British Open

British Open
(also the Open)
the British Open Golf Championship, the most important golf contest in Britain, which takes place once a year at one of several British golf courses. It is the oldest international golf event in the world, and both professional and amateur players take part.

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golf
Introduction
byname of  The Open Championship 
 one of the world's four major golf tournaments—with the Masters Tournament, the U.S. Open (United States Open Championship), and the Professional Golfers' Association (Professional Golfers' Association of America) (PGA) Championship—and the oldest continually run championship in the sport. The British Open has been held annually (with a few exceptions) on various courses in Scotland, England, and—on one occasion—Northern Ireland since 1860.

History
      The first British Open was played on Oct. 17, 1860, at Prestwick Golf Club in Scotland. A field of eight professionals played three rounds of Prestwick's 12-hole course in one day. Willie Park, Sr., won the inaugural tournament and was presented with the Challenge Belt, a silver-buckled leather belt that each champion was to keep until the following Open. The tournament was opened to amateurs in 1861. In 1863 a purse of £10—which was to be shared among the professionals who finished in second, third, and fourth place—was introduced, and a first-place cash prize of £6 was added in 1864. In 1870 Tom Morris, Jr., won the British Open for the third consecutive time and was thus allowed to keep the Challenge Belt permanently. As there was no award to present to the winner, the Open was not held again until 1872, when it was determined that the winning golfer would receive the Golf Champion Trophy, now commonly known as the Claret Jug. In 1892 the Open became a 72-hole event (four rounds of 18 holes), and in 1898 a cut (reduction of the field) was introduced after the first two rounds of play.

  The British Open has always been dominated by professionals, with only six victories by amateurs, all before 1930. The last of these was Bobby Jones (Jones, Bobby)'s third Open, which was part of his celebrated grand slam (four major tournament victories in one calendar year). The popularization of golf in the mid-20th century produced a string of noteworthy British Open champions, including England's Sir Henry Cotton (Cotton, Sir Henry) (winner in 1934, 1937, and 1948), South Africa's Bobby Locke (Locke, Bobby) (1949–50, 1952, 1957), Australia's Peter W. Thomson (Thomson, Peter W.) (1954–56, 1958, 1965), and the United States' Arnold Palmer (Palmer, Arnold) (1961–62) and Tom Watson (1975, 1977, 1980, 1982–83). Watson's final win in 1983 ended an era of U.S. domination, during which American golfers won 12 times in 14 years. For the next 11 years there was only one American winner, with the Claret Jug going to Spain's Seve Ballesteros, Australia's Greg Norman, and England's Nick Faldo, among others.

 In 1995 the Open became part of the PGA Tour's official schedule. American John Daly won that year after a play-off with Italy's Costantino Rocca, beginning another period of American supremacy at the British Open in which 10 of the next 13 winners hailed from the United States, including Tiger Woods (Woods, Tiger), who won three championships (2000, 2005–06). Recent years have seen a number of victories by golfers for whom the Open was their first major tournament triumph, including Paul Lawrie in 1999, David Duval in 2001, Ben Curtis in 2003, and Padraig Harrington in 2007.

 Another notable British Open champion is Jack Nicklaus (Nicklaus, Jack), who won in 1966, 1970, and 1978 and placed in the top five 16 times, including seven second-place finishes. Harry Vardon (Vardon, Harry) won the British Open six times—more than any other player—and four golfers, including Thomson and Watson, have won five championships. South African Gary Player (Player, Gary), who won the title in 1968 and 1974, holds the record for the most appearances in the British Open, with 46.

Courses
      The British Open has always been played on links courses (mostly treeless golf courses that are built along a coast and retain the natural, uneven terrain of their locations). From 1860 to 1870 the British Open was played exclusively at Prestwick Golf Club. Since 1872 it has been played at a number of courses in rotation. Initially the three courses were Prestwick, St. Andrews, and Musselburgh, all located in Scotland. The nine courses in the current rotation are the Old Course at St. Andrews; Carnoustie Golf Links in Carnoustie, Scot.; Muirfield in Gullane, Scot.; the Ailsa Course at the Westin Turnberry Resort, outside Girvan, Scot.; Royal Troon Golf Club in Troon, Scot.; Royal St. George's Golf Club in Sandwich, Eng.; Royal Birkdale Golf Club in Southport, Eng.; Royal Lytham & St. Annes Golf Club in Lytham St. Annes, Eng.; and Royal Liverpool Golf Club in Hoylake, Eng.

      The British Open is a unique event and is of great importance to professionals and amateur golfers alike, as well as to fans of golf. Unlike the play of other majors—which are typically contested in sunny locales in the United States—the outcome of the British Open is often influenced by the weather. On a links course, morning and afternoon tee times can produce vastly different playing conditions, depending on the breeze that comes in off the sea. The weather is just one of the many unique features of the British Open that combine with its long history and prestigious reputation to make it an event unparalleled in golf.

      This author, who experienced a warm reception from his home crowd when he finished second to Tiger Woods at St. Andrews in 2005, looks forward to competing in the British Open every year. To him, the British Open is pure romance and theatre, and it truly is a special event that every golfer dreams of winning.

Colin Montgomerie

British Open winners
       British Open Golf Tournament-men British Open Golf Tournament-menThe table provides a list of British Open winners.

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Universalium. 2010.

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