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2004 PGA Championship


FieldValue
name2004 PGA Championship
image2004PGALogo.jpg
image_size150
datesAugust 12–15, 2004
locationKohler, Wisconsin
courseWhistling Straits,
Straits Course
orgPGA of America
tourPGA Tour
PGA European Tour
Japan Golf Tour
par72
yardage7514 yd
field156 players, 73 after cut
cut145 (+1)
purse$6,250,000
€5,071,152
winners_share$1,125,000
€916,724
championFJI Vijay Singh
score280 (−8), playoff
previous[2003](2003-pga-championship)
next[2005](2005-pga-championship)

Straits Course PGA European Tour Japan Golf Tour €5,071,152 €916,724 |USA Straits |USA Wisconsin Straits The 2004 PGA Championship was the 86th PGA Championship, played August 12–15 at the Straits Course of the Whistling Straits complex in Haven, Wisconsin (postal address Kohler). The purse was $6.25 million and the winner's share was $1.125 million.

Vijay Singh, the 1998 champion, earned his third and final major title in a three-hole aggregate playoff, defeating Justin Leonard and Chris DiMarco. At the time Singh, age 41, was third in the world rankings; the win moved him to #2 and he ascended to the top spot three weeks later, displacing Tiger Woods.

It was the first major championship at the expansive Straits Course, designed by Pete Dye and opened in 1998, which allowed high attendance and was highly profitable for the PGA of America. It set records with over 94,400 tickets sold and an overall attendance of 320,000 for the week. The overall economic impact was $76.9 million, shattering the previous record of $50.4 million in 2002, and nearly doubling that of 2003.

The PGA Championship returned just six years later, in 2010, displacing the more confined Sahalee Country Club near Seattle, which hosted in 1998, Singh's first major win. The admittance at Sahalee in 1998 was capped at 25,000 per day by the PGA of America. In early 2005, its chief executive officer, Jim Awtrey, cited the proximity to the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver as the main reason for the retraction, and that Sahalee was targeted for 2012 to 2015 for another PGA Championship. The PGA of America has yet to commit to a return to Sahalee before 2028, but the championship returned to the West in 2020 at San Francisco.

Field

  1. All former PGA Champions.
  2. Winners of the last five U.S. Opens.
  3. Winners of the last five Masters.
  4. Winners of the last five British Opens.
  5. The 2003 Senior PGA Champion.
  6. The low 15 scorers and ties in the 2003 PGA Championship.
  7. The 25 low scorers in The 2004 PGA Club Professional Championship.
  8. The 70 leaders in official money standings.
  9. Members of the 2002 United States Ryder Cup Team.
  10. Winners of tournaments co-sponsored or approved by the PGA Tour from the 2003 PGA Championship to the 2004 PGA Championship (does not include pro-am and team competitions).
  11. The PGA of America reserves the right to invite additional players not included in the categories listed above.
  12. The total field will be a maximum of 156 players. Vacancies will be filled by the first available player from the list of alternates (those below 70th place in official money standings).

Full eligibility list

History of the PGA Championship at Whistling Straits

This was the first major championship held at Whistling Straits, and the Straits Course hosted the PGA Championship again in 2010, which also ended in a playoff, and 2015. It hosted the Ryder Cup in 2020. The course also hosted the U.S. Senior Open in 2007, won by Brad Bryant.

This was the second PGA Championship (and major) in the state of Wisconsin; 71 years earlier, the 1933 edition was played at Blue Mound in Wauwatosa, just west of Milwaukee. The PGA Tour stopped in the state regularly with the Greater Milwaukee Open (19682009), preceded by the Milwaukee Open Invitational (1955–1961).

Course layout

Main article: Whistling Straits

Hole123456789Out101112131415161718InTotalYardagePar
408593181493598355221507449**3,805**361618143404373518569223500**3,709****7,514**
453454344**36**453444534**36****72**

Round summaries

First round

Thursday, August 12, 2004

Led by Darren Clarke, 39 players broke par in Thursday opening round. Clarke birdied the first four holes and finished at 7-under-par 65. It was the lowest score under par in the first round of a major since Chris DiMarco had a 7-under 65 at the 2001 Masters. He was one stroke better than Justin Leonard and Ernie Els.

