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2004 Open Championship
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | 2004 Open Championship |
| dates | 15–18 July 2004 |
| location | Troon, South Ayrshire, Scotland |
| course | Royal Troon Golf Club, |
| Old Course | |
| tour | European Tour |
| PGA Tour | |
| Japan Golf Tour | |
| par | 71 |
| yardage | 7175 yd |
| field | 156 players, 73 after cut |
| cut | 145 (+3) |
| purse | £4,000,000 |
| €6,001,690 | |
| $7,490,400 | |
| winners_share | £720,000 |
| €1,078,430 | |
| $1,348,272 | |
| champion | USA Todd Hamilton |
| score | 274 (−10), playoff |
| previous | [2003](2003-open-championship) |
| next | [2005](2005-open-championship) |
Old Course PGA Tour Japan Golf Tour €6,001,690 $7,490,400 €1,078,430 $1,348,272 |UK Scotland |Scotland South Ayrshire The 2004 Open Championship was a men's major golf championship and the 133rd Open Championship, held from 15 to 18 July at the Old Course of Royal Troon Golf Club in Troon, Scotland.
Todd Hamilton won his only major championship, defeating 2002 champion Ernie Els by a stroke in a four-hole playoff. Phil Mickelson finished third, followed by Lee Westwood in fourth. Hamilton was the sixth consecutive American to win at Royal Troon.
History of The Open Championship at Royal Troon
Royal Troon first hosted The Open Championship in 1923 and the 2004 Open was its eighth. Royal Troon's list of champions includes Arthur Havers (1923), 4-time Open winner Bobby Locke (1950), 7-time major winner Arnold Palmer (1962), Tom Weiskopf (1973), 5-time Open champion Tom Watson (1982), Mark Calcavecchia (1989), and Justin Leonard (1997).
Course
Main article: Royal Troon Golf Club}}Old Course{{cite news
| Hole | Name | Yards | Par | Hole | Name | Yards | Par |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Seal | 370 | 4 | 10 | Sandhills | 438 | |
| 2 | Black Rock | 391 | 4 | 11 | The Railway | 490 | 4 |
| 3 | Gyaws | 379 | 4 | 12 | The Fox | 431 | 4 |
| 4 | Dunure | 560 | 5 | 13 | Burmah | 472 | 4 |
| 5 | Greenan | 210 | 3 | 14 | Alton | 178 | 3 |
| 6 | Turnberry | 601 | 5 | 15 | Crosbie | 483 | 4 |
| 7 | Tel-el-Kebir | 405 | 4 | 16 | Well | 542 | 5 |
| 8 | Postage Stamp | 123 | 3 | 17 | Rabbit | 222 | 3 |
| 9 | The Monk | 423 | 4 | 18 | Craigend | 457 | 4 |
| **Out** | **3,462** | **36** | **In** | **3,713** | **35** | ||
| **Total** | **7,175** | **71** |
Lengths of the course for previous Opens (since 1950):
Field
;1. Top 10 and ties from the 2003 Open Championship Thomas Bjørn (3,4), Ben Curtis (2,3), Brian Davis (4), Gary Evans, Nick Faldo (2), Sergio García (3), Retief Goosen (3,4,9,13,17), Freddie Jacobson (3,4), Davis Love III (3,12,13,17), Hennie Otto, Kenny Perry (3,13,17), Phillip Price (4), Vijay Singh (3,10,13,17), Tiger Woods (2,3,9,10,11,13,17)
;2. Past Open Champions aged 65 or under on 18 July 2004 Mark Calcavecchia, John Daly, Ernie Els (3,4,13,17), Paul Lawrie, Tom Lehman, Justin Leonard (3,13,17), Sandy Lyle, Greg Norman, Mark O'Meara, Nick Price (3,13,17), Tom Weiskopf
- David Duval and Tom Watson (26) withdrew.
- Ian Baker-Finch, Seve Ballesteros, Tony Jacklin, Johnny Miller, Jack Nicklaus, Bill Rogers, and Lee Trevino did not enter.
;3. The first 50 players on the OWGR on 27 May 2004 Robert Allenby (17), Stephen Ames, Stuart Appleby (13,17), Chad Campbell (13), Paul Casey (4), K. J. Choi (17), Stewart Cink, Darren Clarke (4), Chris DiMarco (13,17), Brad Faxon (13), Steve Flesch, Jim Furyk (9,13,17), Jay Haas (13,17), Todd Hamilton (23), Pádraig Harrington (4), Charles Howell III (13,17), John Huston, Trevor Immelman (4), Miguel Ángel Jiménez, Zach Johnson, Jonathan Kaye (13), Jerry Kelly (17), Stephen Leaney (4,17), Peter Lonard (4,17,19), Shigeki Maruyama, Shaun Micheel (11), Phil Mickelson (10,17), Craig Parry, Ian Poulter (4), Chris Riley, Adam Scott (4,12,17), David Toms (11,13,17), Bob Tway (13,21), Scott Verplank (13), Mike Weir (10,13,17)
- Fred Couples, Scott Hoch, and Kirk Triplett did not play.
