1897 Open Championship

1897 golf tournament held at the Royal Liverpool Golf Club, Hoylake, Wirral, England From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 1897 Open Championship was the 37th Open Championship, held 19–20 May at Royal Liverpool Golf Club in Hoylake, England. Harold Hilton, an amateur, won the Championship for the second time, a stroke ahead of James Braid.

Dates19–20 May 1897
Length6,043 yards (5,526 m)
Quick facts Tournament information, Dates ...
1897 Open Championship
Tournament information
Dates19–20 May 1897
LocationHoylake, England
CourseRoyal Liverpool Golf Club
Statistics
Length6,043 yards (5,526 m)
Field88 players[1]
Cutnone
Prize fund£90
Winner's share£30
Champion
England Harold Hilton (a)
314
 1896
1898 
Close
Hoylake is located in England
Hoylake
Hoylake
Location in England

This was the second Open to be played in England after the 1894 event staged at Royal St George's. It was also the last Open Championship with no qualifying and no cut. 88 players entered including 20 amateurs. Royal Liverpool was the home club of many of the leading amateurs of the day including John Ball Jr. and Hilton, both of whom had already won the Championship.

After the first round Ball and Sandy Herd led with scores of 78, with David Brown and Freddie Tait on 79. There were two outstanding rounds in the afternoon. Braid scored 74 gave him the lead on 154 while Hilton's 75 put him second on 155. Tait was third on 158. J.H. Taylor and Harry Vardon were a disappointing 8 and 10 strokes behind the leader.

Despite a few withdrawals, 39 pairs started on the final day. Under the new proposed cut rule, to be introduced in 1898, the field would have been reduced to a more comfortable 41. The leaders had poor third rounds which meant for a close position after the morning's play. Braid led by two from Herd, George Pulford and Tait with Hilton a further stroke behind and Brown and Tom Vardon five behind the leader. Tait was the early leader after a 79 gave him a score of 317 but this was bettered by a round of 75 by Hilton to give him the lead on 314. Hilton had scored just 18 on the opening five holes. Disappointing front nines from Herd and Pulford put them out of contention, leaving only Braid with a chance to match Hilton. After a three at the 15th, Baird reached the 16th tee needing 14 to tie with Hilton. However, with his third shot at the long 16th, he chipped over the green and he took six. He had a long putt at the last to tie but missed and finished a shot behind Hilton. With more withdrawals on the final day only 52 players completed the 72 holes, two players finishing 53 strokes behind the winner.

First day leaderboard

Wednesday, 19 May 1897

More information Place, Player ...
PlacePlayerScore
1Scotland James Braid80-74=154
2England Harold Hilton (a)80-75=155
3Scotland Freddie Tait (a)79-79=158
T4England John Ball (a)78-81=159
Scotland Sandy Herd78-81=159
England George Pulford80-79=159
7Scotland David Brown79-82=161
T8Scotland Ben Sayers84-78=162
England J.H. Taylor82-80=162
Jersey Tom Vardon81-81=162
Close

Final leaderboard

Source:[2]

Thursday, 20 May 1897

More information Place, Player ...
PlacePlayerScoreMoney
1England Harold Hilton (a)80-75-84-75=314(£30)
2Scotland James Braid80-74-82-79=315£20
T3England George Pulford80-79-79-79=317£10
Scotland Freddie Tait (a)79-79-80-79=317
5Scotland Sandy Herd78-81-79-80=318£7
6Jersey Harry Vardon84-80-80-76=320£5
T7Scotland David Brown79-82-80-83=324£3 6s 8d
Scotland Archie Simpson83-81-81-79=324
Jersey Tom Vardon81-81-79-83=324
T10Scotland Andrew Kirkaldy83-83-82-82=330£2 10s
England J.H. Taylor82-80-82-86=330
Close

As an amateur Hinton received "£30 in plate" in addition to the "Championship Cup" and "Gold Medal".[3] The prize-money for the professionals was reduced accordingly to £60. This arrangement had been introduced after the 1892 Open Championship which was also won by Hilton.[4]

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI