With the exception of 1997 and 2014, the U.S. Open has been held in some form every year since , the first event won by
Detroit's John "The General" Crimmins. Prior to 1971, this event was known as the BPAA All-Star. In its early years, the BPAA All-Star was a 100-game tournament.
Andy Varipapa is notable for winning back-to-back BPAA All-Star titles in 1947 and 1948, the second coming at age 57, which makes him this tournament's oldest winner. BPAA All-Star winners in the PBA era (1959–1970) were initially not credited with PBA titles for their victories. A rule change in 2008, however, retroactively awarded titles to the winners if they were PBA members at the time of their victories. Because the 1959 BPAA All-Star occurred before the PBA's debut,
Harry Smith (1960) earned the first PBA title in a BPAA All-Star event. The first modern-day U.S. Open tournament in the PBA took place in 1971 and was won by
Mike Limongello. With five wins,
Pete Weber holds the most U.S. Open trophies of all time, one more than
Dick Weber (Pete's father) and
Don Carter. Pete Weber is also the only player to win a U.S. Open title in four different decades (1988, 1991, 2003-04, 2006-07 and 2011-12). The only player to successfully defend a modern day U.S. Open title was
Dave Husted, who won the event in 1995 and 1996. Since then, only two bowlers have come close to joining Husted. After winning in 2007-08,
Norm Duke finished runner-up to
Mike Scroggins in 2008-09. Scroggins then finished runner-up to
Bill O'Neill in 2009-10. Since 1971, only eight bowlers have won multiple U.S. Open titles: : 1. Pete Weber - 5 titles (1988, 1992, 2003-04, 2006-07, 2011-12) : 2. Dave Husted - 3 titles (1982, 1995, 1996) : T3. Marshall Holman - 2 titles (1981, 1985) : T3. Del Ballard Jr. - 2 titles (1987, 1993) : T3. Walter Ray Williams Jr. - 2 titles (1998, 2002-03) : T3. Norm Duke - 2 titles (2007-08, 2010-11) : T3. François Lavoie - 2 titles (2016, 2019) : T3. E.J. Tackett - 2 titles (2023, 2025) There has only been one time in modern-day U.S. Open tournament history that two former U.S. Open champions met in a final. In the 2010-11 U.S. Open Championship match, 2001-02 winner
Mika Koivuniemi needed a spare and 9 pins in the tenth frame to defeat 2007-08 winner Norm Duke, but missed the 10-pin to the right and Duke would win 225 to 216. This would also be the only time two bowlers met in multiple U.S. Open Finals as Duke had defeated Koivuniemi 224 to 216 in the 2007-08 Final. The
1987 U.S. Open, sponsored by
Seagram Wine Coolers, offered a then-record total purse of $500,000, and was the first PBA tournament to award a $100,000 first prize (won by
Del Ballard Jr.). Unable to find viable sponsorship, the U.S. Open was canceled for 2014, amid speculation that the tournament may not return at all. However, the USBC and BPAA later reached a three-year agreement that brought the tournament back for 2015, 2016 and 2017. The USBC and BPAA secured Bowlmor AMF, at the time the largest operator of bowling centers in the world, as the title sponsor for 2015. The 2015 tournament took place November 2–8 in
Garland, Texas. Beginning in 2017 with the U.S. Open held at Flamingo Bowl in
Liverpool, New York, the tournament instituted a partial invitational field for the first time. Among those invited are top money leaders among PBA members, top performers from a variety of USBC events, members of Team USA and Junior Team USA, winners of the past ten U.S. Opens, the last three winners from each of the PBA's other major championships, and winners of the current year
PBA Regional Tour U.S. Open qualifier tournaments. The "open" portion of the tournament is actually a pre-tournament qualifier (PTQ) with a maximum of 80 entries. Top finishers from the eight-game PTQ then join all those who accepted invitations to round out the starting field of 144 players. The 2018 event had 116 invitational entries and only 28 open spots available via the PTQ. In 2019, only 91 invitees entered the tournament, so 53 open spots were filled from the PTQ. ==Format==