2009 Open Championship Explained

2009 Open Championship
Dates:16–19 July 2009
Course:Ailsa Course, Turnberry
Org:The R&A
Tour:European Tour
PGA Tour
Japan Golf Tour
Par:70
Field:156 players, 73 after cut
Cut:144 (+4)
Purse:£4,200,000
4,852,724
$6,837,628
Winners Share:£750,000
€866,558
$1,221,005
Champion: Stewart Cink
Score:278 (−2), playoff
Previous:2008
Next:2010

The 2009 Open Championship was a men's major golf championship and the 138th Open Championship, held from 16–19 July at the Ailsa Course of the Turnberry Resort, in Ayrshire, Scotland. Stewart Cink won his only major championship after a four-hole playoff with Tom Watson. At age 59, Watson had the chance to win his sixth Open and become the oldest major champion in history during regulation play, but was unable to par the final hole and tied with Cink.[1]

It was the fourth Open at Turnberry; the previous winners were Watson (1977), Greg Norman (1986), and Nick Price (1994).[2]

Venue

See main article: Turnberry (golf course). As with previous editions of The Open Championship at Turnberry, this event was played on the resort's Ailsa Course. Since it last hosted the Championship in 1994, the course had been lengthened by almost 250yd, with over 60yd having been added to the par 5 17th hole. Six new tees had been built, and the 16th hole was 45yd longer and had been remodelled into a dog-leg to the right, having previously been relatively straight.[3]

Card of the course

Ailsa Course

HoleNameYardsParHoleNameYardsPar
1Ailsa Craig354410Dinna Fouter4564
2Mak Siccar428411Maidens1753
3Blaw Wearie489412Monument4514
4Woe-Be-Tide166313Tickly Tap4104
5Fin Me Oot474414Risk-An-Hope4484
6Tappie Toorie231315Ca' Canny2063
7Roon The Ben538516Wee Burn4554
8Goat Fell454417Lang Whang5595
9Bruce's Castle449418Duel in the Sun4614
Out3,58335In3,62135
Total7,20470

Previous lengths of the course for The Open Championship:[4]

Field

Each year, around two-thirds of The Open Championship field consists of players that are fully exempt from qualifying for the Open. Below is a list of the exemption categories, and the players who were exempt for the 2009 Open. Each player is classified according to the first category by which they qualified, with other categories they also fall into being shown in parentheses. Some categories are not shown as all players in that category had already qualified from an earlier category:

1. First 10 and anyone tying for 10th place in the 2008 Open Championship
Robert Allenby (5,15), Stephen Ames (5), Paul Casey (5,6,7,19), Ben Curtis (3,4,5,15,19), Ernie Els (3,4,5,15), Jim Furyk (5,15,19), Pádraig Harrington (3,4,5,6,13,19), David Howell, Anthony Kim (5,15,19), Greg Norman (3), Ian Poulter (5,6,19), Henrik Stenson (5,6,14,19), Steve Stricker (5,15,19), Chris Wood

2. Past Open Champions born between 17 July 1943 and 19 July 1948
(Eligible but did not compete: Tony Jacklin, Johnny Miller)

3. Past Open Champions aged 60 or under on 19 July 2008
Mark Calcavecchia, John Daly, David Duval (4), Nick Faldo, Todd Hamilton (4), Paul Lawrie (4), Tom Lehman, Justin Leonard (5,15,19), Sandy Lyle, Mark O'Meara, Tom Watson, Tiger Woods (4,5,11,12,13)
(Eligible but did not compete: Ian Baker-Finch, Seve Ballesteros, Nick Price, Bill Rogers)

4. The Open Champions for 1999-2008

5. The first 50 players on the Official World Golf Rankings for Week 21, 2009
Ángel Cabrera (11,12), Chad Campbell (15,19), K. J. Choi (15), Stewart Cink (15,19), Tim Clark (15), Luke Donald, Gonzalo Fernández-Castaño, Ross Fisher (6), Sergio García (6,14,15,19), Retief Goosen (6), Miguel Ángel Jiménez (6,7,19), Dustin Johnson, Zach Johnson (12), Martin Kaymer (6), Søren Kjeldsen (6), Hunter Mahan (15,19), Graeme McDowell (6,19), Rory McIlroy, Geoff Ogilvy (11), Sean O'Hair, Kenny Perry (15,19), Álvaro Quirós (6), Justin Rose (19), Rory Sabbatini, Adam Scott, Vijay Singh (13,15), David Toms, Camilo Villegas (15), Nick Watney, Mike Weir (15), Lee Westwood (6,19), Oliver Wilson (6,19)

