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1960 Open Championship
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | 1960 Open Championship |
| image | 1960_Open_Championship_Program.png |
| image_size | 250px |
| caption | Front cover of the 1960 Open programme |
| dates | 6–9 July 1960 |
| location | St Andrews, Scotland |
| course | Old Course at St Andrews |
| org | The R&A |
| par | 72 |
| yardage | 6936 yd |
| field | 74 players, 47 after cut |
| cut | 149 (+5) |
| purse | £7,000 |
| $19,600 | |
| winners_share | £1,250 |
| $3,500 | |
| champion | AUS Kel Nagle |
| score | 278 (−10) |
| previous | [1959](1959-open-championship) |
| next | [1961](1961-open-championship) |
$19,600 $3,500 |UK Scotland |Scotland Fife The 1960 Open Championship was the 89th Open Championship, played 6–9 July at the Old Course in St Andrews, Scotland. In the centenary year of the Open Championship, Kel Nagle prevailed over Arnold Palmer by a single stroke; this year marked the championship's re-emergence as a major stop for American players.
The total prize money was increased by forty per cent, from £5,000 to £7,000. The winner's share was increased to £1,250 with £900 for second, £700 for third, £500 for fourth, £400 for fifth, £300 for sixth, £250 for seventh, £200 for eighth, £150 for ninth, and £130 for tenth. The next fifteen places each received £60 with £50 for next seven and then £40 for the next eighteen. The £50 prize for winning the qualification event was unchanged while the four prizes for the lowest score in each round were increased to £50. For the centenary event there was a special prize for the winner in the form of a replica of the claret jug.
Qualifying took place on 4–5 July, Monday and Tuesday, with 18 holes on the Old Course and 18 holes on the New Course. A maximum of 100 players could qualify. Gary Player led the qualifiers as medalist at 135, and the qualifying score was 147 and 74 players qualified; 28 players on 148 were not included. Dick Metz, who had won the World Senior Golf Championship at Gleneagles on 3 July, was one of those on 148 who just failed to qualify.
Roberto De Vicenzo opened the tournament proper with consecutive rounds of 67 on Wednesday and Thursday to take a two-stroke lead over Nagle. In the third round, De Vicenzo's drive on the 14th ended up on top of a wall and he finished the round with a score of 75, allowing Nagle to take a two-shot lead. Palmer, who had won the U.S. Open three weeks earlier by erasing a seven-shot deficit in the final round, was four back after 54-holes. The final round on Friday afternoon was delayed until Saturday due to a heavy rainfall that flooded portions of the course; the first postponement in over fifty years. When play resumed the next day, Palmer and Nagle both went out in 34. Still four-strokes behind, Palmer began another charge on the back. He made up strokes on the 13th and 15th, made a 4 on the 17th, then made birdie at the last. Nagle was standing over a crucial par putt on the Road Hole 17th when he heard the roar signifying Palmer's birdie at 18. He managed to collect himself and hole the putt, then made a safe 4 at the last to win the title by a single shot over Palmer.
Already 39 at the time of his victory, this was Nagle's first top ten finish in a major championship. Although little-known outside of Australia at the time of the tournament, he went on to have success throughout the next decade and came close to winning another major at the 1965 U.S. Open, losing to Gary Player in an 18-hole playoff.
Palmer had won the first two majors at the Masters and U.S. Open, and was attempting to equal Ben Hogan's 1953 season with a third consecutive major. His appearance established the British Open as an important tournament for American golfers and, although Palmer himself skipped the tournament a few times afterward, the best American players began crossing the Atlantic with regularity from then on. Palmer won the next two Opens in 1961 and 1962.
