2002 Open Championship
Tournament information | |
---|---|
Dates | 18–21 July 2002 |
Location | Gullane, Scotland |
Course(s) | Muirfield Golf Links |
Tour(s) | European Tour PGA Tour Japan Golf Tour |
Statistics | |
Par | 71[1] |
Length | 7,034 yards (6,432 m)[1] |
Field | 156 players, 83 after cut[1] |
Cut | 144 (+2)[1] |
Prize fund | £3,800,000 €5,947,076 $6,004,760 |
Winner's share | £700,000 €1,095,514 $1,106,140 |
Champion | |
Ernie Els | |
278 (−6), playoff | |
The 2002 Open Championship was a men's major golf championship and the 131st Open Championship, held from 18–21 July at Muirfield Golf Links in Gullane, East Lothian, Scotland. Ernie Els won his first Claret Jug and third major title in a playoff over Stuart Appleby, Steve Elkington, and ultimately in a sudden-death playoff over Thomas Levet.[2][3]
Tiger Woods' bid for the Grand Slam came to a halt on Saturday with the worst round of his career up to that time, an 81 (+10) in cold, gusty rain.[4] It took him and others out of contention, but he rebounded on Sunday with a six-under 65 and finished at even par, six strokes back. Woods was the first in thirty years to win the first two legs (Masters, U.S. Open), last done by Jack Nicklaus in 1972.[5] Nicklaus' grand slam bid also ended at Muirfield, runner-up by one stroke to Lee Trevino in 1972. The only one to win the first three was Ben Hogan in 1953. Entering the championship, Woods had won seven of the previous eleven majors.[6]
Course
Hole | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | Out | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | In | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Yards | 448 | 351 | 378 | 213 | 560 | 468 | 185 | 443 | 508 | 3,554 | 475 | 389 | 381 | 191 | 448 | 415 | 186 | 546 | 449 | 3,480 | 7,034 |
Par | 4 | 4 | 4 | 3 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 36 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 4 | 3 | 5 | 4 | 35 | 71 |
Source:[7]
Lengths of the course for previous Opens (since 1950):[1]
Field
- 1. Top 15 and ties from the 2001 Open Championship
Billy Andrade (4), Alex Čejka, Darren Clarke (4,5,18), David Duval (2,3,4,13,14,18), Ernie Els (4,5,10,14), Niclas Fasth (4,5,18), Sergio García (4,14,18), Retief Goosen (4,5,10), Mikko Ilonen, Raphaël Jacquelin, Miguel Ángel Jiménez (5), Bernhard Langer (4,5,18), Billy Mayfair, Colin Montgomerie (4,5,6,18), Jesper Parnevik (4,18), Loren Roberts, Vijay Singh (4,11,12,14), Des Smyth, Kevin Sutherland (4), Ian Woosnam (5)
- 2. Open Champions, 1992–2001
John Daly (3,4), Nick Faldo (3), Paul Lawrie (3,5), Tom Lehman (3,4,14), Justin Leonard (3,4), Greg Norman (3), Mark O'Meara (3,11), Nick Price (3,4), Tiger Woods (3,4,10,11,12,13,14,18)
- 3. Past Open Champions aged 65 or under on 21 July 2002
Mark Calcavecchia (4,14,18), Sandy Lyle, Tom Watson
- Seve Ballesteros withdrew.
- Ian Baker-Finch, Tony Jacklin, Johnny Miller, Jack Nicklaus, Bill Rogers, Lee Trevino, and Tom Weiskopf did not enter.
- 4. The first 50 players on the OWGR on 30 May 2002
Robert Allenby (14), Thomas Bjørn (5,18), Ángel Cabrera (5), Michael Campbell (5,22), Stewart Cink (18), José Cóceres, John Cook, Chris DiMarco (14), Bob Estes (14), Brad Faxon (14), Jim Furyk (14,18), Pádraig Harrington (5,18), Dudley Hart, Scott Hoch (14,18), Toshimitsu Izawa (23), Shingo Katayama (23), Jerry Kelly, Matt Kuchar, Davis Love III (12,14,18), Shigeki Maruyama, Len Mattiace, Scott McCarron, Paul McGinley (5,18), Rocco Mediate, Phil Mickelson (14,18), José María Olazábal (11), Adam Scott (5), David Toms (12,14,18), Scott Verplank (14,18,19), Mike Weir (14)
- Paul Azinger (18) and Kenny Perry did not play.