6. First 30 in the PGA European Tour Final Order of Merit for 2008
Darren Clarke, Richard Finch, Richard Green, Søren Hansen (19), Peter Hanson, Peter Hedblom, James Kingston, Pablo Larrazábal, Paul McGinley, Damien McGrane, Francesco Molinari, Colin Montgomerie, Charl Schwartzel, Anthony Wall

7. The BMW PGA Championship winners for 2007-2009
Anders Hansen

8. First 3 and anyone tying for 3rd place, not exempt having applied above, in the top 20 of the 2009 PGA European Tour Race to Dubai on completion of the 2009 BMW PGA Championship
Thongchai Jaidee, Louis Oosthuizen, Robert Rock

9. First 2 European Tour members and any European Tour members tying for 2nd place, not exempt, in a cumulative money list taken from all official PGA European Tour events from OWGR Week 19 up to and including the BMW International Open and including the U.S. Open
Nick Dougherty, Johan Edfors

10. The leading player, not exempt having applied above, in the first 5 and ties of each of the 2009 Open de France Alstom and the 2009 Barclays Scottish Open.

11. The U.S. Open Champions for 2005-2009
Michael Campbell, Lucas Glover

12. The U.S. Masters Champions for 2005-2009

13. The U.S. PGA Champions for 2004-2008

14. The U.S. PGA Tour Players Champions for 2007-2009

15. Top 30 on the Official 2008 PGA Tour FedEx Cup points list
Stuart Appleby, Briny Baird, Ken Duke, Ryuji Imada, Billy Mayfair, Carl Pettersson, Andrés Romero, Kevin Sutherland, D. J. Trahan, Bubba Watson

16. First 3 and anyone tying for 3rd place, not exempt having applied above, in the top 20 of the FedEx Cup points list of the 2009 PGA Tour on completion of the HP Byron Nelson Championship
Brian Gay, Charley Hoffman, Charles Howell III

17. First 2 PGA Tour members and any PGA Tour members tying for 2nd place, not exempt, in a cumulative money list taken from The Players Championship and the five PGA Tour events leading up to and including the 2009 AT&T National
Paul Goydos, Bryce Molder

18. The leading player, not exempt having applied above, in the first 5 and ties of each of the 2009 AT&T National and the 2009 John Deere Classic
Brandt Snedeker

19. Playing members of the 2008 Ryder Cup teams
J. B. Holmes, Boo Weekley

20. First place on the 2008 Asian Tour Order of Merit

21. First place on the 2008 PGA Tour of Australasia Order of Merit
Mark Brown

22. First place on the 2008 Sunshine Tour Order of Merit
Richard Sterne

23. The 2008 Japan Open Champion

24. First 2, not exempt, on the Official Money List of the Japan Golf Tour for 2008
Prayad Marksaeng, Azuma Yano

25. The leading 4 players, not exempt, in the 2009 Mizuno Open Yomiuri Classic
Ryo Ishikawa, Tomohiro Kondo, Kenichi Kuboya, David Smail

26. First 2 and anyone tying for 2nd place, not exempt having applied (25) above, in a cumulative money list taken from all official 2009 Japan Golf Tour events up to and including the 2009 Mizuno Open Yomiuri Classic
Yuta Ikeda, Koumei Oda

27. The Senior British Open Champion for 2008
Bruce Vaughan

28. The 2009 Amateur Champion
Matteo Manassero (a)

29. The 2008 U.S. Amateur Champion
(U.S. Amateur winner Danny Lee turned professional in April 2009 and forfeited his automatic exemption.[13])

30. The 2008 European Individual Amateur Champion
Stephan Gross (a)

International Final Qualifying

Africa: Jaco Ahlers, Marc Cayeux, Jeremy Kavanagh

Australasia: Josh Geary, Tim Wood, Michael Wright

Asia: Gaganjeet Bhullar, Liang Wenchong, Terry Pilkadaris, Tim Stewart

America: James Driscoll, Freddie Jacobson, Richard S. Johnson, Matt Kuchar, Martin Laird, Davis Love III, Jeff Overton

