The Facts
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* When: Thursday-Sunday.
* Where: Southern Hills Country Club, Tulsa, Okla.
* The Course: Built during the Depression, Southern Hills was designed by Perry Maxwell and opened in 1936.
* Length: 6,973 yards.
* Par: 35-35--70.
* Format: 72 holes (18 daily) stroke play.
* Cut: Top 60 and ties, and anyone within 10 strokes of the lead after 36 holes.
* Playoff, if necessary: 18 holes on Monday.
* Field: 156 (152 pros, four amateurs).
* Purse: $5 million
* Winner’s share: $900,000.
* Defending champion: Tiger Woods.
* Last year: In the most dominant performance in the 140-year history of major championships, Woods became the first player to finish double digits below par (12-under 272), and his 15-stroke victory at Pebble Beach was the largest in a major. Woods never made worse than par over his final 26 holes.
* Last U.S. Open at Southern Hills: Despite receiving a death threat in the final round, Hubert Green went wire-to-wire for a one-stroke victory over Lou Graham in 1977.
* Changes: Southern Hills has the longest par five (No. 5, 642 yards) and longest par four (No. 16, 491 yards) in U.S. Open history.
* Noteworthy: Woods is a combined 65-under par in his last four majors.
* Quoteworthy: “Name anybody who isn’t amazed by what he has accomplished.” -- Jack Nicklaus on Woods.
* Former champions in the field: Woods (2000), Lee Janzen (1993, 1998), Ernie Els (1994, 1997), Steve Jones (1996), Corey Pavin (1995), Tom Kite (1992), Hale Irwin (1974, 1979, 1990).
* Television: (all times PDT) Thursday and Friday, 9 a.m.-noon, 2 p.m.-5 p.m., ESPN; noon-2 p.m., NBC. Saturday and Sunday, 10:30 a.m.-5 p.m., NBC.
THE CHAMPIONS
1895: Horace Rawlins
1896: James Foulis
1897: Joe Lloyd
1898: Fred Herd
1899: Willie Smith
1900: Harry Vardon
1901: Willie Anderson
1902: Laurie Auchterlonie
1903: Willie Anderson
1904: Willie Anderson
1905: Willie Anderson
1906: Alex Smith
1907: Alex Ross
1908: Fred McLeod
1909: George Sargent
1910: Alex Smith
1911: John McDermott
1912: John McDermott
1913: Francis Ouimet
1914: Walter Hagen
1915: Jerome Travers
1916: Charles Evans Jr.
1917-18: No event
1919: Walter Hagen
1920: Edward Ray
1921: James M. Barnes
1922: Gene Sarazen
1923: Bobby Jones
1924: Cyril Walker
1925: W. MacFarlane
1926: Bobby Jones
1927: Tommy Armour
1928: Johnny Farrell
1929: Bobby Jones
1930: Bobby Jones
1931: Billy Burke
1932: Gene Sarazen
1933: Johnny Goodman
1934: Olin Dutra
1935: Sam Parks Jr.
1936: Tony Manero
1937: Ralph Guldahl
1938: Ralph Guldahl
1939: Byron Nelson
1940: Lawson Little
1941: Craig Wood
1942-45: No event
1946: Lloyd Mangrum
1947: Lew Worsham
1948: Ben Hogan
1949: Cary Middlecoff
1950: Ben Hogan
1951: Ben Hogan
1952: Julius Boros
1953: Ben Hogan
1954: Ed Furgol
1955: Jack Fleck
1956: Cary Middlecoff
1957: Dick Mayer
1958: Tommy Bolt
1959: Billy Casper
1960: Arnold Palmer
1961: Gene Littler
1962: Jack Nicklaus
1963: Julius Boros
1964: Ken Venturi
1965: Gary Player
1966: Billy Casper
1967: Jack Nicklaus
1968: Lee Trevino
1969: Orville Moody
1970: Tony Jacklin
1971: Lee Trevino
1972: Jack Nicklaus
1973: Johnny Miller
1974: Hale Irwin
1975: Lou Graham
1976: Jerry Pate
1977: Hubert Green
1978: Andy North
1979: Hale Irwin
1980: Jack Nicklaus
1981: David Graham
1982: Tom Watson
1983: Larry Nelson
1984: Fuzzy Zoeller
1985: Andy North
1986: Ray Floyd
1987: Scott Simpson
1988: Curtis Strange
1989: Curtis Strange
1990: Hale Irwin
1991: Payne Stewart
1992: Tom Kite
1993: Lee Janzen
1994: Ernie Els
1995: Corey Pavin
1996: Steve Jones
1997: Ernie Els
1998: Lee Janzen
1999: Payne Stewart
2000: Tiger Woods
TRIVIA
PRACTICE TEES (1 POINT)
1. Who is the oldest player to win the U.S. Open?
2. Who was the last European to win the U.S. Open?
3. Name the only player to win the U.S. Junior Amateur, the U.S. Amateur and the U.S. Open.
4. Which player won or was runner-up eight times in a nine-year period?
5. Who won the last time the U.S. Open went to a playoff?
6. Nine players have won three legs of the career Grand Slam. Which one is missing only the U.S. Open?
MEMBERS TEES (3 POINTS)
7. Name the only player to lose three U.S. Opens in a playoff.
8. This player’s only victory in the 1950s was a U.S. Open.
9. Name the two players who have won a U.S. Open at Southern Hills.
10. Of the three men who have shot 63 in the U.S. Open, name the only player who didn’t go on to win.
11. Which two players finished runner-up, albeit 15 strokes behind to Tiger Woods in the 2000 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach?
12. In the past 90 years, who is the only player to win the U.S. Open twice on the same course?
CHAMPIONSHIP TEES (5 POINTS EACH)
13. Who was the last player to win the U.S. Open with a 72-hole score over par?
14. Name the two players who went 11 years between U.S. Open victories.
15. Who was the last player to win in his first U.S. Open attempt?
16. How many players have won consecutive U.S. Opens?
17. Tiger Woods’ 12-under total at Pebble Beach broke the previous U.S. Open record of eight under par held by three players. Name them.
18. Who is the only player to finish under par in three consecutive U.S. Opens?
19TH HOLE (10 POINTS)
Bonus: Which player set the U.S. Open record with a nine-hole 29, then matched it a year later?
ANSWERS
1. Hale Irwin, 45; 2. Tony Jacklin in 1970; 3. Tiger Woods; 4. Bobby Jones; 5. Ernie Els in 1994; 6. Sam Snead; 7. Arnold Palmer; 8. Jack Fleck, who beat Ben Hogan in a playoff; 9. Tommy Bolt in 1958 and Hubert Green in 1977; 10. Tom Weiskopf; 11. Ernie Els and Miguel Angel Jimenez; 12. Jack Nicklaus at Baltusrol (1967, 1980); 13. Andy North, one-over 285, at Cherry Hills in 1978; 14. Julius Boros (1952-1963) and Hale Irwin (1979-1990); 15. Francis Ouimet in 1913; 16. Six. Willie Anderson (1903-05), John McDermott (1911-12), Bobby Jones (1929-30), Ralph Guldahl (1937-38), Ben Hogan (1950-51), Curtis Strange (1988-89); 17. Ben Hogan (1948), Jack Nicklaus (1980), Lee Janzen (1993); 18. Curtis Strange (1988-90); 19. Neal Lancaster.
SCORING
55-64: Grand Slam.
45-54: Open champion.
35-44: Sunday contender.
25-34: Amateur status.
11-24: Missed the cut.
0-10: Sell the clubs.
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