;4. Top 20 in the final 2003 European Tour Order of Merit Michael Campbell, Alastair Forsyth, Ignacio Garrido (5), David Howell, Raphaël Jacquelin, Lee Westwood
;5. The Volvo PGA Championship winners for 2002–04 Scott Drummond, Anders Hansen
;6. First 3 players, not exempt, in the top 20 of the 2004 European Tour Order of Merit as of 27 May Joakim Haeggman, Barry Lane, Graeme McDowell
;7. First 2 European Tour members, not exempt, in a cumulative money list taken from all official European Tour events from the Deutsche Bank - SAP Open TPC of Europe up to and including the European Open and including the U.S. Open Richard Green, Jean-François Remésy
;8. The leading player, not exempt having applied (7) above, in each of the 2004 European Open and the 2004 Scottish Open Thomas Levet, Peter O'Malley
;9. The U.S. Open Champions for 2000–04
;10. The Masters Champions for 2000–04
;11. The PGA Champions for 1999–2003 Rich Beem
;12. The Players Champions for 2002–04 Craig Perks
;13. Top 20 in the final 2003 PGA Tour Official Money List
;14. First 3 players, not exempt, in the top 20 of the 2004 PGA Tour Official Money List as of 27 May
;15. First 2 PGA Tour members, not exempt, in a cumulative money list taken from the 2004 Players Championship and the five PGA Tour events leading up to and including the 2004 Western Open Frank Lickliter, Rory Sabbatini
;16. The leading player, not exempt having applied (15) above, in each of the 2004 Western Open and the 2004 John Deere Classic Steve Lowery
- Mark Hensby did not play.
;17. Playing members of the 2003 Presidents Cup teams Tim Clark
- Fred Funk did not play.
;18. Winner of the 2003 Asian PGA Tour Order of Merit Arjun Atwal
;19. Top 2 from the 2003 PGA Tour of Australasia Order of Merit
- Andre Stolz did not play.
;20. Winner of the 2003–04 Sunshine Tour Order of Merit Darren Fichardt
;21. The 2003 Canadian Open Champion
;22. The 2003 Japan Open Champion Keiichiro Fukabori
;23. Top 3 from the 2003 Japan Golf Tour Order of Merit Tetsuji Hiratsuka
- Toshimitsu Izawa did not play.
;24. The leading player, not exempt, in the 2004 Mizuno Open
- Hiroaki Iijima did not play.
;25. First 4, not exempt having applied (24) above, in a cumulative money list taken from all official Japan Golf Tour events from the 2004 Japan PGA Championship up to and including the 2004 Mizuno Open Dinesh Chand, Hidemasa Hoshino, Hur Suk-ho, Takashi Kamiyama
;26. The 2003 Senior British Open Champion
;27. The 2004 Amateur Champion Stuart Wilson (a)
;28. The 2003 U.S. Amateur Champion Nick Flanagan (a)
;29. The 2003 European Amateur Champion Brian McElhinney (a)
;International Final Qualifying :Africa – James Kingston, Grant Muller, Louis Oosthuizen, Tjaart van der Walt :Australasia – Andrew Buckle, Matthew Hazelden, Brendan Jones, Adam Le Vesconte, Paul Sheehan :Asia – Scott Barr, Kim Felton, Jyoti Randhawa, Yoshinobu Tsukada :America – Aaron Baddeley, Cameron Beckman, Glen Day, Luke Donald, Bob Estes, Mathew Goggin, Mathias Grönberg, Tim Herron, Skip Kendall, Hunter Mahan, Spike McRoy, Rod Pampling, Carl Pettersson, Bo Van Pelt :*Steve Elkington qualified but withdrew prior to the tournament. :Europe – Paul Broadhurst, Christian Cévaër, Nicolas Colsaerts, Gary Emerson, Klas Eriksson, Kenneth Ferrie, Mark Foster, Peter Hedblom, Maarten Lafeber, Euan Little, Paul McGinley, Colin Montgomerie, Mårten Olander, Eduardo Romero, Miles Tunnicliff, Simon Wakefield :*Warren Bennett qualified but withdrew prior to the tournament.
