1950 U.S. Open (golf)


The 1950 U.S. Open was the 50th U.S. Open, held June 8–11 at the East Course of Merion Golf Club in Ardmore, Pennsylvania, a suburb northwest of Philadelphia. In what became known as the "Miracle at Merion," 1948 champion Ben Hogan won the second of his four U.S. Open titles in an 18-hole playoff over 1946 champion Lloyd Mangrum and George Fazio, just 16 months after being severely injured in an automobile accident. It was the fourth of Hogan's nine major titles.
Lee Mackey established a new tournament record by shooting a 64 in the first round, but followed that up with an 81 and finished in 25th place. His score of 64 was not bettered in any other major championship for 23 years, until Johnny Miller closed with a 63 at the U.S. Open in 1973 to win at Oakmont. Tommy Armour, three-time major champion and winner in 1927, played in his final major and missed the cut.
This was the second U.S. Open played at Merion's East Course, which previously hosted sixteen years earlier in 1934, won by Olin Dutra. Opened in 1912, the course was the site of the U.S. Amateur in 1916, 1924, and 1930; the first was the debut of Bobby Jones at age 14 and the latter two he won. The 1930 victory was the fourth and final leg of his grand slam.
Hogan made his U.S. Open debut at Merion in 1934 at age 21. He shot 79 twice and missed the 36-hole cut by three strokes. He made his first cut at the U.S. Open in 1939 and did not miss another; his last was in 1967 at age 54.

Course

East Course
Hole123456789Out101112131415161718InTotal
Yards3605551955954254353603671853,4773353784001334433954452304583,2176,694
Par453544443364443444343470

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Past champions in the field

Made the cut

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Missed the cut

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Round summaries

First round

Thursday, June 8, 1950
PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
1Lee Mackey64–6
2Al Brosch67–3
T3Skip Alexander68–2
T3Julius Boros68–2
T5Harold Williams69–1
T5Henry Williams, Jr.69–1
T7Pat Abbott71+1
T7John Barnum71+1
T7Al Besselink71+1
T7Jim Ferrier71+1
T7Claude Harmon71+1
T7Loddie Kempa71+1
T7Joe Kirkwood, Jr.71+1
T7Jack Mallon71+1
T7Cary Middlecoff71+1
T7Henry Picard71+1
T7Denny Shute71+1

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Scorecard

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Second round

Friday, June 9, 1950
PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
1Dutch Harrison72-67=139–1
T2Julius Boros68-72=140E
T2Johnny Bulla74-66=140E
T2Jim Ferrier71-69=140E
5Ben Hogan72-69=141+1
T6Skip Alexander68-74=142+2
T6Lloyd Mangrum72-70=142+2
T6Cary Middlecoff71-71=142+2
T6Henry Picard71-71=142+2
T6Skee Riegel73-69=142+2
T6Bob Toski73-69=142+2

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Third round

Saturday, June 10, 1950
PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
1Lloyd Mangrum72-70-69=211+1
2Dutch Harrison72-67-73=212+2
T3Ben Hogan72-69-72=213+3
T3Cary Middlecoff71-71-71=213+3
T3Johnny Palmer73-70-70=213+3
6Jim Ferrier71-69-74=214+4
7Henry Ransom72-71-73=216+6
T8Julius Boros68-72-77=217+7
T8George Fazio73-72-72=217+7
T8Bill Nary73-70-74=217+7

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Final round

Saturday, June 10, 1950
Mangrum began the final round with a one-shot lead over Dutch Harrison and a two-stroke lead over Hogan, defending champion Cary Middlecoff, and Johnny Palmer. Fazio was the first to post 287 after an even-par 70. Mangrum struggled early in his round, carding six bogeys on the first seven holes and shot 76, which also left him at 287. Hogan had a chance to win the tournament in regulation but missed a short putt for par at 15 and then bogeyed the par-3 17th. In a three-way tie for the lead going to the difficult 18th, Hogan hit one of his most famous shots, a 1-iron approach to. He two-putted for par to join Mangrum and Fazio in the Sunday playoff. Middlecoff and Palmer both shot 79 and fell to tenth place.
PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo parMoney
T1Ben Hogan72-69-72-74=287+7Playoff
T1Lloyd Mangrum72-70-69-76=287+7Playoff
T1George Fazio73-72-72-70=287+7Playoff
4Dutch Harrison72-67-73-76=288+8800
T5Jim Ferrier71-69-74-75=289+9500
T5Joe Kirkwood, Jr.71-74-74-70=289+9500
T5Henry Ransom72-71-73-73=289+9500
8Bill Nary73-70-74-73=290+10350
9Julius Boros68-72-77-74=291+11300
T10Cary Middlecoff71-71-71-79=292+12225
T10Johnny Palmer73-70-70-79=292+12225

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Scorecard

Cumulative tournament scores, relative to par
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Playoff

Sunday, June 11, 1950
The three players were within one stroke of each other as late as the 13th hole, with Hogan at even par and Fazio and Mangrum at one-over. Fazio bogeyed four of the last five holes to fall out of contention, while Hogan led Mangrum by a single stroke through 15. Mangrum's tee shot at 16 went into heavy rough but his third shot stopped from the hole. As he putted to save par, he picked up his ball to remove a bug that had landed on it, a violation of the rules. Mangrum rolled it in, but was assessed a two-stroke penalty at the next tee; the double-bogey allowed Hogan to cruise to a four-stroke victory. Hogan had just one bogey, while Fazio had seven and Mangrum four, plus the double-bogey for the rules violation.
PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo parMoney
1Ben Hogan69−14,000
2Lloyd Mangrum73+32,500
3George Fazio75+51,000

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