• 1952:
Ted Kroll wins the inaugural tournament. He beats
Lawson Little,
Skee Riegel, and
Earl Stewart by four shots. • 1955: Amateur Bill Whedon becomes the first player in PGA Tour history to record two holes-in-one in the same round. • 1956:
Arnold Palmer makes the Insurance City Open his first
United States based PGA Tour victory by beating Ted Kroll in a playoff. • 1962:
Bob Goalby defeats
Art Wall Jr. on the seventh hole of a sudden death playoff after Wall misses an 18-inch putt for par on the 72nd hole. • 1967: African American golfer
Charlie Sifford wins his first PGA Tour event. He beats
Steve Oppermann by one shot. • 1968:
Billy Casper becomes the tournament's first three-time winner. He beats
Bruce Crampton by three shots. • 1972:
Lee Trevino defeats
Lee Elder in a sudden death playoff. If Elder had won, he would have become qualified for
The Masters. • 1973: Billy Casper shoots a final round 64 to win for the fourth time at Hartford. He beats
Bruce Devlin by one shot. • 1974:
Dave Stockton wins by four shots over
Raymond Floyd. After the tournament, Stockton gets a congratulatory call from then
President Gerald Ford. Stockton also arranges to donate his entire $40,000 winnings check to charity. • 1977:
Billy Kratzert beats
Grier Jones and
Larry Nelson by three shots. Two years earlier, Kratzert had quit golf and gone to work as a
forklift operator. • 1981: Ninety-one players made the 36-hole cut, a PGA Tour record. • 1982:
Tim Norris sets tournament records for aggregate (259) scoring and under par (−25) as he wins by six shots over
Hubert Green and Raymond Floyd. • 1986:
Mac O'Grady shoots a final round 62 to catch
Roger Maltbie, then defeats him on the first hole of sudden death. • 1989:
Paul Azinger chips it in on the 72nd hole to beat
Wayne Levi by one shot. • 1992:
Lanny Wadkins, who had last played in Hartford in 1978, shoots a final round 65 to win by two shots over
Dan Forsman,
Nick Price, and
Donnie Hammond. • 2000:
Notah Begay III wins for the second week in succession after he makes birdie on the 72nd hole to edge
Mark Calcavecchia by one shot. • 2002:
Phil Mickelson becomes the first winner to successfully defend his title. He beats
Jonathan Kaye and
Davis Love III by one shot. • 2003: Nineteen years after his first triumph in Hartford,
Peter Jacobsen wins again, beating
Chris Riley. Jacobsen's $720,000 winner's check was ten times what he earned in 1984. The tournament was also notable when
Suzy Whaley became the first woman in 58 years to play in a PGA Tour event, though her appearance was controversial after playing from shorter tees during her qualifying tournament, the
Connecticut PGA Championship. • 2011:
Patrick Cantlay, an amateur golfer from
UCLA, set a course-record of 10-under 60, the lowest round ever shot on the PGA Tour by an amateur. • 2014:
Kevin Streelman birdies the last seven holes in the final round, a PGA Tour record for an event winner. • 2016:
Jim Furyk shot a
12-under-par 58 in the final round, becoming the first player to shoot 58 in a PGA Tour event. • 2017:
Jordan Spieth wins in a playoff against
Daniel Berger by holing his bunker shot for birdie on the first playoff hole. Berger had a chance to advance the playoff, but missed his long birdie putt. • 2021:
Harris English wins a sudden-death playoff against
Kramer Hickok on the 8th hole, a playoff which tied for the second longest sudden-death playoff in PGA Tour history. • 2024: In the third round,
Cameron Young shot a 59, making the Travelers Championship the first PGA Tour event with multiple
sub-60 rounds. In the final round,
Scottie Scheffler defeated
Tom Kim in a sudden-death playoff, becoming the sixth player in PGA Tour history to win six Tour events before July. ==References==