- 5. Top 20 in the final 2001 European Tour Order of Merit
Mathias Grönberg, David Howell, Robert Karlsson, Thomas Levet, Peter O'Malley (22)
- 6. The Volvo PGA Championship winners for 1999–2002
- 7. First 5 players, not exempt, in the top 20 of the 2002 European Tour Order of Merit as of 30 May
Barry Lane, Malcolm MacKenzie, Greg Owen, Carl Pettersson, Eduardo Romero
- 8. First 7 European Tour members, not exempt, in the top 25 of a cumulative money list taken from all official European Tour events from the 2002 Volvo PGA Championship up to and including the 2002 Scottish Open
Roger Chapman, Bradley Dredge, Gary Evans, Darren Fichardt, Søren Hansen, Fredrik Jacobson, Ian Poulter
- 9. The leading 8 players, not exempt having applied (8) above, in the 2002 Scottish Open
Warren Bennett, John Bickerton, Paul Casey, Marc Farry, Ricardo González, Stephen Leaney, Jean-François Remésy, Jamie Spence
- 10. The U.S. Open Champions for 1993–2002
Lee Janzen, Steve Jones, Corey Pavin
- 11. The Masters Champions for 1998–2002
- 12. The PGA Champions for 1997–2001
- 13. The Players Champions for 1999–2002
Craig Perks, Hal Sutton (18)
- 15. First 5 players, not exempt, in the top 20 of the 2002 PGA Tour Official Money List as of 30 May
- 16. First 7 PGA Tour members, not exempt, in the top 25 of a cumulative money list taken from the 2002 Players Championship and the five PGA Tour events leading up to and including the 2002 Western Open
Stephen Ames, Jim Carter, Jonathan Kaye, Peter Lonard, Jeff Maggert, Tim Petrovic, Chris Smith
- 17. The leading 8 players, not exempt having applied (16) above, in the 2002 Western Open
Stuart Appleby, Neal Lancaster, John Riegger, Chris Riley, Steve Stricker, Bob Tway, Duffy Waldorf
- Brandt Jobe did not play.
- 18. Players selected to the 2001 Ryder Cup teams
Pierre Fulke, Phillip Price, Lee Westwood
- 19. The 2001 Canadian Open Champion
- 20. The 2001 Japan Open Champion
- 21. Winner of the 2001 Asian PGA Tour Order of Merit
- 22. Top 3 from the 2001–02 PGA Tour of Australasia Order of Merit as of 30 May
- 23. Top 3 from the 2001 Japan Golf Tour Order of Merit
- 24. Top 2 from the 2001–02 Sunshine Tour Order of Merit
- 25. The leading player, not exempt, in the 2002 Mizuno Open
- 26. First 4, not exempt having applied (25) above, in the top 20 of a cumulative money list taken from all official Japan Golf Tour events from the 2002 Japan PGA Championship up to and including the 2002 Mizuno Open
Kenichi Kuboya, Tsuneyuki Nakajima, Toru Suzuki, Toru Taniguchi
- 27. The 2001 Senior British Open Champion
- 28. The 2002 Amateur Champion
- 29. The 2001 U.S. Amateur Champion
- Bubba Dickerson forfeited his exemption by turning professional.
- 30. The 2001 European Amateur Champion
- Stephen Browne forfeited his exemption by turning professional.