The appearance of Palmer, already the most popular golfer in the world, proved to be a turning point for the Open Championship. Until the 1960s, few Americans made the trip to the Open Championship, with the lengthy ocean-voyage and high costs of traveling to Britain often more than they stood to win in the tournament. Even Palmer, winner of the first two majors of the year, had to play in the 36-hole qualifier immediately preceding it. The 1960 event included only four Americans following the qualifier, and only two made the cut. Ten years later, 24 Americans were in the field of 134. For many years, the event often conflicted with the PGA Championship in the U.S., a more lucrative major which gradually moved to late July and then August.
Card of the course
| Hole | Name | Yards | Par | Hole | Name | Yards | Par |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Burn | 374 | 4 | 10 | Tenth ^ | 338 | |
| 2 | Dyke | 411 | 4 | 11 | High (In) | 170 | 3 |
| 3 | Cartgate (Out) | 400 | 4 | 12 | Heathery (In) | 360 | 4 |
| 4 | Ginger Beer | 439 | 4 | 13 | Hole O'Cross (In) | 427 | 4 |
| 5 | Hole O'Cross (Out) | 567 | 5 | 14 | Long | 560 | 5 |
| 6 | Heathery (Out) | 377 | 4 | 15 | Cartgate (In) | 413 | 4 |
| 7 | High (Out) | 364 | 4 | 16 | Corner of the Dyke | 380 | 4 |
| 8 | Short | 163 | 3 | 17 | Road | 453 | 4 |
| 9 | End | 359 | 4 | 18 | Tom Morris | 381 | 4 |
| **Out** | **3,454** | **36** | **In** | **3,482** | **36** | ||
| Source: | **Total** | **6,936** | **72** |
^ The 10th hole was posthumously named for Bobby Jones in 1972
Round summaries
First round
Wednesday, 6 July 1960
| Place | Player | Score | To par |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ARG Roberto De Vicenzo | 67 | −5 |
| T2 | ARG Fidel de Luca | 69 | −3 |
| AUS Kel Nagle | |||
| T4 | SCO David Blair (a) | 70 | −2 |
| ENG Ken Bousfield | |||
| USA Arnold Palmer | |||
| ENG Peter Shanks | |||
| 8 | ENG Peter Mills | 71 | −1 |
| T9 | IRL Joe Carr (a) | 72 | E |
| BRA José María Gonzáles | |||
| ZAF Harold Henning | |||
| ENG Bernard Hunt | |||
| SCO George Low | |||
| IRL Jimmy Martin | |||
| ESP Ángel Miguel | |||
| ENG Ralph Moffitt | |||
| SCO Raymond Munro (a) | |||
| ZAF Gary Player | |||
| ARG Leopoldo Ruiz | |||
| AUS Peter Thomson |
Source:
Second round
Thursday, 7 July 1960
A maximum of fifty players could make the cut. The 47 who scored 149 (+5) or better qualified for the final day; eight players scoring 150 (+6) were not included.
| Place | Player | Score | To par |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ARG Roberto De Vicenzo | 67-67=134 | −10 |
| 2 | AUS Kel Nagle | 69-67=136 | −8 |
| T3 | ESP Sebastián Miguel | 73-68=141 | −3 |
| USA Arnold Palmer | 70-71=141 | ||
| AUS Peter Thomson | 72-69=141 | ||
| T6 | SCO Laurie Ayton, Jnr | 73-69=142 | −2 |
| ARG Fidel de Luca | 69-73=142 | ||
| T8 | SCO David Blair (a) | 70-73=143 | −1 |
| SCO Eric Brown | 75-68=143 | ||
| ENG Ralph Moffitt | 72-71=143 | ||
| ZAF Gary Player | 72-71=143 | ||
| ENG Peter Shanks | 70-73=143 |
Source:
Amateurs: Blair (−1), Wolstenholme (E), Deighton (E), Carr (+1), Jack (+1), Smith (+1), Deboys (+2), Munro (+5), Shade (+5), Walker (+6), Wright (+6), Saddler (+7), Nisbet (+9).
