St. Petersburg Open Invitational Explained

St. Petersburg Open Invitational
Location:St. Petersburg, Florida
Establishment:1930
Course:Lakewood Country Club
Par:72
Tour:PGA Tour
Format:Stroke play
Month Played:March
Final Year:1964
Aggregate:261 Bob Goalby (1961)
To-Par:−23 as above
Final Champion: Bruce Devlin
Map:USA#USA Florida
Map Relief:yes
Map Label:Lakewood Country Club
Coordinates:27.731°N -82.661°W

The St. Petersburg Open Invitational, first played as the St. Petersburg Open, was a PGA Tour event that was held at three St. Petersburg, Florida area clubs for 29 years from 1930 until 1964. The clubs that hosted the event were: Lakewood Country Club (now known as St. Petersburg Country Club),[1] Pasadena Country Club (now known as Pasadena Yacht and Country Club), and Sunset Golf Club of the Vinoy Park Hotel (now known as the Renaissance Vinoy Resort & Golf Club).[2]

Bob Goalby won[3] the 1961 event after making eight consecutive birdies in the final round, a PGA Tour record at the time. Other golfers tied Goalby's mark but nobody surpassed it till 2009.[4] In 1963, Raymond Floyd won the event at 20 years 6 months of age becoming the youngest player to win a PGA Tour event since 1928.[2] [5]

Bruce Devlin, an Australian golfer who had recently moved to the United States, won the first of his eight PGA Tour titles at the last one in 1964. The tournament succumbed to financial pressure when the St. Petersburg City Council voted to postpone a decision on sponsorship of the 1965 event, and then Jacksonville announced the resumption of the Jacksonville Open during week the tournament was to be held.[2]

Tournament hosts

CourseYears
Lakewood Country Club 1930 (co-host), 1933 (co-host), 1936 (co-host), 1938, 1940, 1942, 1948, 1952, 1955–56, 1959–60, 1962–64
Jungle Country Club 1930 (co-host)
Pasadena Country Club 1932, 1933 (co-host), 1934, 1936 (co-host), 1937, 1939, 1941, 1947, 1949–51, 1953, 1957–58, 1961
Sunset Golf Club at Vinoy Park 1946

Winners

YearWinnerScoreTo parMargin of
victory
Runner(s)-upWinner's
share ($)
St. Petersburg Open Invitational
272 −16 4 strokes 3,300
274 −14 1 stroke 3,500
272 −16 2 strokes 2,800
261 −23 3 strokes 2,800
282 −6 Playoff 2,000
Cary Middlecoff (2) 275 −13 3 strokes 2,000
276 −8 1 stroke 2,000
St. Petersburg Open
1957 269 −15 4 strokes 1,700 <--other sources say 1,600-->
1956 275 −13 Playoff 2,200
1955 274 −14 2 strokes 2,200
1954: No tournament
1953 266 −18 1 stroke 2,000
1952 Jack Burke Jr. (2) 266 −22 8 strokes 2,000
1951 268 −16 6 strokes 2,000
1950 272 −12 1 stroke 2,000
1949 275 −9 1 stroke 2,000
1948 272 −16 3 strokes 2,000
1947 Jimmy Demaret (2) 280 −4 3 strokes 2,000
1946 269 −15 5 strokes 2,000
1943–1945: No tournament due to World War II
1942 Sam Snead (3) 286 −2 3 strokes 1,000
1941 Sam Snead (2) 279 −5 2 strokes 1,200
1940 211 −2 1 stroke 700
1939 207 −9 Playoff 700
1938 282 −2 Playoff 700
1937 284 −4 Playoff 700
1936 283 −3 Playoff 500
1935: No tournament
1934 141 −3 3 strokes 200
1933 144 +1 1 stroke 275
1932 209 −7 1 stroke 500
1931: No tournament
1930 141 +1 1 stroke 1,000

Notes and References

  1. Web site: St. Petersburg Country Club Our Golf Course. St. Petersburg Country Club. 2014-09-23.
  2. News: St. Petersburg Open left legacy . St. Petersburg Times . October 15, 2000 . 2007-11-05.
  3. https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=-SZIAAAAIBAJ&sjid=mQANAAAAIBAJ&pg=2925,1934447&dq=bob+goalby+st+petersburg&hl=en Goalby cards 8 consecutive birdies to win at St. Pete
  4. http://golf.about.com/od/progolftours/qt/consecbirdies.htm Most Consecutive Birdies in a PGA Tour Tournament
  5. Web site: USGA History:1951 - 1970 . 2007-11-05 . https://web.archive.org/web/20071220214639/http://www.usga.org/aboutus/usga_history/1951_1970.html . 2007-12-20.