Europe: Paul Broadhurst, Rhys Davies, David Drysdale, Rafael Echenique, Oliver Fisher, Branden Grace, Raphaël Jacquelin, Gary Orr, Richie Ramsay, Graeme Storm

Local Final Qualifying (Monday 6 July and Tuesday 7 July)

Glasgow Golf Club - Gailes Links

Thomas Aiken, Peter Baker, David Higgins, Elliot Saltman

Kilmarnock (Barassie): Markus Brier, Peter Ellebye, Daniel Gaunt, Lloyd Saltman

Western Gailes: Fredrik Andersson Hed, Thomas Haylock, Steve Surry, Daniel Wardrop

Alternates
Drawn from the Official World Golf Rankings of 5 July 2009[14] (provide the player was entered in the Open and did not withdraw from qualifying):[9] [15]

  1. Mathew Goggin replaced Trevor Immelman.[8]
  2. Ben Crane replaced Phil Mickelson.[9]
  3. Steve Marino replaced Shingo Katayama.[10]
  4. Rod Pampling entered the field as no players not already qualified finished in the top 5 at the Barclays Scottish Open.[16]
  5. Thomas Levet replaced Brett Quigley.[12] [15]
  6. John Senden replaced Jeev Milkha Singh.[11]

Round summaries

First round

Thursday, 16 July 2009

Calm and sunny weather provided good scoring conditions for the opening round. Miguel Ángel Jiménez took the lead at 64 (−6), and past champions turned back the clock: five-time winner Tom Watson, age 59, carded a bogey-free 65, and both Mark Calcavecchia (1989, age 49) and Mark O'Meara (1998, 52) shot 67. Ben Curtis, 2003 champion, also opened with 65 to join Watson and Kenichi Kuboya, who was even par through 14 holes, but finished birdie, birdie, eagle, birdie. Steve Stricker, Stewart Cink, and Camilo Villegas started strong at 66, and notables at 67 included Calcavecchia, O'Meara, Retief Goosen, Jim Furyk, Mike Weir, and Vijay Singh. Two-time defending champion Pádraig Harrington had a quiet 69, while Tiger Woods struggled off the tee for 71. Two-time champion Greg Norman, the previous year's Cinderella story, had a disappointing 77.[17] [18]

PlacePlayerScoreTo par
1 Miguel Ángel Jiménez64−6
T2 Ben Curtis65−5
Kenichi Kuboya
Tom Watson
T5 Stewart Cink66−4
Mathew Goggin
John Senden
Steve Stricker
Camilo Villegas
T10 Mark Calcavecchia67−3
Jim Furyk
Retief Goosen
Branden Grace
James Kingston
Steve Marino
Mark O'Meara
Vijay Singh
Richard Sterne
Boo Weekley
Mike Weir

Second round

Friday, 17 July 2009

High winds and scattered showers pushed the scoring average more than two strokes higher with just seven sub-par rounds on Friday, compared to fifty on Thursday. The conditions were the worst during the morning, and the round's best of 68 belonging to co-leader Steve Marino and Ross Fisher, tied for fourth place. Retief Goosen shot an even par 70 to share fourth. Veteran Tom Watson continued his excellent performance; he struggled through the front nine, but holed long putts at the 16th and 18th, as he made three birdies on the back nine to tie Marino for the lead at 135 (−5). Nearly sixty, Watson looked to become the oldest winner of a major championship by over a decade.[19]

The cut was at 144 (+4) and 73 players advanced to the weekend. Sixteen-year-old British Amateur Champion Matteo Manassero played with Watson and posted 141 and all but secured the silver medal as the leading amateur.[20] Among those to miss the cut was world number one and pre-tournament favorite Tiger Woods. Going out in the afternoon, his 74 included two double bogeys on holes 10 and 13, and his 145 missed the cut by a stroke. It was his first missed cut at the Open, and only the second missed cut in a major as a professional, after the 2006 U.S. Open.[19] Other notables to miss the cut included Mike Weir (67–78=145), Ben Curtis (65–80=145), David Duval (71–76=147), and Geoff Ogilvy (75–78=153).[21]

PlacePlayerScoreTo par
T1 Steve Marino67-68=135−5
Tom Watson65-70=135
3 Mark Calcavecchia67-69=136−4
T4 Ross Fisher69-68=137−3
Retief Goosen67-70=137
Miguel Ángel Jiménez64-73=137
Kenichi Kuboya65-72=137
Vijay Singh67-70=137
T9 Stewart Cink66-72=138−2
J. B. Holmes68-70=138
Mathew Goggin66-72=138
James Kingston67-71=138
Lee Westwood68-70=138

Amateurs: Manassero (+1), Gross (+9).

