2001 U.S. Open (golf)

2001 U.S. Open
Tournament information
Dates June 14–18, 2001
Location Tulsa, Oklahoma
Course(s) Southern Hills Country Club
Organized by USGA
Tour(s) PGA Tour
European Tour
Japan Golf Tour
Statistics
Par 70
Length 6,973 yards (6,376 m)
Field 156 players, 79 after cut
Cut 146 (+6)
Prize fund $5,000,000
5,878,883
Winner's share $900,000
€1,058,199[1]
Champion
South Africa Retief Goosen
276 (–4), playoff
«2000
2002»
Southern Hills Country Club
Location in the United States

The 2001 United States Open Championship was the 101st U.S. Open, held June 14–18 at Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Oklahoma. The U.S. Open returned to Southern Hills for the first time since 1977. Retief Goosen won the first of his two U.S. Open titles in an 18-hole Monday playoff, two strokes ahead of runner-up Mark Brooks. The tournament was also notable for ending defending champion Tiger Woods's run of four consecutive major championship wins, the "Tiger Slam"; Woods finished seven strokes back in a tie for twelfth. He reclaimed the U.S. Open title the following year, and won the PGA Championship at Southern Hills in 2007.

The total purse was $5 million with a winner's share of $900,000.

At the end of the final round on Sunday, Brooks three-putted his way out of the lead on the 72nd hole. In the final pairing, co-leaders Goosen and Stewart Cink both had approach shots from the 18th fairway. Cink missed the green long and then three-putted from 15 feet (5 m) to double bogey. Goosen had 10 feet (3 m) for birdie, but also three-putted to tie Brooks, forcing the next-day playoff.[2]

Previous majors at Southern Hills

This U.S. Open was the third at Southern Hills and its sixth major championship. Former Open champions were Tommy Bolt in 1958, and Hubert Green in 1977. Southern Hills had a history of hot championships with temperatures soaring above 90 °F (32 °C). In 1977, Green led by one shot with four holes to go when he was informed of a death threat against him, received by the FBI. He decided to continue on and won the title by one stroke, the first of his two major championships.

The course also previously hosted the PGA Championship in 1970, 1982, and 1994, all played in August, and later hosted the 2007 event.

Course layout

Southern Hills Country Club

Hole123456789Out101112131415161718InTotal
Yards4544674083686421753822253743,4953741654565342154124913654663,4786,973
Par444453434354345344443570

Past champions in the field

Made the cut

Player Country Year(s) won R1 R2 R3 R4 Total To par Finish
Tom Kite  United States 1992 73 72 72 64 281 +1 T5
Tiger Woods  United States 2000 74 71 69 69 283 +3 T12
Corey Pavin  United States 1995 70 75 68 72 285 +5 T19
Steve Jones  United States 1996 73 73 72 70 288 +8 T30
Hale Irwin  United States 1974, 1979, 1990 67 75 74 76 292 +12 T52
Ernie Els  South Africa 1994, 1997 71 74 77 72 294 +14 T66

Missed the cut

Player Country Year(s) won R1 R2 Total To par
Lee Janzen  United States 1993, 1998 77 70 147 +7

Round summaries

First round

Thursday, June 14, 2001
Friday, June 15, 2001

Severe thunderstorms halted play Thursday afternoon with only 66 players completing their rounds. South Africa's Goosen completed an opening round of 66, four-under-par, to lead the way. Goosen resumed his unfinished round on three-under-par and raced to six-under, but bogeys at the 16th and 17th took the edge off his round. However, it was enough to earn him a one-stroke lead over three-time champion Hale Irwin and Canadian Mike Weir with tour journeyman J. L. Lewis one stroke further back. Irwin, age 56, won his last U.S. Open title in 1990; he capped his opening 67 (–3) with a birdie at the treacherous par-four 18th. Woods could only manage a first round of 74 (+4), eight shots off the lead. He bogeyed the ninth, before recording his first birdie of the round at the 15th. But even that could not spark a revival in his fortunes as he bogeyed the last.

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
1Retief Goosen  South Africa66–4
T2Hale Irwin United States67–3
Mike Weir Canada
4J. L. Lewis United States68–2
T5Stewart Cink United States69–1
Chris DiMarco United States
Toshimitsu Izawa Japan
Jeff Maggert United States
Loren Roberts United States
T10Ángel Cabrera Argentina70E
Mark Calcavecchia United States
José Cóceres Argentina
David Duval United States
Bob Estes United States
Jim Furyk United States
Sergio García Spain
Matt Gogel United States
Phil Mickelson United States
Corey Pavin United States
Hal Sutton United States

Second round

Friday, June 15, 2001
Saturday, June 16, 2001

The delay created by Thursday's thunderstorms meant 33 players could not finish the second round on Friday, and had to play Saturday morning. The cut line was 146 (+6) with 79 players making the cut. Brooks fired a 64 (–6) Friday to grab a share of the lead. Goosen, who led after the first round was completed Friday morning, and Lewis joined Brooks at 136 (–4). Sergio García and Stewart Cink were tied for fourth at two-under par. Phil Mickelson and David Duval, players who briefly flirted with the lead during Woods' run at the Masters in April, were knotted at 139 (–1) after each posted 69 on Friday. Woods shot a 71 for 145 (+5), one stroke ahead of the cut.

