Image:GeorgeSargent.jpg |
George Sargent, winner of the 1912 Canadian Open at
Rosedale Golf Club. Image:TommyArmour1927.jpg|
Tommy Armour, three-time Canadian Open champion in 1927, 1930 and 1934. Other three-time winners are
Sam Snead and
Lee Trevino. Image:Walter Hagen 1914.png|
Walter Hagen, winner at the 1931 Canadian Open Championship. Image:YN3ArnoldPalmer.jpg|
Arnold Palmer, 1955 Open winner, his first PGA Tour victory. Image:Greg Norman 1986 Photo.jpg|
Greg Norman, two-time Canadian Open champion in 1984 and 1992. Image:Tiger Woods drives by Allison.jpg|
Tiger Woods, champion of the 2000 Canadian Open and winner of the
Triple Crown along with
Lee Trevino (1971). Image:JimFuryk2004RyderCup3.jpg|
Jim Furyk, back-to-back Canadian Open winner in 2006–07, along with
James Douglas Edgar,
Leo Diegel,
Sam Snead,
Jim Ferrier, and
Jhonattan Vegas ,host of the first Canadian Open in 1904. The
Royal Montreal Golf Club, founded in 1873, is the oldest continuously running official golf club in North America. The club was the host of the first Canadian Open championship in 1904, and has been host to nine other Canadian Opens, at two locations, with the club moving to its current site on an island west of Montreal in 1959. The 1912 Canadian Open at the
Rosedale Golf Club was famed American golfer
Walter Hagen's first professional competition. In 1914,
Karl Keffer won the event, being the last Canadian-born champion. Englishman
J. Douglas Edgar captured the 1919 championship at
Hamilton Golf and Country Club by a record 16-stroke margin; 17-year-old amateur prodigy
Bobby Jones (who was coached by Edgar) tied for second. The 1930 Canadian Open at Hamilton was another stellar tournament.
Tommy Armour blazed his way around the course over the final 18 holes of regulation play, shooting a 64. Four-time champion Diegel and Armour went to a 36-hole playoff to decide the title. Armour shot 138 (69-69) to defeat Diegel by three strokes. Toronto's St. Andrews Golf Club hosted the Open in 1936 and 1937 – the only course to hold back-to-back Opens until the creation of Glen Abbey – before it felt the impact of the growth of the city, and was ploughed under to allow for the creation of
Highway 401. The Riverside Golf and Country Club of
Rothesay, New Brunswick was host to the 1939 Canadian Open where
Harold "Jug" McSpaden was champion. This was the only time the Open has been held in
Atlantic Canada. ,
Tommy Armour, and
Walter Hagen at Lakeview Golf Club in Mississauga in 1934.
Scarboro Golf and Country Club in eastern Toronto was host to four Canadian Opens: 1940, 1947, 1953, and 1963. Three of these events were decided by one stroke, and the only time the margin was two shots was when
Bobby Locke defeated
Ed Oliver in 1947. With his win at Scarboro in 1947, the golfer from
South Africa became just the second non-North American winner of the Canadian Open. Locke fired four rounds in the 60s to finish at 16-under-par, two strokes better than the American Oliver. After the prize presentation Locke was given a standing ovation, and was then hoisted to shoulders by fellow countrymen who were then residents of Canada. In 1948, for the first time, the Canadian Open traveled west of Ontario, landing at
Shaughnessy Heights Golf Club in
Vancouver,
British Columbia, where
Charles Congdon sealed his victory on the 16th hole with a 150-yard bunker shot that stopped eight feet from the cup. The following birdie gave him the lead, and Congdon went on to win by three shots.
Mississaugua Golf & Country Club has hosted six Canadian Opens: 1931, 1938, 1942, 1951, 1965, and 1974. The 1951 Open tournament was won by
Jim Ferrier, who successfully defended the title he had won at Royal Montreal a year earlier.
Winnipeg's
St. Charles Country Club hosted the 1952 Canadian Open, and saw
Johnny Palmer set the 72-hole scoring record of 263, which still stands after more than 60 years. Palmer's rounds of 66-65-66-66 bettered the old 1947 mark set by Bobby Locke by five shots. In 1955,
Arnold Palmer captured the Canadian Open championship, his first PGA Tour victory, at the
Weston Golf and Country Club.
Montreal, Quebec's
Laval-sur-le-Lac hosted the 1962 Open where
Gary Player was disqualified after the first round, when he recorded the wrong score on the 10th hole. He had won the
PGA Championship the week before. Californian
Charlie Sifford attended the 1962 Canadian Open in part to raise the profile of
African-American players on the PGA Tour. He was one of only 16 of the top 100 players on tour to play there in 1962. Pinegrove Country Club played host to the Canadian Open in 1964 and 1969. Australian
Kel Nagle edged Arnold Palmer and
Raymond Floyd at the 1964 Open to become, aged almost 44 at the time, the oldest player to win the title. Five years later,
Tommy Aaron fired a final-round 64 to force a playoff with 57-year-old
Sam Snead. Aaron won the 18-hole playoff, beating Snead by two strokes (70-72). The small town of
Ridgeway, Ontario in the
Niagara Peninsula was host of the 1972 Open at Cherry Hill Golf Club. A popular choice of venue, it drew rave reviews by the players, specifically the 1972 champion
Gay Brewer, who called it the best course he had ever played in Canada, and Arnold Palmer, who suggested the Open be held there again the following year. In 1975,
Tom Weiskopf won his second Open in three years in dramatic fashion at the Blue Course of Royal Montreal's new venue, defeating
Jack Nicklaus on the first hole of a sudden-death playoff, after almost holing his short-iron approach.
