The 1974 U.S. Open is the one called “The Massacre at Winged Foot,” a nicknamed coined by sportscaster Dick Schaap to describe what many of the golfers who played it remember as a tournament with brutal scoring conditions.
Quick Bits
Winner: Hale Irwin, 287 (scores below)Dates: June 13-16, 1974Golf course: Winged Foot (West)U.S. Open number: This was the 74th time the championship was played.
How Hale Irwin Survived the ‘Massacre’ to Win 1974 U.S. Open
The 1974 U.S. Open was a tournament that played into the reputations of two golfers. The champion, Hale Irwin, established his reputation for being good on tough courses, while Tom Watson extended the reputation he had in the early few years of his career for not being able to close out tournaments.
Watson, after a third-round 69, led Irwin by one stroke entering the final round. But Watson stumbled out of the gate in Round 4 with a string of front-nine bogeys, finished with a 79 and dropped into a tie for fifth place. Still, at this early stage in the future Hall-of-Famer’s career, it was Watson’s first-ever Top 10 finish in a major championship.
Irwin was also in the early stages of his career, and also a future Hall-of-Famer. His victory here was just the third of Irwin’s PGA Tour career. He opened the tournament with a 73, two strokes off the first-round lead. An even-par 70 gave Irwin a share of the second round lead, and a third-round 71 left him one stroke off Watson’s lead.
In the final round, Irwin and Watson were tied for the lead after eight holes, but Irwin’s birdie on No. 9 gave him a lead he never relinquished. Irwin reached the 72nd hole with a 2-stroke margin over Forrest Fezler and Lou Graham (who won the next year at the 1975 U.S. Open). Irwin successfully negotiated Winged Foot’s treacherous 18th — the hole where Phil Mickelson blew up and lost the 2006 U.S. Open — with his stock-in-trade, an expertly played long iron shot to the green. Irwin two-putted for par to close out a 73 and win the championship at 7-over 287.
“Now that I’ve won one,” Irwin said in the post-tournament news conference, “I want to do something bigger, like two major championships.”
And he did: three majors. Irwin won the U.S. Open again in 1979 and 1990, won 20 PGA Tour titles total, and was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame as part of the Class of 1992.
How Tough Was the Golf Course?
Irwin’s 7-over score is the second-highest winning score in relation to par of any U.S. Open after World War II. Not a single player broke par in the first round. The legend is that the USGA “tricked up” Winged Foot because the governing body felt embarrassed by Johnny Miller’s final-round 63 a year earlier at Oakmont.
Is that true? No question the course conditions were brutal. But keep in mind that the winning score two years earlier at Pebble Beach was 290, higher than Irwin’s winning 287 this year. And the 1974 U.S. Open does not hold the tournament’s post-World War II records for fewest rounds below par, or most rounds over-par, or highest 36-hole cut. Which takes nothing away from just how difficult Winged Foot played in 1974 — which was very difficult. The winning score at Winged Foot in 2006 was 5-over 285.
The four past U.S. Open champions in the field who made the cut all finished double-digits over par: Palmer was 12-over, Gary Player 13-over, Jack Nicklaus (whose first round started with him putting off the green) 14-over and Miller 22-over. Two-time champ Lee Trevino missed the cut after opening 78-78.
The USGA’s habit of making hard courses harder for the U.S. Open, and playing many of them as par-70s, entered into the public consciousness for good after the 1974 U.S. Open, as did the nickname, “The Massacre at Winged Foot.”
During this championship, Sandy Tatum of the USGA was asked if the organization was trying to embarrass the world’s best golfers. “No,” Tatum famously replied, “we’re trying to identify them.”
Said champion Irwin: “We were all dumbfounded by how difficult it was. It was easily the most difficult golf course I had ever seen.”