- Final Qualifying (Sunday 14 July and Monday 15 July)
- Dunbar – Luke Donald, Mattias Eliasson, Steve Elkington, Ian Garbutt, Patrik Sjöland, Esteban Toledo, Simon Young (a)
- Gullane No. 1 – Fredrik Andersson, Gary Emerson, Richard Green, James Kingston, Adam Mednick, Raymond Russell, John Senden
- Luffness New – Peter Baker, Benn Barham, Andrew Coltart, Paul Eales, John Kemp (a), Jarrod Moseley, Magnus Persson Atlevi
- North Berwick – Matthew Cort, Scott Henderson, Trevor Immelman, Paul Mayoh, David Park, Roger Wessels, Tom Whitehouse
Past champions in the field
Made the cut
Player | Country | Year(s) won | R1 | R2 | R3 | R4 | Total | To par | Finish |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Justin Leonard | United States | 1997 | 71 | 72 | 68 | 70 | 281 | −3 | T14 |
Nick Price | Zimbabwe | 1994 | 68 | 70 | 75 | 68 | 281 | −3 | T14 |
Greg Norman | Australia | 1986, 1993 | 71 | 72 | 71 | 68 | 282 | −2 | T18 |
David Duval | United States | 2001 | 72 | 71 | 70 | 70 | 283 | −1 | T22 |
Mark O'Meara | United States | 1998 | 69 | 69 | 77 | 68 | 283 | −1 | T22 |
Tiger Woods | United States | 2000 | 70 | 68 | 81 | 65 | 284 | E | T28 |
Paul Lawrie | Scotland | 1999 | 70 | 70 | 78 | 71 | 289 | +5 | T59 |
Nick Faldo | England | 1987, 1990, 1992 | 73 | 69 | 76 | 71 | 289 | +5 | T59 |
Sandy Lyle | Scotland | 1985 | 68 | 76 | 73 | 75 | 292 | +8 | T76 |
Mark Calcavecchia | United States | 1989 | 74 | 66 | 81 | 74 | 295 | +11 | T80 |
Missed the cut
Player | Country | Year(s) won | R1 | R2 | Total | To par |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tom Lehman | United States | 1996 | 70 | 76 | 146 | +4 |
John Daly | United States | 1995 | 74 | 77 | 151 | +9 |
Tom Watson | United States | 1975, 1977, 1980, 1982, 1983 |
77 | 78 | 155 | +13 |
Source:[8]
Round summaries
First round
Thursday, 18 July 2002
Second round
Friday, 19 July 2002
Place | Player | Country | Score | To par[10] |
---|---|---|---|---|
T1 | Ernie Els | South Africa | 70-66=136 | −6 |
Pádraig Harrington | Ireland | 69-67=136 | ||
Shigeki Maruyama | Japan | 68-68=136 | ||
Bob Tway | United States | 70-66=136 | ||
Duffy Waldorf | United States | 67-69=136 | ||
T6 | Søren Hansen | Denmark | 68-69=137 | −5 |
Carl Pettersson | Sweden | 67-70=137 | ||
Des Smyth | Ireland | 68-69=137 | ||
T9 | Stephen Ames | Trinidad and Tobago | 68-70=138 | −4 |
Thomas Bjørn | Denmark | 68-70=138 | ||
Thomas Levet | France | 72-66=138 | ||
Colin Montgomerie | Scotland | 74-64=138 | ||
Mark O'Meara | United States | 69-69=138 | ||
Ian Poulter | England | 69-69=138 | ||
Nick Price | Zimbabwe | 68-70=138 | ||
Tiger Woods | United States | 70-68=138 |
Amateurs: Young (+5), Kemp (+6), Larrazábal (+10).
