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1952 Open Championship
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | 1952 Open Championship |
| dates | 9–11 July 1952 |
| location | Lytham St Annes, England |
| course | Royal Lytham & St Annes Golf Club |
| tour | |
| par | 72 |
| yardage | 6657 yd |
| field | 96 players, 46 after cut |
| cut | 151 (+7) |
| purse | £1,700 |
| $4,760 | |
| winners_share | £300 |
| $840 | |
| champion | ZAF Bobby Locke |
| score | 287 (−1) |
| previous | [1951](1951-open-championship) |
| next | [1953](1953-open-championship) |
$4,760 $840 |UK England St Annes St Annes The 1952 Open Championship was the 81st Open Championship, held 9–11 July at Royal Lytham & St Annes Golf Club in Lytham St Annes, England. This was the second Open at the course, its first was 26 years earlier in 1926.
Bobby Locke won the third of his four Claret Jugs at 287 (−1), one stroke ahead of runner-up Peter Thomson. This was the first of seven consecutive Opens in which Thomson, age 22, finished as champion or runner-up. Fred Daly, 1947 champion, led after each of the first three rounds, but concluded with 153 (+9) on the final day and finished third.
For qualifying, 274 players entered compared to the 148 the previous year in Northern Ireland. Through an error, the initial entry did not include Antonio Cerdá, the prior year's runner-up. The Championship committee used its discretion to allow him a late entry. Qualifying took place on 7–8 July, Monday and Tuesday, with 18 holes at Royal Lytham & St Annes and 18 holes at adjacent Fairhaven. The number of qualifiers was limited to a maximum of 100, and ties for 100th place were not included. John Panton led at 134 with Harry Bradshaw next on 136. The qualifying score was 152 and 96 players advanced. Three former champions did not continue: Reg Whitcombe (1938) 154, Alf Padgham (1936) 155, and Dick Burton (1939) 156.
The opening round on Wednesday had the lowest scoring, as Daly took the lead at 67, followed by Thomson (68), and Locke in third at 69. Daly widened his lead in the second round on Thursday with 69 for 136. Locke was four behind at 140, with Thomson a stroke behind in third. English amateur Jackie Jones was tied for fourth place, seven shots behind Daly. The maximum number of players making the cut after 36 holes remained at fifty, and ties for 50th place did not make the cut. The cut was at 151 (+7), and 46 players advanced.
Stronger winds arrived on Friday morning for the third round, but Daly still led with 213 after a 77. Locke had closed to one shot after a 74 and Thomson was four behind Locke at 218 (+2), despite going out of bounds at the second hole. Harry Bradshaw and Sam King came next on 219. Starting an hour before Daly, Locke began the final round that afternoon 3-4-3 and reached the turn in 34. Daly was out in 37 and a victory for Locke seemed likely. However he finished with two fives and Daly still had a chance to catch him, but Daly took a six at the 15th; despite finishing 3–4–4, he ended up two shots behind. Thomson seemed to be out of contention after going out in 36, six shots behind Locke at the same stage. However, he came home in 34 with a birdie three at the last to take second place from Daly, one stroke behind Locke. Henry Cotton had the best score on the final day (74-71=145), but had been thirteen behind Daly at 149 after the first two rounds and finished fourth. Jones partnered Locke on the final day and, despite rounds of 78 and 83, held onto the position of leading amateur, winning the silver medal.
Only five Americans were in the field; Gene Sarazen, the 1932 champion, tied for seventeenth at age 50.