1974 U.S. Open Golf Tournament Scores
Results from the 1974 U.S. Open golf tournament played on the par-70 West Course of Winged Foot Golf Club in Mamaroneck, New York (a-amateur):
Hale Irwin 73-70-71-73–287 $35,000
Forrest Fezler 75-70-74-70–289 $18,000
Lou Graham 71-75-74-70–290 $11,500
Bert Yancey 76-69-73-72–290 $11,500
Arnold Palmer 73-70-73-76–292 $8,000
Jim Colbert 72-77-69-74–292 $8,000
Tom Watson 73-71-69-79–292 $8,000
Gary Player 70-73-77-73–293 $5,500
Tom Kite 74-70-77-72–293 $5,500
Jack Nicklaus 75-74-76-69–294 $3,750
Bud Allin 76-71-74-73–294 $3,750
John Mahaffey 74-73-75-73–295 $2,633
Frank Beard 77-69-72-77–295 $2,633
Larry Ziegler 78-68-78-71–295 $2,633
Mike Reasor 71-76-76-73–296 $1,933
Tom Weiskopf 76-73-72-75–296 $1,933
Raymond Floyd 72-71-78-75–296 $1,933
David Graham 73-75-76-73–297 $1,700
Dale Douglass 77-72-72-76–297 $1,700
Al Geiberger 75-76-78-68–297 $1,700
Leonard Thompson 75-75-76-72–298 $1,575
J.C. Snead 76-71-76-75–298 $1,575
Larry Hinson 75-76-75-73–299 $1,450
Bruce Crampton 72-77-76-74–299 $1,450
Bobby Mitchell 77-73-73-76–299 $1,450
Lanny Wadkins 75-73-76-76–300 $1,300
Chi Chi Rodriguez 75-75-77-73–300 $1,300
Jim Jamieson 77-73-75-75–300 $1,300
Hubert Green 81-67-76-76–300 $1,300
David Glenz 76-74-75-76–301 $1,160
Rod Funseth 73-75-78-75–301 $1,160
Jerry McGee 77-72-78-74–301 $1,160
Ron Cerrudo 78-75-75-73–301 $1,160
Rik Massengale 79-72-74-76–301 $1,160
Don Iverson 74-77-76-75–302 $1,060
Johnny Miller 76-75-74-77–302 $1,060
Bob E. Smith 77-74-73-78–302 $1,060
Steve Melnyk 74-79-73-76–302 $1,060
John Buczek 73-73-83-73–302 $1,060
Mark Hayes 73-77-76-77–303 $980
Dave Eichelberger 76-77-76-74–303 $980
Kermit Zarley 74-73-78-78–303 $980
Homero Blancas 77-71-79-76–303 $980
Dave Stockton 79-74-78-72–303 $980
Bob Stone 75-74-77-78–304 $935
Tom Ulozas 77-75-74-78–304 $935
Jerry Heard 73-77-75-79–304 $935
Jim Dent 76-73-79-76–304 $935
Lynn Janson 77-74-77-77–305 $905
Bobby Nichols 72-77-80-76–305 $905
George Knudson 78-75-75-78–306 $880
Jim Masserio 75-75-76-80–306 $880
Mike McCullough 76-76-74-80–306 $880
Alan Tapie 77-74-77-79–307 $845
Bob Zender 77-73-79-78–307 $845
a-Jay Haas 78-73-79-77–307
Barney Thompson 72-77-80-78–307 $845
Jack Rule 78-75-73-81–307 $845
Eddie Pearce 75-71-84-78–308 $820
Charles Sifford 77-76-76-80–309 $810
Tom Shaw 77-76-78-81–312 $800
Jim Simons 77-72-81-83–313 $800
Roy Pace 74-76-78-85–313 $800
a-Bill Hyndman 79-72-82-81–314
a-Andy Bean 74-76-83-81–314
Bruce Summerhays 77-76-79-83–315 $800
Comings/Goings and Milestones at the 1974 US Open
This was the final major championship played in by Ken Venturi. He missed the cut. Venturi was the winner of the U.S. Open played 10 years previously, in 1964. Arnold Palmer finished tied for fifth. It was the last time Palmer posted a Top 5 finish in any of the four major championships. It was Palmer’s 10th Top 5 finish in a U.S. Open. Sam Snead had to withdraw due to a rib injury suffered during practice prior to the tournament. He played the U.S. Open only two more times after this, missing the cut both times. Snead, age 62, went on to finish tied for third place at the 1974 PGA Championship. Among those who made the cut was a journeyman player named Mike Reasor. Two months earlier, Reasor made the cut at the Tallahassee Open, but then carded scores of 123 and 114 in the final two rounds, perhaps the worst scores ever on tour.
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1998 US Open: Janzen Gets the Better of Stewart … Again
2008 US Open: Tiger Woods Wins a Thriller
2010 US Open
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The 1974 U.S. Open is the one called “The Massacre at Winged Foot,” a nicknamed coined by sportscaster Dick Schaap to describe what many of the golfers who played it remember as a tournament with brutal scoring conditions.
Quick Bits
Winner: Hale Irwin, 287 (scores below)Dates: June 13-16, 1974Golf course: Winged Foot (West)U.S. Open number: This was the 74th time the championship was played.
How Hale Irwin Survived the ‘Massacre’ to Win 1974 U.S. Open
The 1974 U.S. Open was a tournament that played into the reputations of two golfers. The champion, Hale Irwin, established his reputation for being good on tough courses, while Tom Watson extended the reputation he had in the early few years of his career for not being able to close out tournaments.
Watson, after a third-round 69, led Irwin by one stroke entering the final round. But Watson stumbled out of the gate in Round 4 with a string of front-nine bogeys, finished with a 79 and dropped into a tie for fifth place. Still, at this early stage in the future Hall-of-Famer’s career, it was Watson’s first-ever Top 10 finish in a major championship.
Irwin was also in the early stages of his career, and also a future Hall-of-Famer. His victory here was just the third of Irwin’s PGA Tour career. He opened the tournament with a 73, two strokes off the first-round lead. An even-par 70 gave Irwin a share of the second round lead, and a third-round 71 left him one stroke off Watson’s lead.
In the final round, Irwin and Watson were tied for the lead after eight holes, but Irwin’s birdie on No. 9 gave him a lead he never relinquished. Irwin reached the 72nd hole with a 2-stroke margin over Forrest Fezler and Lou Graham (who won the next year at the 1975 U.S. Open). Irwin successfully negotiated Winged Foot’s treacherous 18th — the hole where Phil Mickelson blew up and lost the 2006 U.S. Open — with his stock-in-trade, an expertly played long iron shot to the green. Irwin two-putted for par to close out a 73 and win the championship at 7-over 287.