Third round
Saturday, 20 July 2002
Place | Player | Country | Score | To par[11] |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Ernie Els | South Africa | 70-66-72=208 | −5 |
2 | Søren Hansen | Denmark | 68-69-73=210 | −3 |
T3 | Thomas Bjørn | Denmark | 68-70-73=211 | −2 |
Sergio García | Spain | 71-69-71=211 | ||
Justin Leonard | United States | 71-72-68=211 | ||
Shigeki Maruyama | Japan | 68-68-75=211 | ||
Scott McCarron | United States | 71-68-72=211 | ||
Justin Rose | England | 68-75-68=211 | ||
Des Smyth | Ireland | 68-69-74=211 | ||
T10 | Steve Elkington | Australia | 71-73-68=212 | −1 |
Pádraig Harrington | Ireland | 69-67-76=212 | ||
Thomas Levet | France | 72-66-74=212 | ||
Peter Lonard | Australia | 72-72-68=212 |
Final round
Sunday, 21 July 2002
Place | Player | Country | Score | To par | Money (£) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
T1 | Ernie Els | South Africa | 70-66-72-70=278 | −6 | Playoff |
Thomas Levet | France | 72-66-74-66=278 | |||
Stuart Appleby | Australia | 73-70-70-65=278 | |||
Steve Elkington | Australia | 71-73-68-66=278 | |||
T5 | Gary Evans | England | 72-68-74-65=279 | −5 | 140,000 |
Pádraig Harrington | Ireland | 69-67-76-67=279 | |||
Shigeki Maruyama | Japan | 68-68-75-68=279 | |||
T8 | Thomas Bjørn | Denmark | 68-70-73-69=280 | −4 | 77,500 |
Sergio García | Spain | 71-69-71-69=280 | |||
Retief Goosen | South Africa | 71-68-74-67=280 | |||
Søren Hansen | Denmark | 68-69-73-70=280 | |||
Scott Hoch | United States | 74-69-71-66=280 | |||
Peter O'Malley | Australia | 72-68-75-65=280 |
Source:[8]
Scorecard
Final round
Cumulative tournament scores, relative to par
Source:[12]
Playoff
The four-hole aggregate playoff was contested over holes 1, 16, 17, & 18; Levet and Elkington went off in the first pair and Els and Appleby in the last. After a 50-foot (15 m) birdie putt on the second hole (#16, par 3), Levet led by a stroke, but bogeyed the last to tie Els at even-par. Appleby and Elkington also bogeyed the last hole and were eliminated by a stroke.[13] At the first hole (#18) of sudden death, Levet put his tee shot in a fairway bunker and bogeyed. Els saved par from a greenside bunker with a five-foot (1.6 m) putt to win the title.[3] Through 2016, this is the only four-man playoff in Open Championship history, and no other current major championship has had a four-way playoff.
Place | Player | Country | Four-hole | Sudden-death | Money (£) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Score | To par | Score | To par | ||||
1 | Ernie Els | South Africa | 4-3-5-4=16 | E | 4 | E | 700,000 |
T2 | Thomas Levet | France | 4-2-5-5=16 | 5 | +1 | 286,667 | |
Stuart Appleby | Australia | 4-4-4-5=17 | +1 | ||||
Steve Elkington | Australia | 5-3-4-5=17 |
Scorecard
Hole | 1 | 16 | 17 | 18 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Par | 4 | 3 | 5 | 4 |
Els | E | E | E | E |
Levet | E | −1 | −1 | E |
Appleby | E | +1 | E | +1 |
Elkington | +1 | +1 | E | +1 |
Sudden-death | ||||
Els | E | |||
Levet | +1 |
Cumulative playoff scores, relative to par
References
- ^ a b c d e "Media guide". The Open Championship. 2011. pp. 28, 203. Archived from the original on 18 April 2012. Retrieved 1 July 2012.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
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suggested) (help) - ^ Rushin, Steve (29 July 2002). "Brutish Open". Sports Illustrated.
- ^ a b Ferguson, Doug (22 July 2002). "Someone Els wins Open title". Associated Press. p. C-1.
- ^ Dahlberg, Tim (21 July 2002). "British field gets blown away". Eugene Register-Guard. Associated Press. p. 1D.
- ^ Ferguson, Doug (16 July 2002). "British Open next test for Tiger". Eugene Register-Guard. Associated Press. p. E1.
- ^ Whicker, Mark (18 July 2002). "Incomparable, really". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. (Orange County Register). p. D1.
- ^ "British Open: hole-by-hole analysis". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. 18 July 2002. p. 3C.
- ^ a b "2002 Open Championship results". databasegolf.com. Retrieved 2 July 2012.
- ^ "PGA European Tour - Tournaments". Archived from the original on 4 September 2009. Retrieved 23 August 2009.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
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suggested) (help) - ^ "PGA European Tour - Tournaments". Archived from the original on 4 September 2009. Retrieved 23 August 2009.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
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suggested) (help) - ^ "PGA European Tour - Tournaments". Archived from the original on 4 September 2009. Retrieved 23 August 2009.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
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suggested) (help) - ^ "British Open Championship". ESPN. Retrieved 11 August 2015.
- ^ "Big, but not easy". Toledo Blade. Associated Press. 22 July 2002. p. C1.