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
T1Mark Brooks United States 72-64=136 –4
Retief Goosen South Africa 66-70=136
J. L. Lewis United States 68-68=136
T4Stewart Cink United States69-69=138 –2
Sergio García Spain 70-68=138
T6David Duval United States 70-69=139 –1
Rocco Mediate United States 71-68=139
Phil Mickelson United States 70-69=139
Matt Gogel United States70-69=139
10Jim Furyk United States 70-70=140 E

Amateurs: Molder (+6), Harris (+13), Quinney (+15).

Third round

Saturday, June 16, 2001

Cink finished with a three-under 67 and a share of the third-round lead with Goosen. One of three leaders at the start of the day, Goosen parred each of the last nine holes despite a number of wayward shots down the stretch. The 32-year-old South African managed a 69 to push the leading total to 205 (–5). Brooks, a co-leader of Goosen's after a tournament-low 64 on Friday, shot even-par 70 to join Rocco Mediate and García in third place at 206 (–4). Mickelson, who ended the day three under, was the first big name to make a charge in the third round. Woods shot a 69 for 214 (+4), nine strokes back in tie for 23rd.

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
T1Stewart Cink United States 69-69-67=205 –5
Retief Goosen South Africa 66-70-69=205
T3Mark Brooks United States72-64-70=206–4
Sergio García Spain70-68-68=206
Rocco Mediate United States71-68-67=206
6Phil Mickelson United States 70-69-68=207 –3
T7Paul Azinger United States 74-67-69=210 E
David Duval United States 70-69-71=210
T9Jim Furyk United States 70-70-71=211 +1
Mike Weir Canada 67-76-68=211

Final round

Sunday, June 17, 2001

Goosen missed a two-foot (0.6 m) par putt at the 72nd hole to fall back into a tie with Brooks, forcing an 18-hole playoff to decide the 101st U.S. Open champion. Brooks was in the clubhouse when Goosen charged his 10-foot (3 m) birdie putt two feet by the cup. Goosen, after watching his playing partner and co-leader Cink miss a 20-inch (50 cm) putt for bogey, pushed his short par putt by the right edge of the cup. He then sank a short bogey putt to finish regulation alongside Brooks at four-under-par 276.[2] When Goosen and Cink dialed it up to go to five-under, Brooks responded by two-putting for birdie at the par-five 13th. The lead was his after Cink drove into a creek for bogey at 13 and Goosen suffered his first three-putt of the championship at the 14th. Goosen, who stoically battled to hold on to a piece of the top spot all week, knocked his approach at the 15th to the back fringe and rolled in a 12-footer to return to minus-five with Brooks. Brooks' 200-yard (180 m) approach to 18 landed 40 feet (12 m) left of the right-side pin placement. His first putt was too hard and sped eight feet past the hole, and his par try stopped on the right edge. The bogey gave Brooks an even-par 70 and dropped him to four-under. Back at 17, Cink replaced Brooks as co-leader after a brilliant wedge approach over the flag landed past the pin before spinning back to two feet for birdie.

Two top-class players who had been expected to make a charge in the final round - Mickelson and García - blew their chances with poor displays. The most eye-catching performances of the day came from Fiji's Vijay Singh and U.S. veteran Tom Kite, who both stormed to 64 (–6) - the best rounds of the week - and Olin Browne, who sank a hole-in-one at the 11th. Woods, winner of the previous four major championships, failed to make a charge on Sunday and saw his run come to an end. He turned in his second straight 69 to finish seven strokes back, tied for 12th at 283 (+3), snapping streaks of eight straight top-10s in majors and 40 consecutive events under par.

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo parMoney ($)
T1 Retief Goosen  South Africa 66-70-69-71=276 –4Playoff
Mark Brooks United States 72-64-70-70=276
3Stewart Cink United States69-69-67-72=277–3340,365
4Rocco Mediate United States71-68-67-72=278–2226,777
T5Paul Azinger United States 74-67-69-71=281 +1172,912
Tom Kite United States 73-72-72-64=281
T7Ángel Cabrera Argentina 70-71-72-69=282 +2125,172
Davis Love III United States 72-69-71-70=282
Phil Mickelson United States 70-69-68-75=282
Vijay Singh Fiji 74-70-74-64=282
Kirk Triplett United States 72-69-71-70=282

Amateurs: Molder (+8).

