Tacoma Open Invitational

Golf tournament formerly on the PGA Tour From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Tacoma Open Invitational was a golf tournament on the PGA Tour that was played in 1948 and won by Ed Oliver in a one-hole playoff with Cary Middlecoff after the two had survived a five-man, 18-hole playoff the first in tour history. Oliver eagled the final playoff hole; Middlecoff birdied it.[1] Byron Nelson, who in 1945 won a record-setting 18 tournaments including 11 consecutively, ended up tied for ninth in the tournament his worst finish of the year.[2] In 1945, the event played as the Tacoma Open and was won by Jimmy Hines by one stroke over Harold "Jug" McSpaden.[1]

Both events were held at Fircrest Golf Club, an 18-hole, par-71 private club located just west of Tacoma. Construction on the course began in 1923 under the direction of Arthur Vernon Macan. It opened in 1924.[2][3] Fircrest hosted the Carling Open Invitational in 1960.

Winners

More information Year, Player ...
YearPlayerCountryScoreTo parMargin
of victory
Runner(s)-upWinner's
share ($)
Ref
Tacoma Open Invitational
1948Ed Oliver United States274−10PlayoffUnited States Chuck Congdon
United States Vic Ghezzi
United States Fred Haas
United States Cary Middlecoff
2,150[4]
1946–1947: No tournament
Tacoma Open
1945Jimmy Hines United States275−51 strokeUnited States Jug McSpaden2,000[5]
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References

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