1966 U.S. Open (golf)
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The 1966 U.S. Open was the 66th U.S. Open, held June 16–20 at the Lake Course of the Olympic Club in
San Francisco San Francisco (; Spanish for " Saint Francis"), officially the City and County of San Francisco, is the commercial, financial, and cultural center of Northern California. The city proper is the fourth most populous in California and 17th ...
, California. Billy Casper, the 1959 U.S. Open (golf), 1959 champion, staged one of the greatest comebacks in history by erasing a seven-stroke deficit on the final nine holes to tie Arnold Palmer; he then prevailed in an 18-hole playoff to win the second of his three Men's major golf championships, major titles. It was the fourth playoff in five years at the U.S. Open, and the third for Palmer, the 1960 U.S. Open (golf), 1960 champion. Of the fifteen sub-par rounds posted in this U.S. Open, four belonged to Casper. He one-putted 33 greens and did not three-putt a green until the 81st hole. The "continuous putting" rule was in effect for this Open. Once putting on a green, the players had to keep putting until holing out. There was no marking of balls on the green except for lifting to clean. The rule was put into effect to speed up play at the Open. Three future champions made their Men's major golf championships, major championship debuts and all made the cut: Lee Trevino and collegians Hale Irwin and Johnny Miller. Irwin was entering his senior year at University of Colorado at Boulder, Colorado, where he was also an all-conference defensive back for the Colorado Buffaloes football, Buffaloes in College football, football. Miller was a San Francisco native and junior merit member of the Olympic Club entering his sophomore year at Brigham Young University, BYU; he finished tied for eighth and was the low amateur by three strokes. It was the penultimate appearance at the U.S. Open for four-time champion Ben Hogan; he finished twelfth at age 53. Cary Middlecoff, champion in 1949 U.S. Open (golf), 1949 and 1956 U.S. Open (golf), 1956, made his final appearance this year but withdrew after the first round. Sam Snead, 54, failed to qualify for the U.S. Open for the first time in thirty years; he had played in every edition since 1937 U.S. Open (golf), 1937, but never won. The winner's share was $25,000 and both playoff participants received a $1,500 bonus. Daily admission was five dollars for the first two rounds, seven dollars on the weekend, and five for the playoff. This was the second U.S. Open at the Lake Course of the Olympic Club, the first was in 1955 U.S. Open (golf), 1955 and also ended in a playoff. The U.S. Open returned in 1987 U.S. Open (golf), 1987, 1998 U.S. Open (golf), 1998, and 2012 U.S. Open (golf), 2012; all three were won by one stroke.


Past champions in the field


Made the cut


Missed the cut

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Round summaries


First round

''Thursday, June 16, 1966'' Source:


Second round

''Friday, June 17, 1966'' The grouping of Jack Nicklaus, Tony Lema, and Bruce Devlin was instructed to speed up by a USGA official and Nicklaus promptly made four consecutive bogeys. They had been in the rough often early in the round and finished in less than four and a half hours, but nearly an hour longer than others. Source:


Third round

''Saturday, June 18, 1966'' Source:


Final round

''Sunday, June 19, 1966'' Palmer began the final round with a three-stroke lead over Casper, his partner in the final pairing. Palmer shot 32 (−3) on the front nine and with Casper's 36, the lead was seven strokes at the turn. With his eye on Hogan's U.S. Open scoring record (276 in 1948 U.S. Open (golf), 1948), Palmer needed to shoot just 36 (+1) on the back nine for 275. But after the turn, his game quickly unravelled; he bogeyed 10, rebounded with a birdie at 12, but bogeyed 13. At the par-3 15th, Casper made birdie and Palmer missed a par putt, dropping the lead to just three. After another birdie-bogey swing at the par-5 16th, Palmer's lead completely disappeared with another bogey at 17. Palmer needed a difficult up-and-down from the rough for par on 18 just to force a playoff. Palmer shot 39 (+4) on the inward nine, Casper 32 (−3), and the two tied at 278 (−2), seven strokes ahead of solo third-place finisher Jack Nicklaus, the 1962 U.S. Open (golf), 1962 champion. The San Francisco Bay Area, Bay Area's affable Tony Lema tied for fourth. He and his wife were killed in a plane crash a month later. Four-time champion Hogan, age 53, shot even par in the final round to finish alone in 12th place and received a standing ovation from the thousands on the hillside overlooking the :(a) denotes amateur Source:


Scorecard

''Cumulative tournament scores, relative to par'' : Source:


Playoff

''Monday, June 20, 1966'' The 18-hole playoff proved similar to the final round, with a Monday gallery of 12,000 under sunny skies. Palmer took a two-stroke lead to the back nine, only to fall apart once again. The pair halved 10 and 11, but Casper birdied 12 and Palmer bogeyed to even up the playoff with six holes remaining. Palmer bogeyed 14 and 15, then double-bogeyed the par-5 16th. Casper finished with a one-under 69, four strokes ahead of Palmer, who shot a 40 (+5) on the back nine. For Palmer, it marked his third loss in as many playoffs at the U.S. Open (1962 U.S. Open (golf), 1962, 1963 U.S. Open (golf), 1963, and 1966). *Included in earnings is a playoff bonus of $1,500 each, from the playoff gate receipts.


Scorecard

: Source:


References


External links


USGA Championship Database
{{coord, 37.709, -122.495, type:event, display=title U.S. Open (golf) Golf in California Sports competitions in San Francisco 1966 in golf, U.S. Open 1966 in American sports, U.S. Open (golf) 1966 in sports in California, U.S. Open June 1966 sports events in the United States, U.S. Open (golf)