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HISTORY
The
Open Championship at St Andrews
"To
win at St Andrews is the ultimate"
Tiger Woods, Open Champion 2000, 2005
"If a golfer is
to be remembered he must win The Open at St Andrews"
Jack Nicklaus, Open Champion 1970, 1978
With a new era came a
new icon. The Claret Jug carries the hallmark of 1873, the year
of the first St Andrews Open Championship. Until then 12-hole Prestwick
held the monopoly on the tournament, awarding a belt or a medal
to its champions. With Musselburgh donating a £10 share, the
most famous trophy in the world of golf was bought for all of £30.
There have now been 27
Opens held on the Old Course, and 22 different winners. Each has
walked in triumph up the final fairway into the great arena surrounding
the Home Green. Many thousands have been in their footsteps, but
fewer than two dozen people have walked off the 18th as Open Champion.
The first seven Old Course Opens were played over 36 holes and St
Andrews residents won five of them. Tom Kidd has the honour of being
the first, and he was joined by Jamie Anderson, two-time winner
Bob Martin, and Hugh Kirkaldy. This carried on the tradition established
by Old Tom Morris and his son, Tommy, who won eight tournaments
at Prestwick. Club and ball makers had an advantage, and the success
of these player-craftsmen helped to foster an interest in the mechanics
of their game, driving on further improvements. Bob Ferguson and
Jack Burns were the other 19th century Open Champions on the Old
Course.
The double success of
Fifer James Braid continued the tradition of local men winning at
St Andrews. Only England's JH Taylor, who was taught by St Andreans,
could equal Braid on the Old Course, and he also won twice at the
Home of Golf. Even after the war, Jock Hutchison, born in St Andrews
but an American citizen, came out on top. His victory pioneered
the way for his adopted countrymen to sweep to domination in the
inter-war years, with Bobby Jones and Densmore Shute taking the
title across the Atlantic from St Andrews during this period. Dick
Burton of England was victorious in 1939.
Following
the resumption of the Open, in 1946, half the winners have been
American, starting with Sam Snead and including the most successful
player of them all, Jack Nicklaus (right), the fourth double-winner
on the Old Course. Two other champions were Australian, including
Kel Nagle who won the Centenary Open in 1960. South African Bobby
Locke won in 1957 despite famously walking under a ladder in the
days before the tournament. The jubilant Seve Ballesteros from Spain
triumphed in 1984. Only one Briton has won at the Old Course since
1939.
St
Andrews caddie Tip Anderson guided Tony Lema to victory in 1964,
but the main contribution the residents make to The Open today is
in helping it to run so efficiently. The whole town seems somehow
to participate in this grandest of sports events.
The Old Course itself
has been a patient witness to the vicissitudes of time and its tides
of humanity. In the beginning, scores of 80 plus were championship-winning
totals. Kirkaldy lowered the record to 73, considered par for the
Old Course for many years (the 17th being a par 5). Bobby Jones
brought the record down to 68. His aggregate score of 285 was 11
better than Hutchison's, and was not bettered for 28 years, when
Peter Thomson shot 281. In the second half of the twentieth century
aggregates of around 280 have been enough to close in on the trophy.
The exceptions have been two of the modern greats, Nick Faldo (270)
and Tiger Woods, whose 269 total was 53 better than JH Taylor's
in 1895. But it should comfort those who fear the demise of the
Old Course as a championship challenge that John Daly's 1995 win
was achieved with a 6-under par total of 282.
There have been holes
in one and other great feats of shot making, but the memory of disasters
befalling players in the Swilcan Burn, Hell Bunker or at the Road
Hole, of missed putts and wind-blown shots, remain as fresh as many
a victory.
What all St Andrews champions
have in common is that they learned to plot their way around the
hazards that litter the links and prey on the mind. The Old Course
remains the toughest challenge to golfers because not only must
its champion defeat the best of his contemporaries but also force
his way through the gates of history.
As
Tiger Woods said in 2000, 'to win at St Andrews is the ultimate.'
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The 2010 Open collection is now available.
For a full range of golfwear and gifts visit
St Andrews Links online golf shop
All purchases contribute towards the maintenance and preservation
of the Links, including the Old Course.
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Open
Champions at St Andrews, 1873-2005
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| 1873 |
Tom
Kidd |
1939 |
Dick Burton |
| 1876 |
Bob
Martin |
1946 |
Sam Snead |
| 1879 |
Jamie
Anderson |
1955 |
Peter Thomson |
| 1882 |
Bob
Ferguson |
1957 |
Bobby Locke |
| 1885 |
Bob
Martin |
1960 |
Kel Nagle |
| 1888 |
Jack
Burns |
1964 |
Tony Lema |
| 1891 |
Hugh
Kirkaldy |
1970 |
Jack Nicklaus |
| 1895 |
J.H.
Taylor |
1978 |
Jack Nicklaus |
| 1900 |
J.H.
Taylor |
1984 |
Seve Ballesteros |
| 1905 |
James
Braid |
1990 |
Nick Faldo |
| 1910
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James
Braid |
1995 |
John Daly |
| 1921 |
Jock
Hutchison |
2000 |
Tiger Woods |
| 1927 |
Mr
R.T. Jones |
2005 |
Tiger Woods |
| 1933 |
Densmore Shute |
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