- Edited
https://www.golfchannel.com/news/three-more-players-wd-open-bringing-total-17
Can't wait to see how many are DQ'd by the R&A, after a couple more days pass.
What happens to the 'close contacts'?? And with Zack, there had to be many.
https://www.golfchannel.com/news/three-more-players-wd-open-bringing-total-17
Can't wait to see how many are DQ'd by the R&A, after a couple more days pass.
What happens to the 'close contacts'?? And with Zack, there had to be many.
Sarnella I can't stop now, I've too much invested in the argument ...
Google Open Championship and results are 95% that, Open Championship. Google British Open Championship and the only references you'll get is American media. Even the PGA Tour website calls it the Open Championship.
Yours was the first PGA Championship and is always just that, even here, the PGA, rarely (if ever) USPGA.
Other countries have their PGA Championships, for example there are English, Scottish and British PGA Championships (Bristish started in 1955) but they're called exactly that (although the current incarnation is the BMW PGA Championship for sponsorship reasons).
golf_bhoy Google Open Championship and results are 95% that, Open Championship. Google British Open Championship and the only references you'll get is American media. Even the PGA Tour website calls it the Open Championship.
Pre-internet 1990 US fans always called it The British Open. That case has been made. Hence your internet search is quasi. We older Buzzer's are speaking before 1990. I'll give you today but not back way when....it was and still is in older golfers minds The British Open. That's my/our point.
Bryson just called it the "British Open" in a TV Interview. Must be American old school.....
Well whatever we call it won't make a difference to how it plays out, and I hope it's as entertaining as the rest of this year's Majors. Weather forecast is decent but RSG doesn't need a load of wind to "protect" scoring as much as some Open venues do (going by reviews I've read and preview shows on TV).
There really is no argument as to what it is called. It's merely a discussion about how Americans were brought up with the name, not knowing that is was NEVER The British Open. We know now, but old habits die hard sometimes. More than likely, it was the actual 1st Open of any, in golf, so they want to distinguish the fact from others.
How I will explain this to my hometown crowd is beyond me. Most in that little burg probably do not even know there is another golf tourney in the world. Damn hillbillies. How'd they ever learn the game to begin with?
Good enough for Jack good enough for me!
Stu1961 Winning amount in 2021 exceeds $2M--$2,070,000 to be precise. Not sure how much this change with exchange rates changes
Bravopilot
I keep doing the math: if in 1949 the winner's prize was less than 1/6 of the average annual salary ... then I should be making over 12 million annually now!
garyt1957 You still haven't got it right. It's not 'The Open.' It's 'The Open Championship,' and the winner is known as 'the champion golfer of the year.'
I agree that if you just say 'The Open,' it could get confusing. But 'The Open Championship' is The Open Championship, and everybody knows exactly what you are talking about.
rsvman2 I really don't care what they call it, and agree that it's always been officially "The Open Championship", but it's only in the last, what 10 years, or so they've been insisting on "The Open". And that reeks of a bit of haughtiness to me. Jack and Arnie were as respectful of the game as you can be and yet they called it The British Open and no one complained. They certainly wouldn't have done that if it in any way was a slight at the tournament. I don't have the desire but if you searched enough I'd bet you can find a guy like Peter Allis or someone calling it the British.
This guy calls it the British Open, looks like it's a few years old
The above footage, aired during Golf Channel's second-round coverage, is from the first Open at Carnoustie in 1931, when the Silver Scot Tommy Armour claimed his only claret jug. It's worth noting that the presenter in this scenario was not some bureaucrat from Ponte Vedra, but the Earl of Airlie sporting an unmistakably Scottish kilt.
Ok, Ok. How about the " Open Championship of the British Isles ".
Tee it up - let's go.
About 1:25 The guy announces Bobby Jones as the winner of the British Open Championship
Oops!