Windsor, Ontario's
Essex Golf & Country Club was host of the 1976 Canadian Open, where Nicklaus again finished second, this time behind champion
Jerry Pate. Essex came to the rescue late in the game, when it was determined that the newly built Glen Abbey was not yet ready to host the Canadian Open. The 1997 Open at Royal Montreal was the first time
Tiger Woods ever missed a professional cut, after winning the
Masters Tournament a few months before. 's second Canadian Open win in 1994
Angus Glen Golf Club was host to two recent Canadian Opens, 2002 and 2007. In 2007
Jim Furyk became one of a few golfers who have won two consecutive Canadian Open titles, joining
James Douglas Edgar,
Leo Diegel, Sam Snead and
Jim Ferrier. Angus Glen owns the unique distinction of having each of its two courses (North and South) host the Canadian Open.
Glen Abbey Golf Club of
Oakville, Ontario has hosted 30 Open Championships (1977–79, 1981–96, 1998–2000, 2004, 2008–09, 2013, 2015–2018), and has crowned 24 different champions. The 11th hole at Glen Abbey is widely considered its
signature hole, and begins the world-famous valley sequence of five holes from 11 to 15. The picturesque 11th is a 459-yard straightaway par-4, where players tee off 100 feet above the fairway, which ends at
Sixteen Mile Creek, just short of the green.
John Daly left his mark, and a plaque is permanently displayed on the back tee deck, recounting Daly's attempt to reach the green with his tee shot. His ball landed in the creek. In 2000, Tiger Woods dueled with
Grant Waite over the final 18 holes, before finally subduing the New Zealander on the 72nd hole with an exceptional shot. Holding a one-shot advantage, Woods found his tee shot in a fairway bunker, and after watching Waite put his second shot 30 feet from the hole, decided to go for the green. Woods hit a 6-iron which carried a lake and settled on the fringe just past the flag, which was 218 yards away, and then chipped to tap-in range for the title-clinching birdie. With the victory, Woods became only the second golfer to capture the
U.S. Open,
Open Championship and Canadian Open in the same year, earning him the
Triple Crown trophy; he matched
Lee Trevino (1971). In 2009,
Mark Calcavecchia scored nine consecutive birdies at the second round, breaking the PGA Tour record.
Canadian performances Until 2023, a Canadian citizen had not won the Canadian Open since
Pat Fletcher in 1954, and since 1914 for a player born in Canada. One of the most exciting conclusions ever seen at the Open came in 2004, extending that streak.
Mike Weir had never done well at the Glen Abbey Golf Course, the site of the tournament that week. In fact, he had only made the cut once at any of the Opens contested at Glen Abbey. But Weir clawed his way to the top of the leaderboard by Friday. And by the third day at the 100th anniversary Open, he had a three-stroke lead, and many Canadians were buzzing about the possibility of the streak's end. Weir started off with a double bogey, but then went 4-under to keep his 3-stroke lead, with only eight holes left. Yet, with the expectations of Canadian observers abnormally high, there was another roadblock in the way of Mike Weir:
Vijay Singh. Weir bogeyed three holes on the back nine but still had a chance to win the tournament with a 10-footer on the 72nd hole. When he missed the putt, the two entered a sudden-death playoff. Weir missed two more chances to win the tournament: a 25-foot putt for eagle on No. 18 on the first hole of sudden-death, and a 5-foot putt on No. 17, the second playoff hole. On the third playoff hole, Weir put his third shot into the water after a horrid drive and lay-up, and Singh was safely on the green in two. Singh won the Open and overtook Tiger Woods as the world's number one player. Canadian
David Hearn took a two-shot lead into the final round in 2015. He still had the lead as late as the 15th hole, but was being closely pursued by three players ranked near the top of the
Official World Golf Ranking –
Bubba Watson, Jim Furyk, and
Jason Day. All four golfers had chances to win right until the end. Hearn was overtaken by champion Day's three consecutive birdies to close the round; Day finished one shot ahead of Watson, who also birdied the final three holes, narrowly missing an eagle attempt on a final hole greenside chip that would have tied. Day's fourth career Tour triumph came after he had just missed a potential tying putt on the final hole at the
Open Championship the previous week. Hearn finished third, the best result by a
Canadian since Weir's near-miss in 2004. In 2016, Canadian amateur
Jared du Toit was only one stroke behind going into the final round, allowing him to play in the final group. He finished tied for ninth, three strokes behind eventual winner
Jhonattan Vegas. In 2023, Canadian
Nick Taylor finally broke the drought for the home country, dating back 69 years to 1954, winning in dramatic fashion at the
Oakdale Golf & Country Club. He birdied the final hole to tie Englishman
Tommy Fleetwood (who made par) at 17 under par after 72 holes. On the fourth sudden death hole, Taylor made a eagle to capture the title. ==Event titles==