;Local Final Qualifying (Saturday 10 July and Sunday 11 July) :Glasgow (Gailes) – Paul Bradshaw, Simon Dyson, Anthony Millar, Andrew Willey :Irvine – Jonathan Cheetham, Martin Erlandsson, Andrew Oldcorn, Sven Strüver :Turnberry Kintyre – Lloyd Campbell (a), Steven Tiley (a), Paul Wesselingh, Sean Whiffin :Western Gailes – Lewis Atkinson, Daniel Sugrue, Ben Willman
;Alternates
- Jimmy Green – IFQ America – replaced Steve Elkington
- Barry Hume – Western Gailes – replaced Mark Hensby
- Ian Spencer – Irvine – replaced Toshimitsu Izawa
- Neil Evans – Turnberry Kintyre – replaced Warren Bennett
- Brett Taylor – Glasgow (Gailes) – replaced Andre Stolz
- David Griffiths – Western Gailes – replaced David Duval
Round summaries
First round
Thursday, 15 July 2004
Paul Casey and Thomas Levet both carded 66 (−5) and held a two stroke lead over a group of nine players. The group at 3-under included amateur Stuart Wilson and Vijay Singh. Defending champ Ben Curtis carded a 75 (+4). In total there were 39 rounds under par, 25 of those being in the 60s. Home favourite Colin Montgomerie started with a 2-under 69.
| Place | Player | Score | To par |
|---|---|---|---|
| T1 | ENG Paul Casey | 66 | −5 |
| FRA Thomas Levet | |||
| T3 | KOR K. J. Choi | 68 | −3 |
| ENG Gary Evans | |||
| ENG Kenneth Ferrie | |||
| SCO Alastair Forsyth | |||
| AUS Mathew Goggin | |||
| SWE Mårten Olander | |||
| SWE Carl Pettersson | |||
| FIJ Vijay Singh | |||
| SCO Stuart Wilson (a) |
Second round
Friday, 16 July 2004
Skip Kendall stormed into the lead with a 66 to reach the halfway stage at 135 (−7). Casey dropped down the leaderboard with a 77, while Levet shot a 70 to drop down into second. K. J. Choi continued his good start with a 69, keeping him in a tie for third place with Barry Lane. Todd Hamilton finished the round with a 67 to move up into a tie for fifth place.
| Place | Player | Score | To par |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | USA Skip Kendall | 69-66=135 | −7 |
| 2 | FRA Thomas Levet | 66-70=136 | −6 |
| T3 | KOR K. J. Choi | 68-69=137 | −5 |
| ENG Barry Lane | 69-68=137 | ||
| T5 | NZL Michael Campbell | 67-71=138 | −4 |
| ZAF Ernie Els | 69-69=138 | ||
| USA Todd Hamilton | 71-67=138 | ||
| SCO Colin Montgomerie | 69-69=138 | ||
| FIJ Vijay Singh | 68-70=138 | ||
| T10 | ZAF Retief Goosen | 69-70=139 | −3 |
| USA Phil Mickelson | 73-66=139 | ||
| USA Kenny Perry | 69-70=139 | ||
| USA Scott Verplank | 69-70=139 | ||
| CAN Mike Weir | 71-68=139 |
Amateurs: Stuart Wilson (+1), Campbell (+5), Tiley (+5), Flanagan (+6), McElhinney (+10).
Third round
Saturday, 17 July 2004
Hamilton surged up the leader with a second consecutive 67 to finish the day at 205 (−8). Ernie Els, the 2002 champion, moved up to second at 206 with a 68, while one shot behind lay the reigning Masters champion Phil Mickelson, Retief Goosen, and Thomas Levet at 207 (−6).
| Place | Player | Score | To par |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | USA Todd Hamilton | 71-67-67=205 | −8 |
| 2 | ZAF Ernie Els | 69-69-68=206 | −7 |
| T3 | ZAF Retief Goosen | 69-70-68=207 | −6 |
| FRA Thomas Levet | 66-70-71=207 | ||
| USA Phil Mickelson | 73-66-68=207 | ||
| 6 | ENG Barry Lane | 69-68-71=208 | −5 |
| T7 | USA Scott Verplank | 69-70-70=209 | −4 |
| USA Tiger Woods | 70-71-68=209 | ||
| T9 | USA Skip Kendall | 69-66-75=210 | −3 |
| SCO Colin Montgomerie | 69-69-72=210 | ||
| CAN Mike Weir | 71-68-71=210 |
Final round
Sunday, 18 July 2004
A see-saw final round led to a two-man playoff between Hamilton and Els. Hamilton, playing in only his eighth major, opened up a two-shot lead after chipping in for birdie from 30 ft on the par-3 14th to get to 10 under. Then he holed a 12 ft birdie on the par-5 16th to keep his cushion. Els had to make birdies to keep up, and he came through with pure putts on the 16th and 17th. Then came the wild 72nd hole, with Hamilton holding a one shot lead. Hamilton pushed his iron off the tee and into the rough, then chopped it across the fairway next to a guard railing that restricted his swing. Els hit his approach to within the shadow of the flag, leaving a 12-foot birdie attempt. Hamilton chipped to 20 ft and missed to take bogey. Els suddenly had a putt to win, but left it short. Mickelson carded a final round 68 to finish a shot back at 275 (−9). A 67 moved Lee Westwood into sole fourth, matching Davis Love III for low score of the final round.
