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-   The Open Championship / July 20-23, 2006 (http://www.lynnblakegolf.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?f=100)
-   -   Who's Who At Hoylake (http://www.lynnblakegolf.com/forum/showthread.php?t=3172)

Yoda 07-19-2006 08:58 AM

Who's Who At Hoylake
 
Lots of guys have lots to prove at Hoylake.

Will Geoff Ogilvy become one of the few men in history (Jones, Sarazen, Hogan, Trevino, Watson and Woods) to lift both the U.S. and British Open trophies in the same year? Can Phil shake the demons of Winged Foot and see his extensive Royal Liverpool preparation pay off? Will Monte get his revenge? Is the rusty Tiger now fully reconditioned and prepared to reassert his dominance on one of golf's great stages? And who else among the great, the near-great and the rank and file is prepared to step up, take history by the neck and claim their destiny?

Who indeed?

metallion 07-19-2006 09:09 AM

We'll see. I will see for myself
 
For the fourth consecutive year I'll be at the Open to watch & down beer. This time Friday and Saturday. :happy3:

neil 07-19-2006 09:12 AM

Hoylake is not in Scotland by the way!

Yoda 07-19-2006 10:39 AM

No Place Like Home
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by neil

Hoylake is not in Scotland by the way!

Right you are, Neil. http://www.royal-liverpool-golf.com/location.htm Thanks for spotting the error in the Forum subtitle. :redface:

blehnhard 07-19-2006 11:33 AM

Name Change?
 
The US Open Champ is Geoff not Jeff. Got the last name correct.

I am sure that Jeff Ogilvie would love to have the trophy.

Bruce

Yoda 07-19-2006 06:39 PM

Missed Cut At the Spelling Bee
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by blehnhard

The US Open Champ is Geoff not Jeff. Got the last name correct.

Thanks, Bruce. Good thing I don't engrave the trophies!

P.S. Next time I decide to start a thead on the fly, please...somebody stop me. :violent:

I moved Hoylake to Scotland and made Ogilvie a Yank. No telling what I would have done had this been the Southern Farm Bureau Classic in Minnesota. Or is it Maine? Maryland? Mississippi? Mexico? And what if Arron Oberrheiser had been the U.S. Open champ. Uh...Aaron Oberholser. Arron Oberholster. Uberheimer. Oh...Whatever.

:)

Mike O 07-20-2006 12:43 AM

Spelling Bee or English Lit 101
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Yoda
Lots of guys have lots to prove at Hoylake.

Will Geoff Ogilvy become one of the few men in history (Jones, Sarazen, Hogan, Trevino, Woods) to lift both the U.S. and British Open trophies in the same year? Can Phil shake the demons of Winged Foot and see his extensive Royal Liverpool preparation pay off? Will Monte get his revenge? Is the rusty Tiger now fully reconditioned and prepared to reassert his dominance on one of golf's great stages? And who else among the great, the near-great and the rank and file is prepared to step up, take history by the neck and claim their destiny?

Who indeed?

Lynn,
It's HoyeLake not HoyLake-:happy3: :confused1 (Just Kidding!- Did I scare ya!) Seriously, it's always good to correct mistakes but I give you props for the writing- Well written and interesting as usual- I'd put money up that you did OK in that English Lit Class!:read:

yippedagain 07-20-2006 04:44 AM

D'ont think Nicklaus and Player should be on the list either.

Yoda 07-20-2006 05:32 AM

Like I Said...A Short List
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by yippedagain

Don't think Nicklaus and Player should be on the list either.

:oops:

Correction made. Thanks, yippedagain.

Doing my homework in arrears, I've now scoured the list of past British Open champions -- back to the days of Young Tom (Morris, not Watson) -- and found one more U.S.-British Open same-year Open Champion -- Gene Sarazen. So that would leave the five in my edited post (Jones, Sarazen, Hogan, Trevino, Watson and Woods).

Can anybody else find another same-year dual winner?

To save you a little trouble, five-time British Open winners Vardon and Thomson didn't make the grade, nor did four-time winners Hagen and Locke. Palmer won his British Opens in 1961 and 1962, but got his lone U.S. Open in 1960. And four-time U.S. Open winner Willie Anderson never won the British (it was quite a boat ride in the early 1900s -- expensive, too).

yippedagain 07-20-2006 06:58 AM

Going only from a fading memory, but didn't Watson win at Pebble Beach and Troon in '82?.
Arnie should've but didn't in '60, ending up runner up to Kel Nagle at St Andrews.
Nicklaus came close at Muirfield in '72.


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