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Greater Jacksonville Open

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Greater Jacksonville Open
Tournament information
LocationLauderhill, Florida
Established1945
Course(s)Inverrary Country Club
Par72
Tour(s)PGA Tour
FormatStroke play
Prize fundUS$175,000
Month playedMarch
Final year1976
Tournament record score
Aggregate264 Sam Snead (1946)
To par−24 as above
Final champion
United States Hubert Green
Location map
Inverrary CC is located in the United States
Inverrary CC
Inverrary CC
Location in the United States
Inverrary CC is located in Florida
Inverrary CC
Inverrary CC
Location in Florida

The Greater Jacksonville Open was a PGA Tour event that was played from 1945 until 1976.

Shortly after World War II, the Jacksonville Open began play as a PGA Tour event in Jacksonville, Florida at the Hyde Park Golf Club until it was discontinued in the mid-1950s. In the mid-1960s, the PGA Tour came to town again. This time the event was initially named the Jacksonville Open again and changed for the 1968 event to the Jacksonville Open Invitational. The name was changed to the Greater Jacksonville Open for the 1969 event.

The Greater Jacksonville Open was discontinued after the 1976 tournament when the PGA Tour decided to relocate The Players Championship to Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida. The PGA Tour had been looking for some time for a permanent home for the marquee event which has professional golf's highest prize fund and is sometimes referred to as the "fifth major". The Players Championship had been played at the Atlanta Country Club in Marietta, Georgia in 1974, the Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth in 1975 and at the Inverrary Country Club in Ft. Lauderdale in 1976. The Greater Jacksonville Open laid the groundwork and provided much of the infrastructure for the modern Players Championship, which was first played in Ponte Vedra Beach in 1977.[1]

Tournament highlights

[edit]
  • 1947: During his third round, Ben Hogan scores eleven on the par-3 6th hole.[2]
  • 1952: At the end of regulation play, Doug Ford and Sam Snead were tied for the lead. An 18-hole playoff was scheduled for the next day but rather than play, Snead forfeited. The forfeit stemmed from a ruling Snead received during the tournament's second round of play. On the 10th hole, Snead's drive landed behind an out of bounds stake. While Chick Harbert who was playing with Snead thought the ball was out of bounds,[3] a rules official ruled differently due to the starter not telling players the stakes had been moved since the previous day's play had ended. Afterwards Snead explained why he forfeited even though Ford suggested they play sudden death for the title. "I want to be fair about it. I don't want anyone to think I took advantage of the ruling."[4]
  • 1965: Bert Weaver wins the first modern version of the tournament. He finishes one shot ahead of Bruce Devlin, Jack Nicklaus, Bob Charles, and Dave Marr.[5]
  • 1966: Jack Nicklaus makes a double eagle[6] on the tournament's final hole but can finish no better than tied for eighth. Doug Sanders is the winner by one shot over Gay Brewer.[7]
  • 1967: Jacksonville native Dan Sikes wins by one shot over Bill Collins.[8]
  • 1968: Tony Jacklin becomes the first English golfer to win on the PGA Tour. He finishes two shots ahead of DeWitt Weaver, Chi-Chi Rodríguez, Doug Sanders, and Don January.[9]
  • 1972: Tony Jacklin takes home his second Jacksonville title via a sudden death playoff win over John Jacobs.[10] No Englishman would win a PGA Tour event on US soil again till Nick Faldo triumphed at the 1983 Sea Pines Heritage.[11]
  • 1975: Larry Ziegler shoots a final round 65 to win by two shots over Mike Morley and Mac McLendon.[12]
  • 1976: Hubert Green wins the last edition of the tournament. He finishes two shots ahead of Miller Barber.[13]

Winners

[edit]
Year Winner Score To par Margin of
victory
Runner(s)-up
Greater Jacksonville Open
1976 United States Hubert Green (2) 276 −12 2 strokes United States Miller Barber
1975 United States Larry Ziegler 276 −12 2 strokes United States Mac McLendon
United States Mike Morley
1974 United States Hubert Green 276 −12 3 strokes United States John Mahaffey
1973 United States Jim Colbert 279 −9 1 stroke United States Lou Graham
United States Johnny Miller
United States Dan Sikes
United States Jim Wiechers
1972 England Tony Jacklin (2) 283 −5 Playoff United States John Jacobs
1971 South Africa Gary Player 281 −7 Playoff United States Hal Underwood
1970 United States Don January 279 −9 Playoff United States Dale Douglass
1969 United States Raymond Floyd 278 −10 Playoff United States Gardner Dickinson
Jacksonville Open Invitational
1968 England Tony Jacklin 273 −15 2 strokes United States Gardner Dickinson
United States Don January
United States Chi-Chi Rodríguez
United States Doug Sanders
United States DeWitt Weaver
Jacksonville Open
1967 United States Dan Sikes 279 −9 1 stroke United States Bill Collins
1966 United States Doug Sanders 273 −15 1 stroke United States Gay Brewer
1965 United States Bert Weaver 285 −3 1 stroke New Zealand Bob Charles
Australia Bruce Devlin
United States Dave Marr
United States Jack Nicklaus
1954–1964: No tournament
1953 United States Lew Worsham 272 −16 1 stroke Australia Jim Ferrier
1952 United States Doug Ford 280 −8 Playoff United States Sam Snead
1951 Australia Jim Ferrier 272 −16 11 strokes United States Lloyd Mangrum
United States Jack Shields
1950 United States Cary Middlecoff (2) 279 −9 2 strokes United States George Fazio
1949 United States Cary Middlecoff 274 −10 2 strokes United States Jerry Barber
1948 United States Chick Harbert 284 −4 1 stroke United States Skip Alexander
United States Vic Ghezzi
1947 United States Clayton Heafner 281 −3 Playoff United States Lew Worsham
1946 United States Sam Snead (2) 264 −24 4 strokes United States Jimmy Demaret
1945 United States Sam Snead 266 −22 4 strokes United States Bob Hamilton

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Kerr, Jessie-Lynne (July 20, 2007). "Montgomery championed pro golf in area". The Times-Union. Retrieved 2007-11-04.
  2. ^ Ward, Andrew (1999). Golf's Strangest Rounds. London: Robson Books. p. 146. ISBN 1861051840.
  3. ^ Ford gets first major golf win
  4. ^ "Sam Snead Forfeits First in Jacksonville Open". The Spokesman-Review. Associated Press. March 25, 1952. p. 12 – via Google News.
  5. ^ Bert Weaver wins Jacksonville Open golf tournament
  6. ^ Big Jack gets double eagle; First of career
  7. ^ Doug Sanders wins $82,000 Jacksonville Open golf tourney
  8. ^ Hometown hero Dan Sikes takes Jacksonville Open
  9. ^ Cool Tony Jacklin wins Jacksonville
  10. ^ Tony Jacklin is winner in Jacksonville
  11. ^ Faldo rises to Kite's challenge to win
  12. ^ Ziegler takes Jacksonville
  13. ^ Hubert Green captures another tourney win
[edit]