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St. Petersburg Open Invitational

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Golf tournament formerly on the PGA Tour
Golf tournament
St. Petersburg Open Invitational
Tournament information
LocationSt. Petersburg, Florida
Established1930
CourseLakewood Country Club
Par72
TourPGA Tour
FormatStroke play
Prize fundUS$25,000
Month playedMarch
Final year1964
Tournament record score
Aggregate261Bob Goalby (1961)
To par−23as above
Final champion
AustraliaBruce Devlin
Location map
Lakewood Country Club is located in the United States
Lakewood Country Club
Lakewood Country Club
Location in theUnited States
Show map of the United States
Lakewood Country Club is located in Florida
Lakewood Country Club
Lakewood Country Club
Location inFlorida
Show map of Florida

TheSt. Petersburg Open Invitational, first played as theSt. Petersburg Open, was aPGA Tour event that was held at threeSt. Petersburg, Florida area clubs for 29 years from 1930 until 1964.[1] The clubs that hosted the event were: Lakewood Country Club (now known as St. Petersburg Country Club),[2] Pasadena Country Club (now known as Pasadena Yacht and Country Club), and Sunset Golf Club of the Vinoy Park Hotel (now known as the Renaissance Vinoy Resort & Golf Club).[1]

Bob Goalby won[3] the 1961 event after making eight consecutive birdies in the final round, a PGA Tour record at the time. Other golfers tied Goalby's mark but nobody surpassed it till 2009.[4] In 1963,Raymond Floyd won the event at 20 years 6 months of age becoming the youngest player to win a PGA Tour event since 1928.[1][5]

Bruce Devlin, an Australian golfer who had recently moved to theUnited States, won the first of his eight PGA Tour titles at the last one in 1964. The tournament succumbed to financial pressure when the St. Petersburg City Council voted to postpone a decision on sponsorship of the 1965 event, and thenJacksonville announced the resumption of theJacksonville Open during week the tournament was to be held.[1]

Tournament hosts

[edit]
CourseYears
Lakewood Country Club1930 (co-host), 1933 (co-host), 1936 (co-host), 1938, 1940, 1942, 1948, 1952, 1955–56, 1959–60, 1962–64
Jungle Country Club1930 (co-host)
Pasadena Country Club1932, 1933 (co-host), 1934, 1936 (co-host), 1937, 1939, 1941, 1947, 1949–51, 1953, 1957–58, 1961
Sunset Golf Club at Vinoy Park1946

Winners

[edit]
YearWinnerScoreTo parMargin of
victory
Runner(s)-upWinner's
share ($)
St. Petersburg Open Invitational
1964AustraliaBruce Devlin272−164 strokesUnited StatesDan Sikes3,300
1963United StatesRaymond Floyd274−141 strokeUnited StatesDave Marr3,500
1962United StatesBobby Nichols272−162 strokesUnited StatesFrank Boynton2,800
1961United StatesBob Goalby261−233 strokesUnited StatesTed Kroll2,800
1960United StatesGeorge Bayer282−6PlayoffUnited StatesJack Fleck2,000
1959United StatesCary Middlecoff (2)275−133 strokesUnited StatesPete Cooper2,000
1958United StatesArnold Palmer276−81 strokeUnited StatesDow Finsterwald
United StatesFred Hawkins
2,000
St. Petersburg Open
1957United StatesPete Cooper269−154 strokesUnited StatesJack Burke Jr.1,700
1956United StatesMike Fetchick275−13PlayoffUnited StatesLionel Hebert2,200
1955United StatesCary Middlecoff274−142 strokesUnited StatesJay Hebert2,200
1954: No tournament
1953United StatesDutch Harrison266−181 strokeUnited StatesChick Harbert
United StatesDick Mayer
2,000
1952United StatesJack Burke Jr. (2)266−228 strokesUnited StatesAl Besselink2,000
1951AustraliaJim Ferrier268−166 strokesUnited StatesAl Brosch2,000
1950United StatesJack Burke Jr.272−121 strokeUnited StatesChick Harbert2,000
1949United StatesPete Cooper275−91 strokeUnited StatesCary Middlecoff2,000
1948United StatesLawson Little272−163 strokesSouth AfricaBobby Locke2,000
1947United StatesJimmy Demaret (2)280−43 strokesAustraliaJim Ferrier2,000
1946United StatesBen Hogan269−155 strokesUnited StatesSam Snead2,000
1943–1945: No tournament due toWorld War II
1942United StatesSam Snead (3)286−23 strokesUnited StatesSam Byrd
United StatesChick Harbert
United StatesByron Nelson
1,000
1941United StatesSam Snead (2)279−52 strokesUnited StatesHerman Barron
United StatesChick Harbert
United StatesBen Hogan
United StatesJug McSpaden
1,200
1940United StatesJimmy Demaret211−21 strokeUnited StatesByron Nelson700
1939United StatesSam Snead207−9PlayoffUnited StatesHenry Picard700
1938United StatesJohnny Revolta282−2PlayoffUnited StatesChandler Harper700
1937EnglandHarry Cooper284−4PlayoffUnited StatesRalph Guldahl
United StatesHorton Smith
700
1936United StatesLeonard Dodson283−3PlayoffUnited StatesHarry Cooper500
1935: No tournament
1934United StatesPaul Runyan141−33 strokesUnited StatesBill Mehlhorn200
1933United StatesBob Stupple144+11 strokeUnited StatesDenny Shute
United StatesAl Watrous
275
1932ScotlandWillie Macfarlane209−71 strokeUnited StatesDave Hackney500
1931: No tournament
1930United StatesJock Collins141+11 strokeUnited StatesHorton Smith
United StatesFrank Walsh
1,000

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcd"St. Petersburg Open left legacy". St. Petersburg Times. October 15, 2000. Retrieved2007-11-05.
  2. ^"St. Petersburg Country Club Our Golf Course". St. Petersburg Country Club. Retrieved2014-09-23.
  3. ^Goalby cards 8 consecutive birdies to win at St. Pete
  4. ^Most Consecutive Birdies in a PGA Tour Tournament
  5. ^"USGA History:1951–1970". Archived fromthe original on 2007-12-20. Retrieved2007-11-05.
FormerPGA Tour events
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