PlacePlayerScoreTo par
1NIR Darren Clarke65−7
T2ZAF Ernie Els66−6
USA Justin Leonard
T4USA Briny Baird67−5
ENG Luke Donald
FJI Vijay Singh
USA Scott Verplank
T8TTO Stephen Ames68−4
AUS Stuart Appleby
KOR K. J. Choi
USA Chris DiMarco
USA Jay Haas
IRL Pádraig Harrington
AUS Geoff Ogilvy
USA Tim Petrovic
USA Loren Roberts

Second round

Friday, August 13, 2004

Justin Leonard posted a 3-under 69 and Vijay Singh carded a 4-under 68 to share a one stroke lead at 9 under midway through the 86th PGA Championship. Opening round leader Darren Clarke shot a 1-under 71 and is tied for third with Ernie Els and Briny Baird. Tiger Woods made two straight birdies on 16 and 17 to avoid missing his first cut in 128 events. Miguel Ángel Jiménez, who shot the low round of the day of 65, ended in a tie for 13th at 3-under.

PlacePlayerScoreTo par
T1USA Justin Leonard66-69=135−9
FJI Vijay Singh67-68=135
T3USA Briny Baird67-69=136−8
NIR Darren Clarke65-71=136
ZAF Ernie Els66-70=136
6USA Chris DiMarco68-70=138−6
T7TRI Stephen Ames68-71=139−5
KOR K. J. Choi68-71=139
IRL Pádraig Harrington68-71=139
USA Chris Riley69-70=139

Third round

Saturday, August 14, 2004

Vijay Singh shot 69 to reach 12 under par as he tried to add a third major title to his 1998 PGA Championship and 2000 Masters. Justin Leonard carded 70 and was at 11 under. Leonard, who had a two-shot lead after making a 6-foot birdie on the 12th, bogeyed Nos. 15 and 18 to keep him one behind. Briny Baird, the leader at one point, pulled his tee shot over the cliff left of the par-3 17th and wound up with a triple bogey to knocked him out of contention. He wound up with a 75 and was seven shots behind.

PlacePlayerScoreTo par
1FJI Vijay Singh67-68-69=204−12
2USA Justin Leonard66-69-70=205−11
T3TRI Stephen Ames68-71-69=208−8
NIR Darren Clarke65-71-72=208
ZAF Ernie Els66-70-72=208
USA Phil Mickelson69-72-67=208
USA Chris Riley69-70-69=208
8USA Chris DiMarco68-70-71=209−7
T9ENG Brian Davis70-71-69=210−6
USA Loren Roberts68-72-70=210

Final round

Sunday, August 15, 2004

An exciting final round filled with missed opportunities led to a three-man playoff between Vijay Singh, Chris DiMarco and Justin Leonard. Ernie Els missed the playoff by one stroke, thanks to a bogey at No. 18, and completed a disheartening season of near-misses in the majors. He finished fourth, tied with Chris Riley who also bogeyed No. 18. Els finished second in the Masters, second in the British Open and ninth in the U.S. Open.

Phil Mickelson also had a chance to get into the playoff, needing a birdie at the 72nd hole. Mickelson however took bogey and added a sixth-place finish to his memorable run at the majors in 2004. Mickelson won the Masters, took second in the U.S. Open and placed third in the British Open. K.J. Choi also had a chance to get into the playoff with a birdie, but also bogeyed the 72nd hole to finish two strokes behind. Tiger Woods bogeyed two of the first four holes and wound up with a 73, his worst finish in the majors this year, and extended his streak to 10 majors without winning, which was the longest drought of his career at that time. He won the next major, his fourth green jacket at the Masters, in 2005.

Leonard, playing in the final group at the PGA Championship for the third time, took a two-shot lead with five holes to play with an 18 ft birdie putt on 13. Leonard missed four putts inside 12 ft down the stretch including a 12-foot par putt on No. 18 which would have given him his second major championship. DiMarco, the only player in the final nine groups to break par, had an 18-foot birdie putt to win on the 72nd hole that he left short. He also lost in a playoff in the next major, to Woods at Augusta, and ended his career without a major victory.

