Sam Snead Festival
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Sam Snead Festival
The Sam Snead Festival was an unofficial money golf tournament, played from 1948 to 1961, at The Greenbrier in White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia. It attracted many PGA Tour players and was won by longtime Greenbrier club pro Sam Snead six times. The tournament began as the Greenbrier Pro-Am in 1948, and was a 36-hole pro-amateur event with 18 invited top professionals of the day. Prizes were awarded for both the professional medal total and the pro-am best ball total. The event went to four rounds the next year; the first 36 holes with just the professionals, the amateurs joining in for the final 36 holes. Winners Sam Snead Festival *1961 Sam Snead *1960 Dave Marr *1959 Sam Snead Greenbrier Invitational *1958 Sam Snead *1957 Dutch Harrison Greenbrier Pro-Am *1956 Ed Oliver *1955 Dutch Harrison *1954 Herman Scharlau *1953 Sam Snead *1952 Sam Snead *1951 Sam Snead *1950 Ben Hogan *1949 Cary Middlecoff *1948 Henry Cotton See also *Greenbrier Classic, PGA Tour event starting in ...
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Golf
Golf is a club-and-ball sport in which players use various clubs to hit balls into a series of holes on a course in as few strokes as possible. Golf, unlike most ball games, cannot and does not use a standardized playing area, and coping with the varied terrains encountered on different courses is a key part of the game. Courses typically have either 18 or 9 ''holes'', regions of terrain that each contain a ''cup'', the hole that receives the ball. Each hole on a course contains a teeing ground to start from, and a putting green containing the cup. There are several standard forms of terrain between the tee and the green, such as the fairway, rough (tall grass), and various ''hazards'' such as water, rocks, or sand-filled ''bunkers''. Each hole on a course is unique in its specific layout. Golf is played for the lowest number of strokes by an individual, known as stroke play, or the lowest score on the most individual holes in a complete round by an individual or team, k ...
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