Scorecard

Final round

Hole 1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9 101112131415161718
Par444453434 434534444
South Africa Goosen –5–5–5–5–5–6–6–5–4–5–5–5–5–4–5–5–5–4
United States Brooks –4–4–4–4–3–3–3–3–3–3–4–4–5–5–5–5–5–4
United States Cink –5–5–5–5–4–4–4–4–4–4–5–5–4–4–4–4–5–3
United States Mediate –5–5–4–5–5–4–4–3–4–3–2–2–2–1–1–1–1–2
United States Mickelson –3–3–3–2–3–3–3–3–2–1–1–1EE+1+1+2+2
United States Woods +4+5+5+4+3+3+2+2+3+3+2+2+2+2+2+2+3+3
Spain García –4–3–3–3–2–2–2–2EEE+1EE+1+2+3+3
United States Duval +1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+2+2+1+3+3+3+3+4

Cumulative tournament scores, relative to par
Source:[3]

Playoff

Monday, June 18, 2001

In the 18-hole playoff, Brooks birdied the third hole and Goosen the sixth to pull even at one-under par. Brooks bogeyed the seventh and again at the ninth, while Goosen birdied it to go three strokes up at the turn. Brooks bogeyed #10 while Goosen birdied to take a five-shot lead with eight holes to be played. They halved the next six holes, all pars except bogeys at #12, and Goosen maintained his five-stroke lead with just two holes remaining. A two-shot swing in Brooks' favor at the 17th cut the lead to three, but Brooks, who struggled off the tee all day, sent his final drive into the right-hand rough. He chose a fairway wood for his approach and did well to run his ball into the bunker short and left of the final green. Goosen found the 18th fairway with his drive, then hit a five-iron that landed short of the green and rolled 20 yards (18 m) back down the slope. Taking no chances with his tight uphill lie, Goosen used a putter to knock his ball onto the putting surface, leaving 25 feet (7.6 m) for his par. Brooks blasted out of the trap to three feet and converted for par for a two-over 72. Goosen cautiously left his par putt five feet short, then rolled in the clinching putt for an even-par 70 and became just the sixth foreign-born winner of the U.S. Open in the last 70 years. The seemingly stoic 32-year-old became the third South African to win the title, joining countrymen Gary Player and Ernie Els as champions of the USGA's premier event.

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo parMoney ($)
1 Retief Goosen  South Africa 70 E900,000
2 Mark Brooks  United States 72 +2530,000

Scorecard

Hole 1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9 101112131415161718
Par444453434434534444
South Africa Goosen EEEEE–1–1–1–2–3–3–2–2–2–2–2–1E
United States Brooks EE–1–1–1–1EE+1+2+2+3+3+3+3+3+2+2

Source:[3][4]

Quotes

"It's amazing and I don't want to consider what it would have felt like if I had lost but I played solid and my putter was warm in places - except yesterday." - Retief Goosen

"It's been a long week, it feels like a year out here." - Retief Goosen

"When I got up this morning, I was more comfortable than I was Sunday morning. I knew I had a 50 percent chance of winning." - Retief Goosen

"I got punished severely in the rough today and that was kind of the difference," - Mark Brooks after his playoff loss.

"I started hitting the ball a lot better a few weeks ago, and just the putter wasn't working. And putting a new putter in the bag last week, it just helped." - Retief Goosen

"To be honest with you I played as hard as I could, I tried on every shot, and there's no regrets." - Tiger Woods after failing to win his fifth straight major championship

"I don't think people really understand how difficult it is on you to keep putting yourself there and the stress it puts on you coming down the back nine on Sunday with a chance to win. More times than not it wears you out." - Tiger Woods

"It's certainly not the finish I would have liked, but out of playing (36) majors now, and not winning any, I'm tired of beating myself up time after time," - Phil Mickelson.

"It was really tough to dig in and concentrate on that second putt because I really didn't think it was really all that important," - Stewart Cink after missing a two-foot putt which ultimately would have put him in the playoff with Goosen and Brooks (since Goosen missed his own two-foot putt seconds later).

References

  1. "U.S. Open Championship: leaderboard". European Tour. June 18, 2001. Retrieved June 14, 2012.
  2. 1 2 Potter, Jerry (June 18, 2001). "No winner at Open as putting woes prevail". USA Today. Retrieved June 14, 2012.
  3. 1 2 "2001 U.S. Open leaderboard". ESPN. June 18, 2001. Retrieved May 25, 2013.
  4. "U.S. Open: Playoff scores". USA Today. June 18, 2001. Retrieved June 14, 2012.

External links

Preceded by
2001 Masters
Major Championships Succeeded by
2001 Open Championship

Coordinates: 36°04′12″N 95°56′46″W / 36.070°N 95.946°W / 36.070; -95.946

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