Round summaries
First round
Wednesday, 9 July 1952
| Place | Player | Score | To par |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | NIR Fred Daly | 67 | −5 |
| 2 | AUS Peter Thomson | 68 | −4 |
| 3 | ZAF Bobby Locke | 69 | −3 |
| T4 | IRL Harry Bradshaw | 70 | −2 |
| ENG Bob Garner | |||
| ENG Arthur Young | |||
| T7 | SCO Eric Brown | 71 | −1 |
| USA Willie Goggin | |||
| ENG Sam King | |||
| SCO Alex Kyle (a) | |||
| ENG Alan Poulton |
Source:
Second round
Thursday, 10 July 1952
| Place | Player | Score | To par |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | NIR Fred Daly | 67-69=136 | −8 |
| 2 | ZAF Bobby Locke | 69-71=140 | −4 |
| 3 | AUS Peter Thomson | 68-73=141 | −3 |
| T4 | SCO Eric Brown | 71-72=143 | −1 |
| ENG Jackie Jones (a) | 73-70=143 | ||
| T6 | ENG Peter Alliss | 72-72=144 | E |
| IRL Harry Bradshaw | 70-74=144 | ||
| SCO John Panton | 72-72=144 | ||
| ENG Syd Scott | 75-69=144 | ||
| T10 | ENG Ken Bousfield | 72-73=145 | +1 |
| FRA Henri de Lamaze (a) | 71-74=145 | ||
| USA Willie Goggin | 71-74=145 | ||
| ENG Sam King | 71-74=145 | ||
| ENG Alan Poulton | 71-74=145 |
Source:
Third round
Friday, 11 July 1952 (morning)
| Place | Player | Score | To par |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | NIR Fred Daly | 67-69-77=213 | −3 |
| 2 | ZAF Bobby Locke | 69-71-74=214 | −2 |
| 3 | AUS Peter Thomson | 68-73-77=218 | +2 |
| T4 | IRL Harry Bradshaw | 70-74-75=219 | +3 |
| ENG Sam King | 71-74-74=219 | ||
| T6 | ENG Fred Bullock | 76-72-72=220 | +4 |
| USA Willie Goggin | 71-74-75=220 | ||
| ENG Syd Scott | 75-69-76=220 | ||
| BEL Flory Van Donck | 74-75-71=220 | ||
| T10 | SCO Eric Brown | 71-72-78=221 | +5 |
| ENG Jackie Jones (a) | 73-70-78=221 | ||
| ENG Alan Poulton | 71-74-76=221 | ||
| AUS Norman Von Nida | 77-70-74=221 |
Source:
Final round
Friday, 11 July 1952 (afternoon)
| Place | Player | Score | To par | Money (£) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ZAF **Bobby Locke** | 69-71-74-73=287 | −1 | 300 |
| 2 | AUS Peter Thomson | 68-73-77-70=288 | E | 200 |
| 3 | NIR Fred Daly | 67-69-77-76=289 | +1 | 100 |
| 4 | ENG Henry Cotton | 75-74-74-71=294 | +6 | 75 |
| T5 | ARG Antonio Cerdá | 73-73-76-73=295 | +7 | 35 |
| ENG Sam King | 71-74-74-76=295 | |||
| 7 | BEL Flory Van Donck | 74-75-71-76=296 | +8 | 20 |
| 8 | ENG Fred Bullock | 76-72-72-77=297 | +9 | 20 |
| T9 | IRL Harry Bradshaw | 70-74-75-79=298 | +10 | 20 |
| SCO Eric Brown | 71-72-78-77=298 | |||
| USA Willie Goggin | 71-74-75-78=298 | |||
| ENG Arthur Lees | 76-72-76-74=298 | |||
| ENG Syd Scott | 75-69-76-78=298 | |||
| AUS Norman Von Nida | 77-70-74-77=298 |
Source:
Amateurs: Jones (+16), Rawlinson (+18), Kyle (+19), De Lamaze (+20), Stranahan (+21), Morrell (+26)
In 1952 at Lytham (Royal Lytham & St Annes) Bobby Locke won the championship by one stroke, from Peter Thomson. Australian Norman Von Nida complained to the R&A saying that Locke should be disqualified, or at least given a two-stroke penalty, for playing slowly. They clocked him at three hours and twenty minutes. source https://www.insidegolf.com.au/feature-articles/an-open-discussion-with-peter-thomson/
References
References
- (2011). "Media guide". The Open Championship.
- (12 July 1952). "Locke wins Open by one stroke". Glasgow Herald.
- "Daly fires 69 to retain lead in British Open". Chicago Daily Tribune.
- "Locke's 287 takes 1st in British Open". Chicago Daily Tribune.
- (19 June 1952). "The Open Championship". The Times.
- (7 July 1952). "Open Golf Championship". The Times.
- (9 July 1952). "Panton's day of record-equalling". Glasgow Herald.
- (9 July 1952). "Sarazen gets second 69 in British Open". Chicago Daily Tribune.
- (9 July 1952). "Golf – Open Championship". The Times.
- (10 July 1952). "Daly leads by stroke in "Open"". Glasgow Herald.
- (10 July 1952). "Golf – Daly's lead at St. Annes". The Times.
- (10 July 1952). "Goggin tops Americans in British Open". Chicago Daily Tribune.
- (11 July 1952). "Daly's four-stroke lead in "Open"". Glasgow Herald.
- (11 July 1952). "Golf – Open Championship". The Times.
- (12 July 1952). "Locke's golf victory - Third Open in four years - Thomson beaten by one stroke". The Times.
- (10 July 1952). "Locke paces British Open". Youngstown Vindicator.
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