Third round

Saturday, 18 July 2009

Tom Watson continued his good form with a one-over 71 to maintain a one stroke lead. Mathew Goggin was one of only five players under par in conditions similar to Friday, and was just one stroke off the lead, tied for second with Ross Fisher. The best round of the day was 67 by Bryce Molder, who leapt into the top ten after starting the round in a tie for 53rd.[22] [23]

PlacePlayerScoreTo par
1 Tom Watson65-70-71=206−4
T2 Ross Fisher69-68-70=207−3
Mathew Goggin66-72-69=207
T4 Retief Goosen67-70-71=208−2
Lee Westwood68-70-70=208
T6 Stewart Cink66-72-71=209−1
Jim Furyk67-72-70=209
T8 Bryce Molder70-73-67=210E
Thongchai Jaidee69-72-69=210
T10 Ángel Cabrera69-70-72=211+1
Richard S. Johnson70-72-69=211
Steve Marino67-68-76=211
Boo Weekley67-72-72=211

Final round

Sunday, 19 July 2009

Fisher birdied the first two holes to take the outright lead as Watson had two bogeys in three holes. Fisher had a three shot lead at one point, but dropped back with a bogey on the 4th hole and quadruple bogey 8 on the 5th hole, and was never in contention again. Matthew Goggin was in contention most of the day and was tied for the lead with 5 holes remaining, but 3 straight bogeys took him out of contention. Chris Wood was 4 under for the day through 17 holes and 2 under the tournament, just 1 stroke behind the lead. But he caught a flier from the rough on 18 and was unable to get up and down behind the green, dropping to 1 under. Lee Westwood eagled the 7th hole to move into the lead, which he held or shared for most of the round, but bogeys at three of the last four holes, including a three putt on 18, dropped him to 1 under, one stroke behind clubhouse leader Cink, who had rolled in a 15feet putt for birdie at the 18th to move to two-under.

Watson birdied the 17th to move into sole possession of the lead at 3 under par. Needing a par four at the 18th to win, his approach shot took a hard bounce and rolled well over the green. Watson was unable to get up and down and entered into a four-hole playoff with Cink for the

PlacePlayerScoreTo parMoney (£)
T1 Stewart Cink66-72-71-69=278−2Playoff
Tom Watson65-70-71-72=278
T3 Lee Westwood68-70-70-71=279−1255,000
Chris Wood70-70-72-67=279
T5 Luke Donald71-72-70-67=280E157,000
Mathew Goggin66-72-69-73=280
Retief Goosen67-70-71-72=280
T8 Thomas Aiken71-72-69-69=281+190,400
Ernie Els69-72-72-68=281
Søren Hansen68-72-74-67=281
Richard S. Johnson70-72-69-70=281
Justin Leonard70-70-73-68=281
Amateurs: Manassero (+2)

Scorecard

Hole 1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9 101112131415161718
Par444343544434443454
Cink −1−1−1−1EE−1−1−1E−1−1−2−1−2−1−1−2
Watson −3−3−2−2−2−2−3−3−2−2−3−3−3−2−2−2−3−2
Westwood −2−2−2−2−1−2−4−4−4−3−3−3−3−3−2−1−2−1
Wood +2+2+2+2+2+2E−1−1−2−2−2−1E−1−1−2−1
Donald +2 +2 +2 +1 +1 +1 +1 +2 +2 +1 +1 +1 +1 +2 +1 +1 E E
Goggin −3 −2 −2 −1 −1 −1 −2 −2 −2 −3 −3 −3 −3 −2 −1 E E E
Goosen −2 −1 −1 −1 −1 −1 −1 −1 −1 −1 −1 E E E +2 +2 E E
Fisher −4 −5 −5 −4 E E +1 +2 +2 +2 +2 +2 +2 +2 +2 +2 +2 +2
Cumulative tournament scores, relative to par
EagleBirdieBogeyDouble bogeyTriple bogey+

Source:[24]

Playoff

Watson and Cink had tied at 278 (−2) during regulation play and entered a playoff for the championship. Under the rules of the Open Championship, a four-hole aggregate playoff was played over hole numbers 5, 6, 17, and 18.

