
Second round
Friday, June 15, 1951
| Place | Player | Score | To par |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ZAF Bobby Locke | 73-71=144 | +4 |
| 2 | USA Dave Douglas | 75-70=145 | +5 |
| 3 | USA Bo Wininger (a) | 75-71=146 | +6 |
| T4 | USA Al Brosch | 73-74=147 | +7 |
| USA Clayton Heafner | 72-75=147 | ||
| USA Charles Klein | 73-74=147 | ||
| USA Paul Runyan | 73-74=147 | ||
| USA Lew Worsham | 76-71=147 | ||
| T9 | USA Julius Boros | 74-74=148 | +8 |
| USA Jimmy Demaret | 74-74=148 | ||
| USA Fred Hawkins | 76-72=148 | ||
| USA George Kinsman | 75-73=148 | ||
| USA Henry Ransom | 74-74=148 | ||
| USA Earl Stewart | 74-74=148 | ||
| USA Craig Wood | 76-72=148 |
Source:
Third round
Saturday, June 16, 1951 (morning)
| Place | Player | Score | To par | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| T1 | USA Jimmy Demaret | 74-74-70=218 | +8 | |
| ZAF Bobby Locke | 73-71-74=218 | |||
| T3 | USA Julius Boros | 74-74-71=219 | +9 | |
| USA Paul Runyan | 73-74-72=219 | |||
| T5 | USA Dave Douglas | 75-70-75=220 | +10 | |
| USA Clayton Heafner | 72-75-73=220 | |||
| USA Ben Hogan | 76-73-71=220 | |||
| 8 | USA Al Besselink | 72-77-72=221 | +11 | |
| T9 | USA Johnny Revolta | 78-72-72=222 | +12 | |
| USA Skee Riegel | 75-76-71=222 |
Source:
Final round
Saturday, June 16, 1951 (afternoon)
| Place | Player | Score | To par | Money ($) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | USA **Ben Hogan** | 76-73-71-67=287 | +7 | 4,000 |
| 2 | USA Clayton Heafner | 72-75-73-69=289 | +9 | 2,000 |
| 3 | ZAF Bobby Locke | 73-71-74-73=291 | +11 | 1,500 |
| T4 | USA Julius Boros | 74-74-71-74=293 | +13 | 700 |
| USA Lloyd Mangrum | 75-74-74-70=293 | |||
| T6 | USA Al Besselink | 72-77-72-73=294 | +14 | 387 |
| USA Dave Douglas | 75-70-75-74=294 | |||
| USA Fred Hawkins | 76-72-75-71=294 | |||
| USA Paul Runyan | 73-74-72-75=294 | |||
| T10 | USA Al Brosch | 73-74-76-72=295 | +15 | 187 |
| USA Smiley Quick | 73-76-74-72=295 | |||
| USA Skee Riegel | 75-76-71-73=295 | |||
| USA Sam Snead | 71-78-72-74=295 |
Source:
References
References
- (June 17, 1951). "Hogan fires 3-under 67 to win third Open crown". Milwaukee Sentinel.
- (June 17, 1951). "Mighty Hogan baffles par to cop Open". Eugene Register-Guard.
- Owosso, Michigan. (July 26, 1991). "Still a 'monster'". Argus-Press.
- Garrity, John. (June 10, 1996). "Making the Monster".
- (June 15, 1951). "Nation Open golf scores". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
- (June 16, 1951). "National Open tourney scores". Youngtown Vindicator.
- (June 17, 1951). "National Open tourney scores". Youngtown Vindicator.
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