1903 U.S. Open (golf) explained

1903 U.S. Open
Dates:June 26–29, 1903
Location:Springfield, New Jersey
Course:Baltusrol Golf Club
Old Course (no longer exists)
Org:USGA
Format:Stroke play − 72 holes
Field:85
Cut:none
Winners Share:$200
Champion: Willie Anderson
Score:307, playoff
Previous:1902
Next:1904

The 1903 U.S. Open was the ninth U.S. Open, held June 26–29 at Baltusrol Golf Club in Springfield, New Jersey, west of New York City. Willie Anderson won the second of his four U.S. Open titles in a playoff over David Brown.[1] [2] The championship was played on the original course at Baltusrol,[3] now known as the Old Course, which no longer exists.

Anderson led after each of the first three rounds,[4] with a six-shot lead after 54 holes, but carded 82 in the final round on Saturday afternoon. Brown's 76 equaled them at 307 total, eight strokes clear of the field.[5] The playoff was moved to Monday because Sunday was reserved for member play, and was played in a heavy rainstorm. Anderson took a two-stroke lead at the turn, but Brown managed to tie after 14. At the next hole, Brown made a seven after his tee shot went out of bounds, but Anderson only gained a single stroke after three-putting for a six. At 16, Brown made a six to Anderson's five, and both made fours on the last two holes; Anderson ended at 82, two shots ahead.[1]

Anderson had won in 1901 and was the first to win the U.S. Open twice; it was the first of three consecutive titles, a feat yet to be repeated. His four U.S. Open wins set a record which has been equaled by three others: Bobby Jones, Ben Hogan, and Jack Nicklaus.

Donald Ross, who would become known as one of the greatest golf course architects, designing several courses that hosted future U.S. Opens, had his best U.S. Open finish with a 5th place showing. Baseball Hall of Famer John Montgomery Ward played in his first of two U.S. Opens here, finishing in 56th place.

The Old Course at Baltusrol hosted the U.S. Open again a dozen years later in 1915, then was plowed under three years later in 1918 by course architect A. W. Tillinghast to create the Upper and Lower Courses.

Round summaries

First round

Friday, June 26, 1903 (morning)

PlacePlayerScore
1 73
2 75
T3 align=center rowspan=276
align=center rowspan=3T5 Findlay Douglas (a) align=center rowspan=377
Stewart Gardner
Alex Smith
align=center rowspan=2T8 George Tuttle Brokaw (a) align=center rowspan=278
William Norton
T10 align=center rowspan=379
Source:[2] [4]

Second round

Friday, June 26, 1903 (afternoon)

PlacePlayerScore
1 73-76=149
T2 75-79=154
77-77=154
77-77=154
T5 79-77=156
Findlay Douglas (a) 77-79=156
7 76-81=157
8 79-79=158
T9 76-83=159
William Norton 78-81=159
82-77=159
Source:[2] [4]

Third round

Saturday, June 27, 1903 (morning)

PlacePlayerScore
1 73-76-76=225
2 79-77-75=231
3 77-77-81=235
T4 77-77-82=236
79-79-78=236
6 82-77-78=237
T7 75-79-84=238
Findlay Douglas (a) 77-79-82=238
9 76-81-82=239
10 83-80-78=241
Source:[2] [5]

Final round

Saturday, June 27, 1903 (afternoon)

PlacePlayerScoreMoney ($)
align=center rowspan=2T1 73-76-76-82=307 Playoff
79-77-75-76=307
3 77-77-82-79=315 125
4 77-77-81-81=316 100
5 79-79-78-82=318 80
6 76-83-83-77=319 70
7 75-79-84-83=321 50
8 Findlay Douglas (a) 77-79-82-84=322 0
T9 76-81-82-84=323 33
83-82-78-80=323
80-81-83-79=323
Source:[2] [5]

Amateurs: Douglas (322), Reinhart (325), Travis (326), Brokaw (333),
Croker (348), Carnegie (353), Kellogg (356), Gillespie (357),
Tappin (359), Watson (360), Ward (363), McDonald (372).

Playoff

Monday, June 29, 1903

PlacePlayerScoreMoney ($)
1 Willie Anderson 42-40=82 200
2 42-42=84 150
Source:[1]

External links

40.705°N -74.328°W

Notes and References

  1. News: Championship for Anderson . Chicago Daily Tribune . June 30, 1903 . 8.
  2. Book: Brenner, Morgan G.. The Majors of Golf: Complete Results of The Open, the U.S. Open, the PGA Championship and the Masters, 1860-2008. 2009 . 205–6 . 9780786453955. June 25, 2017.
  3. News: Ready for the championship . Chicago Daily Tribune . June 26, 1903 . 8.
  4. News: Play in golf tourney . Chicago Daily Tribune . June 27, 1903 . 6.
  5. News: Two champions are tied . Chicago Sunday Tribune . June 28, 1903 . 12.