PlacePlayerScoreTo parMoney ($)
T1USA Chris DiMarco68-70-71-71=280−8Playoff
USA Justin Leonard66-69-70-75=280
FJI Vijay Singh67-68-69-76=280
T4ZAF Ernie Els66-70-72-73=281−7267,500
USA Chris Riley69-70-69-73=281
T6KOR K. J. Choi68-71-73-70=282−6196,000
IRL Paul McGinley69-74-70-69=282
USA Phil Mickelson69-72-67-74=282
T9AUS Robert Allenby71-70-72-70=283−5152,000
TRI Stephen Ames68-71-69-75=283
USA Ben Crane70-74-69-70=283
AUS Adam Scott71-71-69-72=283

Source:

Scorecard

Final round

Hole123456789101112131415161718
Par453454344453444534
FIJ Singh−12−12−12−10−10−10−9−9−9−9−9−9−9−9−8−8−8−8
USA DiMarco−7−7−7−7−7−7−7−7−8−8−9−10−10−10−9−8−8−8
USA Leonard−11−11−12−12−12−12−11−11−11−10−10−10−11−10−10−9−9−8
RSA Els−8−8−7−6−7−7−7−7−8−7−7−7−7−6−7−8−8−7
USA Riley−8−8−7−7−7−7−7−7−6−6−7−7−8−8−8−8−8−7
KOR Choi−4−4−5−5−6−6−7−7−7−6−6−6−7−7−7−7−7−6
IRL McGinley−4−4−4−4−5−5−4−3−4−4−5−5−5−6−5−6−6−6
USA Mickelson−8−8−6−6−7−7−7−7−6−6−7−7−7−7−7−7−7−6
AUS Scott−5−6−6−5−5−5−4−5−5−5−5−5−5−5−5−5−5−5
TTO Ames−8−8−9−9−10−9−8−9−9−9−9−8−7−6−5−5−5−5
NIR Clarke−8−8−8−8−8−6−6−7−7−6−7−7−7−7−6−5−4−4
ENG Davis−6−6−6−6−6−7−7−8−7−7−6−5−6−6−4−4−4−4

Cumulative tournament scores, relative to par

Double EagleEagle --BirdieBogeyDouble bogeyTriple bogey+ --

Source:

Playoff

After 72 holes, Singh, DiMarco and Leonard were tied on 8 under par, requiring a three-hole aggregate playoff, over the 10th, 17th, and 18th holes. Singh, who had yet to make a birdie during the day, got off to fast start with a birdie at the 10th hole, a short par-4 at 361 yd. Singh nearly drove the green and left a simple pitch to 6 ft, while DiMarco and Leonard both made par.

Singh then laced a 3-iron to within 6 feet on the 236 yd par-3 17th, but missed the putt and all three men made par. Leonard and DiMarco needed to gain a stroke on Singh on the par-4 18th and neither came close — DiMarco in a bunker, Leonard so far away that he used a wedge to chip on the green. Neither finished the hole, and Singh's par secured his second PGA Championship and third career major. His 76 on Sunday was the highest final-round score ever by a PGA champion.

PlacePlayerScoreTo parMoney ($)
1FJI **Vijay Singh**3-3-4=10−11,125,000
T2USA Chris DiMarco4-3-x=xx800,000
USA Justin Leonard4-3-x=xx

Scorecard

Playoff

Hole101718
Par434
FIJ Singh−1−1−1
USA DiMarcoEEx
USA LeonardEEx

Cumulative playoff scores, relative to par

Quotes

References

References

  1. [http://www.pga.com/pgachampionship/2004/ 2004 PGA Championship Official Site]
  2. Ferguson, Doug. (August 16, 2004). "A little birdie salvages Singh's rough final round". Eugene Register-Guard.
  3. (August 8, 2004). "Official World Golf Rankings". Official World Golf Rankings.
  4. (September 5, 2004). "Official World Golf Rankings". Official World Golf Rankings.
  5. D'Amato, Gary. (June 23, 1999). "Pros get opportunity to play like pros". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
  6. D'Amato, Gary. (May 25, 2005). "Wisconsin has become major force on national scene". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
  7. D'Amato, Gary. (January 22, 2005). "Whistling Straits on course to host PGA Championship". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
  8. Smith, Craig. (January 21, 2005). "Sahalee loses PGA in 2010". Seattle Times.
  9. (2010). "Whistling Straits ahead". PGA of America.
  10. Booth, Tim. (June 4, 2009). "Sahalee getting prepped for 2010 Senior Open". Seattle Times.
  11. Shedloski, Dave. (August 13, 2010). "Sahalee pro reflects on what might have been".
  12. Dear, Tony. (August 2010). "What Now for Sahalee?". Cybergolf.com.
  13. D'Amato, Gary. (January 25, 2005). "PGA gives Kohler offer he can't refuse". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
  14. (August 15, 2004). "PGA Championship leaderboard". PGA of America.
  15. (August 15, 2004). "2011 PGA Championship leaderboard". Yahoo! Sports.
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