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Dunlop-Metropolitan Tournament

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Dunlop-Metropolitan
Tournament information
LocationSouth East England
Established1934
Month playedSeptember/October
Final year1938
Final champion
Alf Perry

The Dunlop-Metropolitan Tournament was an invitation professional golf tournament played in South East England. It was founded in 1934. The tournament was played towards the end of the season and was played over 72 holes of stroke play. The event had a small field; entry being mostly based on high finishes in important British and Continental events earlier in the year. Past Open Champions were also invited. The tournament was informally called "The Championship of Champions"[1] and was "equivalent almost to the Masters' tournament of America"[2] which was also founded in 1934.

After World War II the event was continued as the Dunlop Masters which started in 1946 and was a similar 72-hole end-of-season event with a restricted field.

History

[edit]

The first tournament was played on 11 and 12 October 1934 on the New Course at Walton Heath Golf Club, contested by a field of 53. Ernest Whitcombe led after the first day, with two rounds of 69. After a 68 on the second morning his lead increased to eight and despite a final round of 77 he won by four strokes. There was no cut. Prize money amounted to £500.

It was planned to play the event again on 24 and 25 September 1935. With the Ryder Cup team leaving for America on 14 September and an earlier date not being possible, the tournament was cancelled.[3]

The second tournament was played from 22–24 September 1936 on the West Course at Wentworth with a field of 62. Arthur Lacey led on the first day with a 70, a new record for the altered course. Henry Cotton broke this with a 68 on the second day and was tied with Lacey for the lead on 140. 33 players scoring 155 or better played 36 holes on the final day. Cotton scored 70, Lacey 75 and Reg Whitcombe, playing with Cotton, scored 68 to take second place, four behind Cotton. Jimmy Adams set a new record with a 67. In the final round Cotton's 71 gave him a three shot win over Whitcombe (70) and Lacey (69). Charles Whitcombe finished fourth, a distant nine shots behind Cotton.

The third tournament was played on 21 and 22 September 1937, again on the West Course at Wentworth. The field consisted of the winners, runners-up, other players who had finished in "prominent positions" in the important 1937 events, together with a number of Open Championship winners, 36 players in all.[2] The field included 69-year-old Sandy Herd, the 1904 Open champion. On the first day Reg Whitcombe led on 138, having set a new course record of 66 in the morning round. Whitcombe scored 72 on the second morning and was level on 210 with Arthur Lacey with Henry Cotton and Paddy Mahon on 213. Whitcombe struggled with a final round 76 and Lacey's 67 gave him a 5 stroke victory. Bill Laidlaw equalled the course record with a final round 66.

The fourth tournament was played on 20 and 21 September 1938 on the West Course at Wentworth. 29 players qualified. Prize money was increased from £500 to £750. In wet conditions Alf Perry led after the first day on 137 (69-68), six ahead of second place Jimmy Adams. Perry had rounds of 67 and 69 on the second day to win comfortably. Henry Cotton was his only challenger after a course record 64 in the third round.

The 1939 tournament was planned to be played at Wentworth on 19 and 20 September 1939 but was cancelled because of the start of World War II.[4]

Winners

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Year Winner Venue Score Margin
of victory
Runner(s)-up Winner's
share (£)
Ref
1934 England Ernest Whitcombe Walton Heath Golf Club 283 4 strokes England Jack Busson 150 [5]
1935: No tournament because of the Ryder Cup
1936 England Henry Cotton Wentworth Club 281 3 strokes England Arthur Lacey
England Reg Whitcombe
150 [6]
1937 England Arthur Lacey Wentworth Club 277 5 strokes Republic of Ireland Paddy Mahon 150 [7]
1938 England Alf Perry Wentworth Club 273 6 strokes England Henry Cotton 200 [8]
1939: Cancelled due to the outbreak of World War II

Between 1933 and 1937 Dunlop also sponsored a number of sectional tournaments. The format varied but was often a 36-hole or match-play event. The events were sometimes qualifying events for the Dunlop-Metropolitan Tournament.

Dunlop-Scottish Tournament

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Winners: 1933: Scotland Jimmy McDowall 1934: England Mark Seymour 1935: England Mark Seymour 1936: Scotland George Knight 1937: Scotland Laurie Ayton, Snr

Dunlop-Irish Tournament

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Winners: 1933: Republic of Ireland Willie Nolan and Republic of Ireland Pat O'Connor (tied) 1934: Republic of Ireland Willie Nolan 1935: Republic of Ireland Pat O'Connor 1936: Republic of Ireland Paddy Mahon 1937: Republic of Ireland John McKenna

Dunlop-Welsh Tournament

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Winners: 1934: Wales Frank Hill 1935: Wales Frank Hill and England Edward Musty (tied) 1936: Wales Frank Hill 1937: Wales Fred Healing and Wales Ken Williams (tied)

Dunlop-Eastern Tournament

[edit]

Winners: 1934: England Ernest Riseborough 1935: England James Sherlock 1936: England James Sherlock 1937: DR Harper

Dunlop-Midland Professional Championship

[edit]

Winners: 1934: England Charlie Ward 1935: England Bill Firkins 1936: England Bill Branch 1937: England Freddie Beck

In these years Dunlop sponsored the Midland Professional Championship which has been contested since 1898.

Dunlop-Northern Tournament

[edit]

Winners: 1934: Wales D. C. Jones and Jack Moffat (tied) 1935: England Dick Burton 1936: England Albert Chevalier and England Ernest Smith (tied) 1937: England Bert Gadd

Dunlop-Southern Tournament

[edit]

Winners: 1934: England Abe Mitchell 1935: Scotland Allan Dailey 1936: England Sam King 1937: England Sam King

Dunlop-West of England Tournament

[edit]

Winners: 1934: England Syd Easterbrook 1935: England Fred Jewell 1936: England Reg Whitcombe 1937: England Reg Whitcombe

References

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  1. ^ "Dunlop-Metropolitan Tournament – Perry's four rounds in the sixties". The Times. 22 September 1938. p. 4.
  2. ^ a b "Dunlop-Metropolitan Tournament – Today's meeting at Wentworth". The Times. 21 September 1937. p. 6.
  3. ^ "Professional tournament suspended". The Times. 21 January 1935. p. 7.
  4. ^ "Further cancellations". The Glasgow Herald. 6 September 1939. p. 16.
  5. ^ "The Champion of Champions – Golfing triumph of E R Whitcombe". The Glasgow Herald. 13 October 1934. p. 18.
  6. ^ "Cotton's late triumph – Winner of Metropolitan £500 tournament". The Glasgow Herald. 25 September 1936. p. 19.
  7. ^ "Professional's late burst of golf brilliance – Lacey's winning aggregate 11 under 4's: Scot equals course record". The Glasgow Herald. 23 September 1937. p. 3.
  8. ^ "Cotton's 64 in vain – Unperturbed Perry wins easily". The Glasgow Herald. 22 September 1938. p. 19.