Western Province Open Explained

Western Province Open
Establishment:1936
Final Year:1976
Tour:Southern African Tour
Format:Stroke play
Month Played:January
Aggregate:268 Gary Player (1971)
To-Par:−16 as above
Final Champion: Allan Henning

The Western Province Open was a golf tournament in South Africa as part of the Southern Africa Tour. In the early years of the tournament, Bobby Locke and Harold Henning had much success, winning the event multiple times each. During the middle and later phase of the tournament legend Gary Player had much success, ultimately winning the event five times.

History

Bobby Locke, Gary Player, Harold Henning, and Bobby Verwey had the most success in the early years of the tournament. In 1956, Locke was victorious, defeating Australia's Peter Thomson by two shots. A young Gary Player finished solo third.[1] The following year, Player and Henning shared the championship, three ahead of Locke, the third place finisher.[2] Locke came back the following year with a blowout win, defeating joint runner-up Henning by 11 shots.[3] Henning won the following year, defeating Eric Moore by two. Locke finished third at 283.[4] Player won the following year but Henning captured the title again in 1961 defeating Bobby Verwey by a stroke.[5] Two years later Verwey "led throughout" and defeated Eric Moore by four.

In the late 1960s and early 1970s, the tournament was dominated by Gary Player and Cobie Legrange. In 1968, Player set the course record in the third round on his way to an easy win. The following year, Legrange was victorious, defeating England's Peter Oosterhuis down the stretch. In 1970, Scotland's Bobby Walker won the tournament defeating fellow Briton Jimmy Hitchcock. According to The Guardian, Walker "became the first overseas player to win the Western Province open."[6] In 1971, however, Player came back and won easily, winning by seven. The following year Player successfully defended his championship, defeating Legrange by four.

In the final years of the event, a variety of golfers had success. In 1973, Hugh Baiocchi overcame a two shot deficit to Ireland's John O'Leary and win. The following year, South African John Fourie won handily, defeating Legrange by seven. Fourie finished joint runner-up the following year, one behind champion Bill Brask. In 1976, at the final edition of the event, Allan Henning was victorious, defeating Baiocchi by six.

Winners

YearWinnerScoreTo parMargin ofvictoryRunner(s)-upRef.
1936 Alf Padgham2786 strokes Sid Brews
Bill Cox
[7]
1956 Bobby Locke2872 strokes Peter Thomson
1957285Tied
1958 Bobby Locke (2)28611 strokes Harold Henning
Ronnie Glennie (a)
1959 Harold Henning (2)2802 strokes Eric Moore
1960 Gary Player (2)271
1961 Harold Henning (3)2841 stroke Bobby Verwey
1962 Tommy Trevena289
1963 Bobby Verwey2864 strokes Eric Moore[8] [9]
1964 Retief Waltman
1965 Allan Henning
1966 Cobie Legrange
1967 Denis Hutchinson
1968 Gary Player (3)280−124 strokes Clive Clark[10] [11]
1969 Cobie Legrange (2)272−122 strokes Peter Oosterhuis[12] [13]
1970 Bobby Walker2841 stroke Jimmy Hitchcock[14]
1971 Gary Player (4)268−167 strokes Harold Henning
Craig Shankland
[15]
1972 Gary Player (5)278−104 strokes Cobie Legrange[16] [17]
1973 Hugh Baiocchi292E1 stroke John O'Leary[18]
1974 (Jan) John Fourie277−117 strokes Cobie Legrange[19]
1974 (Nov) Bill Brask280−41 stroke John Fourie
Allan Henning
[20]
1975No tournament due to rescheduling from November to January
1976 Allan Henning282−66 strokes Hugh Baiocchi[21]

Notes and References

  1. News: 23 January 1956 . Bobby Locke Downs Peter Thomson . 30 . 5 . . 8751 . Australian Capital Territory, Australia . 15 September 2022 . National Library of Australia.
  2. News: 14 January 1958 . Rees and Hunt fifth in South Africa . 3 . . Newspapers.com.
  3. News: 13 January 1958 . Rees 5th to Locke . 5 . . Newspapers.com.
  4. Web site: 12 January 1959 . Henning has win in Open . 14 . The Age.
  5. Web site: January 9, 1961 . Golf Victory to H. Henning . 2023-12-25 . The Age . en.
  6. Web site: February 9, 1970 . Walker wins Western Province . 2023-12-26 . The Guardian . en.
  7. News: 23 November 1936 . Padgham's record round . 7 . . The Times Digital Archive . limited . 27 December 2023.
  8. Web site: 7 January 1963 . Bob Charles in Sixth Place . The Canberra Times.
  9. Web site: January 7, 1963 . Hill Shares Sixth Place . 2023-12-25 . Daily Post (Merseyside edition) . en.
  10. Web site: February 19, 1968 . Player Triumphs . 2023-12-26 . Western Daily Press . en.
  11. Web site: 19 February 1968 . Player's victory in Cape Town . 5 . The Glasgow Herald.
  12. Web site: February 19, 1969 . Oosterhuis is edged out . 2023-12-26 . The Observer . en.
  13. Web site: February 3, 1969 . Golf . 2023-12-26 . The Sydney Morning Herald . en.
  14. Web site: 9 February 1970 . Walker wins by one stroke . 5 . The Glasgow Herald.
  15. Web site: February 8, 1971 . Player in winning form for U.S. trip . 2023-12-26 . Evening Post . en.
  16. Web site: January 17, 1972 . Player wins by four strokes . 2023-12-26 . Huddersfield Daily Examiner . en.
  17. Web site: January 17, 1972 . Player in top spot . 2023-12-26 . Western Daily Press . en.
  18. Web site: 15 January 1973 . Baiocchi slips by O'Leary . 5 . The Glasgow Herald.
  19. Web site: 14 January 1974 . Seven-shot win for Fourie . 5 . The Glasgow Herald.
  20. Web site: 2 December 1974 . Gullane post for Hume . 5 . The Glasgow Herald.
  21. News: 26 January 1976 . Holiday sport . 11 (18 in paper) . The Sydney Morning Herald . Sydney, New South Wales, Australia . 2023-09-10 . Google News Archive.