1910 U.S. Open (golf)

The 1910 U.S. Open was the sixteenth U.S. Open, held June 17–20 at Philadelphia Cricket Club in Chestnut Hill, Pennsylvania, a neighborhood of northwest Philadelphia. Alex Smith, the champion four years earlier, prevailed in an 18-hole playoff over his younger brother Macdonald Smith and 18-year-old John McDermott to win his second U.S. Open.[1][2]

1910 U.S. Open
Tournament information
DatesJune 17–20, 1910
LocationChestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Course(s)Philadelphia Cricket Club
Organized byUSGA
FormatStroke play − 72 holes
Statistics
Par73
Field73, 52 after cut
Cut167 (+21)
Winner's share$300
Champion
Alex Smith
298 (+6)
Philadelphia 
Location in the United States
Philadelphia 
Location in Pennsylvania

On Friday, Alex Smith opened with a pair of 73's to take the 36-hole lead by two shots ahead of McDermott, Gilbert Nicholls, Fred McLeod, and Tom Anderson.[3]

Smith carded a 79 in the third round on Saturday morning that left him two behind McDermott, who shot a 75 for 223. In the final round that afternoon, McDermott was the first to finish and posted another 75 and a 298 total. Macdonald Smith shot 71 that also placed him at 298. McLeod had a chance to also post 298 after driving the final hole, but his putt for a two stayed out and he finished a shot back. Alex Smith also drove the green at the last needing only a two-putt to win, but he missed from 18 inches (45 cm) and tied with McDermott and his brother.[4] Alex was not fazed by the near-miss; in the Monday playoff, his 71 beat McDermott by four and Macdonald by six.

McDermott won the next two U.S. Opens; he was the first American-born winner and remains the youngest champion (19) through 2016. Four-time champion Willie Anderson played in his final U.S. Open and finished eleventh; he died four months later of epilepsy at age 31.

The course also hosted in 1907 and is the present-day St. Martin's course, now nine holes.[5]

Round summaries

First round

Friday, June 17, 1910 (morning)

PlacePlayerScoreTo par
1 Tom Anderson72−1
T2 Tom McNamara73E
Gilbert Nicholls
Alex Smith
T5 Willie Anderson74+1
John McDermott
Macdonald Smith
James R. Thomson
T9 Herbert Barker75+2
George Low

Source:[3]

Second round

Friday, June 17, 1910 (afternoon)

PlacePlayerScoreTo par
1 Alex Smith73-73=146E
T2 Tom Anderson72-76=148+2
John McDermott74-74=148
Fred McLeod78-70=148
Gilbert Nicholls73-75=148
T6 Jack Hobens74-77=151+5
Tom McNamara73-78=151
T8 Willie Anderson74-78=152+9
George Low75-77=152
Macdonald Smith74-78=152
Chay Thom80-72=152

Source:[3]

Third round

Saturday, June 18, 1910 (morning)

PlacePlayerScoreTo par
1 John McDermott74-74-75=223+4
2 Tom McNamara73-78-73=224+5
T3 Jack Hobens74-77-74=225+6
Gilbert Nicholls73-75-77=225
Alex Smith73-73-79=225
6 Fred McLeod78-70-78=226+7
T7Tom Bonnar74-78-75=227+8
Macdonald Smith74-78-75=227
T9 Willie Anderson74-78-76=228+9
Jock Hutchison77-76-75=228

Source:[4][6]

Final round

Saturday, June 18, 1910 (afternoon)

PlacePlayerScoreTo parMoney ($)
T1 Alex Smith73-73-79-73=298+6Playoff
John McDermott74-74-75-75=298
Macdonald Smith74-78-75-71=298
4 Fred McLeod78-70-78-73=299+780
T5 Tom McNamara73-78-73-76=300+865
Gilbert Nicholls73-75-77-75=300
7 Jack Hobens74-77-74-76=301+950
T8 Tom Anderson72-76-81-73=302+1030
Herbert Barker75-78-77-72=302
Jock Hutchison77-76-75-74=302

Source:[4][6]

Playoff

Monday, June 20, 1910

PlacePlayerScoreTo parMoney ($)
1 Alex Smith71−2300
2 John McDermott75+2150
3 Macdonald Smith77+4100

Source:[2]

References

  1. "Alex Smith Champion: Wykagyl Professional Wins Triple Tie Play-Off in Open Golf Tournament". The New York Times. June 21, 1910.
  2. "Alec Smith wins Open golf". Chicago Daily Tribune. June 21, 1910. p. 10.
  3. "Alec Smith leads golfers". Chicago Daily Tribune. June 18, 1910. p. 13.
  4. "Triple tie in golf tourney". Chicago Sunday Tribune. June 19, 1910. p. 3, sec. 3.
  5. "Golf". Philadelphia Cricket Club. Retrieved June 14, 2017.
  6. Brenner, Morgan G. (2009). The Majors of Golf: Complete Results of The Open, the U.S. Open, the PGA Championship and the Masters, 1860-2008. p. 213. ISBN 9780786453955. Retrieved June 14, 2017.

40.065°N 75.209°W / 40.065; -75.209

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