Third round
Friday, 8 July 1960 - (morning)
| Place | Player | Score | To par |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | AUS Kel Nagle | 69-67-71=207 | −9 |
| 2 | ARG Roberto De Vicenzo | 67-67-75=209 | −7 |
| T3 | USA Arnold Palmer | 70-71-70=211 | −5 |
| ENG Syd Scott | 73-71-67=211 | ||
| 5 | IRL Joe Carr (a) | 72-73-67=212 | −4 |
| 6 | ZAF Harold Henning | 72-72-69=213 | −3 |
| 7 | SCO David Blair (a) | 70-73-71=214 | −2 |
| T8 | SCO Eric Brown | 75-68-72=215 | −1 |
| SCO Reid Jack (a) | 74-71-70=215 | ||
| ESP Sebastián Miguel | 73-68-74=215 | ||
| ENG Peter Mills | 71-74-70=215 | ||
| ZAF Gary Player | 72-71-72=215 | ||
| ENG Harry Weetman | 74-70-71=215 | ||
| ENG Guy Wolstenholme (a) | 74-70-71=215 |
Source:
Final round
Saturday, 9 July 1960
| Place | Player | Score | To Par | Money (£) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | AUS **Kel Nagle** | 69-67-71-71=278 | −10 | 1,250 |
| 2 | USA Arnold Palmer | 70-71-70-68=279 | −9 | 900 |
| T3 | ARG Roberto De Vicenzo | 67-67-75-73=282 | −6 | 533 |
| ZAF Harold Henning | 72-72-69-69=282 | |||
| ENG Bernard Hunt | 72-73-71-66=282 | |||
| 6 | ENG Guy Wolstenholme (a) | 74-70-71-68=283 | −5 | − |
| 7 | ZAF Gary Player | 72-71-72-69=284 | −4 | 300 |
| 8 | IRL Joe Carr (a) | 72-73-67-73=285 | −3 | − |
| T9 | SCO David Blair (a) | 70-73-71-72=286 | −2 | − |
| SCO Eric Brown | 75-68-72-71=286 | 158 | ||
| WAL Dai Rees | 73-71-73-69=286 | |||
| ENG Syd Scott | 73-71-67-75=286 | |||
| AUS Peter Thomson | 72-69-75-70=286 | |||
| ENG Harry Weetman | 74-70-71-71=286 |
Source: :(a) denotes amateur
Amateurs: Wolstenholme (−5), Carr (−3), Blair (−2), Jack (E), Deboys (+2), Smith (+9), Shade (+11), Deighton (+14), Munro (+20)
References
References
- (2011). "Media guide". The Open Championship.
- Horne, Cyril. (11 July 1960). "Nagle Centenary Open champion". Glasgow Herald.
- Bartlett, Charles. (10 July 1960). "Palmer misses British title by stroke". Chicago Sunday Tribune.
- (4 December 1959). "Golf - Centenary Open Championship - Prize money increased". The Times.
- "The Centenary Open Golf Championship, 1960 – Qualifying Rounds – Official Programme".
- (6 July 1960). "Sarazen, Palmer qualify". Milwaukee Sentinel.
- Horne, Cyril. (6 July 1960). "Many famous names among non-qualifiers". Glasgow Herald.
- (5 July 1960). "Arnold Palmer posts 142 in British qualifying play". Youngstown Vindicator.
- (6 July 1960). "Arnie balloons to 75 but qualifies easily". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
- (4 July 1960). "Metz the World Senior Champion". The Times.
- Horne, Cyril. (8 July 1960). "Great inward half keeps Vicenzo in lead". Glasgow Herald.
- Horne, Cyril. (9 July 1960). "Play halted at St Andrews". Glasgow Herald.
- (9 July 1960). "Palmer (70) four behind". Milwaukee Sentinel.
- (10 July 1960). "Palmer's 2-birdie finish just short". Milwaukee Sentinel.
- Wind, Herbert Warren. (18 July 1960). "The slam that failed".
- Horne, Cyril. (7 July 1960). "Vicenzo leads after first round proper". Glasgow Herald.
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