| Place | Player | Score | To par | Money (£) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| T1 | USA Todd Hamilton | 71-67-67-69=274 | −10 | Playoff |
| ZAF Ernie Els | 69-69-68-68=274 | |||
| 3 | USA Phil Mickelson | 73-66-68-68=275 | −9 | 275,000 |
| 4 | ENG Lee Westwood | 72-71-68-67=278 | −6 | 210,000 |
| T5 | FRA Thomas Levet | 66-70-71-72=279 | −5 | 159,500 |
| USA Davis Love III | 72-69-71-67=279 | |||
| T7 | ZAF Retief Goosen | 69-70-68-73=280 | −4 | 117,500 |
| USA Scott Verplank | 69-70-70-71=280 | |||
| T9 | CAN Mike Weir | 71-68-71-71=281 | −3 | 89,500 |
| USA Tiger Woods | 70-71-68-72=281 |
Amateurs: Wilson (+12)
Source:
Scorecard
Final round
| Hole | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Par | 4 | 4 | 4 | 5 | 3 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 3 | 4 |
| USA Hamilton | −8 | −7 | −7 | −8 | −9 | −9 | −9 | −9 | −9 | −8 | −9 | −9 | −9 | −10 | −10 | −11 | −11 | −10 |
| ZAF Els | −7 | −7 | −8 | −9 | −8 | −8 | −9 | −9 | −9 | −7 | −7 | −7 | −8 | −8 | −8 | −9 | −10 | −10 |
| USA Mickelson | −6 | −6 | −6 | −8 | −8 | −8 | −9 | −9 | −9 | −9 | −9 | −9 | −8 | −8 | −8 | −9 | −9 | −9 |
| ENG Westwood | −2 | −2 | −1 | −1 | E | −1 | −2 | −3 | −3 | −4 | −4 | −4 | −4 | −4 | −4 | −5 | −5 | −6 |
| FRA Levet | −6 | −6 | −6 | −8 | −8 | −8 | −8 | −7 | −7 | −7 | −7 | −7 | −7 | −7 | −6 | −6 | −5 | −5 |
| USA Love | E | E | −1 | −2 | −2 | −2 | −2 | −3 | −3 | −3 | −3 | −3 | −3 | −3 | −3 | −3 | −3 | −5 |
| ZAF Goosen | −5 | −5 | −5 | −6 | −6 | −6 | −6 | −6 | −5 | −5 | −4 | −4 | −4 | -4 | −4 | −4 | −4 | −4 |
Cumulative tournament scores, relative to par
Source:
Playoff
After 72 holes, Hamilton and Els were tied for the lead at 274 (−10), requiring a four-hole aggregate playoff, played over the 1st, 2nd, 17th, and 18th holes. (The first use of this format in The Open was fifteen years earlier in 1989, also at Royal Troon.) Both players parred the first two holes, both par fours, and Hamilton managed a par 3 on the 222 yd 17th. Els overshot the green and bogeyed, then parred the last, leaving Hamilton a 3-foot (1 m) par putt to win the Open, which he holed. Els had all four rounds in the 60s for the second time in an Open without winning; the other time was at Royal St. George's in 1993.
| Place | Player | Score | To par | Money (£) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | USA **Todd Hamilton** | 4-4-3-4=15 | E | 720,000 |
| 2 | ZAF Ernie Els | 4-4-4-4=16 | +1 | 430,000 |
Scorecard
| Hole | 1 | 2 | 17 | 18 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Par | 4 | 4 | 3 | 4 |
| USA Hamilton | E | E | E | E |
| ZAF Els | E | E | +1 | +1 |
Cumulative playoff scores, relative to par
References
References
- Ferguson, Doug. (19 July 2004). "Unlikely winner captures British". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
- Bonk, Thomas. (19 July 2004). "Hamilton's journey ends with major conquest". Eugene Register-Guard.
- Bamberger, Michael. (26 July 2004). "A horse for the gorse".
- (14 July 2004). "The holes of Royal Troon". The Florida Times-Union.
- (2011). "Media guide". The Open Championship.
- "2004 Open Championship results". databasegolf.com.
- "2004 Open Championship leaderboard". Yahoo! Sports.
- (18 July 2004). "Hamilton wins Open Championship in playoff over Els". PGA of America.
- Hodgetts, Rob. (18 July 2004). "Hamilton grabs shock win". BBC Sport.
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