On the first extra hole, both players found greenside bunkers, but while Watson was only able to make minimal progress towards the hole and made bogey, Cink splashed out to 6feet and saved par. Both made par three on the second hole, but at the par 5 17th, Watson's drive went left to a bad lie in heavy rough, and he was unable to reach the fairway with his next shot. On the green in four, he three-putted for double bogey, while Cink hit the green in two and two-putted for birdie. With a four-stroke lead on the final hole, Cink hit his approach to 5feet and made birdie to triumph in the playoff by six strokes.[1]

PlacePlayerScoreTo parMoney (£)
1 Stewart Cink 4-3-4-3=14 −2750,000
2 5-3-7-5=20 +4450,000

Scorecard

Playoff

Hole  5    6   17  18 
Par4354
Cink EE−1−2
Watson +1+1+3+4
Cumulative playoff scores, relative to par
Source:[24]

External links

55.316°N -4.832°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cink dashes Watson's Open dreams . . 18 July 2009 . 18 July 2009.
  2. Web site: Turnberry hosts The Open in 2009 . . 1 December 2005 . 20 July 2009.
  3. Web site: Turnberry to set longer Open test . . 21 April 2009 . 2009-04-21. https://web.archive.org/web/20090422012539/http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/golf/8009589.stm. 22 April 2009 . live.
  4. Web site: Media guide . The Open Championship . 2011 . 20, 203 . 1 July 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120418224641/http://www.theopen.com/~/media/The%20Open/Information/Media_Guide.ashx . 18 April 2012.
  5. Web site: Karlsson withdraws from British Open . Reuters. . 7 July 2009 . 20 July 2009.
  6. Web site: Eye problem forces Karlsson out of Open . Agence France-Presse. . 7 July 2009 . 20 July 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090709221835/http://sports.sg.msn.com/golf/article.aspx?cp-documentid=3441880 . 9 July 2009 . dead .
  7. Web site: Immelman withdraws from British Open . Associated Press. . 8 July 2009 . 20 July 2009.
  8. Web site: Injury forces Trevor Immelman to pull out of Turnberry Open . . 8 July 2009 . 20 July 2009.
  9. Web site: Mickelson choosing to stay with wife . Associated Press. . 10 July 2009 . 20 July 2009.
  10. Web site: Katayama out with injury; Marino takes spot in field . . 14 July 2009 . 20 July 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090715032001/http://www.pgatour.com/2009/r/07/12/katayama.wds/index.html . 15 July 2009 . dead.
  11. Web site: Jeev Milkha Singh pulls out of the Open . . 14 July 2009 . 20 July 2009.
  12. Web site: Stricker earns second PGA win of year . Associated Press. . 12 July 2009 . 20 July 2009.
  13. Web site: World Number 1 Danny Lee Turns Pro . The New Zealand Herald. amateurgolf.com . 14 April 2009 . 20 July 2009.
  14. Web site: Official World Golf Rankings, Week 27, 5 July 2009 . . 5 July 2009 . 20 July 2009 .
  15. Web site: Open joy for Thomas Levet . Agence France-Presse. . 20 July 2009 . 20 July 2009 .
  16. Web site: Pampling pinches last-minute Open slot . . 13 July 2009 . 13 July 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120402152740/http://news.smh.com.au/breaking-news-sport/pampling-pinches-lastminute-open-slot-20090713-dho5.html . 2 April 2012 . dead.
  17. Web site: Superb Jimenez holds lead at Open . 16 July 2009. BBC Sport. 16 July 2009. https://web.archive.org/web/20090717101822/http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/golf/8154954.stm. 17 July 2009 . live.
  18. Web site: The Open - day one as it happened . 16 July 2009. BBC Sport. 20 July 2009. https://web.archive.org/web/20090716101256/http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/golf/8150295.stm. 16 July 2009 . live.
  19. Web site: Woods misses cut as Watson shines . . 17 July 2009 . 18 July 2009.
  20. Web site: Italian teenager enjoys dream day . . 17 July 2009 . 18 July 2009.
  21. Web site: Open day two as it happened . 16 July 2009. BBC Sport. 20 July 2009.
  22. Web site: Watson leads going into final day . . 18 July 2009 . 18 July 2009.
  23. Web site: Open day three as it happened . 16 July 2009. BBC Sport. 20 July 2009.
  24. Web site: 2009 Open Championship leaderboard . Yahoo! Sports . 19 July 2009 . 8 July 2014.