“Now that I’ve won one,” Irwin said in the post-tournament news conference, “I want to do something bigger, like two major championships.”
And he did: three majors. Irwin won the U.S. Open again in 1979 and 1990, won 20 PGA Tour titles total, and was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame as part of the Class of 1992.
How Tough Was the Golf Course?
Irwin’s 7-over score is the second-highest winning score in relation to par of any U.S. Open after World War II. Not a single player broke par in the first round. The legend is that the USGA “tricked up” Winged Foot because the governing body felt embarrassed by Johnny Miller’s final-round 63 a year earlier at Oakmont.
Is that true? No question the course conditions were brutal. But keep in mind that the winning score two years earlier at Pebble Beach was 290, higher than Irwin’s winning 287 this year. And the 1974 U.S. Open does not hold the tournament’s post-World War II records for fewest rounds below par, or most rounds over-par, or highest 36-hole cut. Which takes nothing away from just how difficult Winged Foot played in 1974 — which was very difficult. The winning score at Winged Foot in 2006 was 5-over 285.
The four past U.S. Open champions in the field who made the cut all finished double-digits over par: Palmer was 12-over, Gary Player 13-over, Jack Nicklaus (whose first round started with him putting off the green) 14-over and Miller 22-over. Two-time champ Lee Trevino missed the cut after opening 78-78.
The USGA’s habit of making hard courses harder for the U.S. Open, and playing many of them as par-70s, entered into the public consciousness for good after the 1974 U.S. Open, as did the nickname, “The Massacre at Winged Foot.”
During this championship, Sandy Tatum of the USGA was asked if the organization was trying to embarrass the world’s best golfers. “No,” Tatum famously replied, “we’re trying to identify them.”
Said champion Irwin: “We were all dumbfounded by how difficult it was. It was easily the most difficult golf course I had ever seen.”
1974 U.S. Open Golf Tournament Scores
Results from the 1974 U.S. Open golf tournament played on the par-70 West Course of Winged Foot Golf Club in Mamaroneck, New York (a-amateur):
Hale Irwin 73-70-71-73–287 $35,000
Forrest Fezler 75-70-74-70–289 $18,000
Lou Graham 71-75-74-70–290 $11,500
Bert Yancey 76-69-73-72–290 $11,500
Arnold Palmer 73-70-73-76–292 $8,000
Jim Colbert 72-77-69-74–292 $8,000
Tom Watson 73-71-69-79–292 $8,000
Gary Player 70-73-77-73–293 $5,500
Tom Kite 74-70-77-72–293 $5,500
Jack Nicklaus 75-74-76-69–294 $3,750
Bud Allin 76-71-74-73–294 $3,750
John Mahaffey 74-73-75-73–295 $2,633
Frank Beard 77-69-72-77–295 $2,633
Larry Ziegler 78-68-78-71–295 $2,633
Mike Reasor 71-76-76-73–296 $1,933
Tom Weiskopf 76-73-72-75–296 $1,933
Raymond Floyd 72-71-78-75–296 $1,933
David Graham 73-75-76-73–297 $1,700
Dale Douglass 77-72-72-76–297 $1,700
Al Geiberger 75-76-78-68–297 $1,700
Leonard Thompson 75-75-76-72–298 $1,575
J.C. Snead 76-71-76-75–298 $1,575
Larry Hinson 75-76-75-73–299 $1,450
Bruce Crampton 72-77-76-74–299 $1,450
Bobby Mitchell 77-73-73-76–299 $1,450
Lanny Wadkins 75-73-76-76–300 $1,300
Chi Chi Rodriguez 75-75-77-73–300 $1,300
Jim Jamieson 77-73-75-75–300 $1,300
Hubert Green 81-67-76-76–300 $1,300
David Glenz 76-74-75-76–301 $1,160
Rod Funseth 73-75-78-75–301 $1,160
Jerry McGee 77-72-78-74–301 $1,160
Ron Cerrudo 78-75-75-73–301 $1,160
Rik Massengale 79-72-74-76–301 $1,160
Don Iverson 74-77-76-75–302 $1,060
Johnny Miller 76-75-74-77–302 $1,060
Bob E. Smith 77-74-73-78–302 $1,060
Steve Melnyk 74-79-73-76–302 $1,060
John Buczek 73-73-83-73–302 $1,060
Mark Hayes 73-77-76-77–303 $980
Dave Eichelberger 76-77-76-74–303 $980
Kermit Zarley 74-73-78-78–303 $980
Homero Blancas 77-71-79-76–303 $980
Dave Stockton 79-74-78-72–303 $980
Bob Stone 75-74-77-78–304 $935
Tom Ulozas 77-75-74-78–304 $935
Jerry Heard 73-77-75-79–304 $935
Jim Dent 76-73-79-76–304 $935
Lynn Janson 77-74-77-77–305 $905
Bobby Nichols 72-77-80-76–305 $905
George Knudson 78-75-75-78–306 $880
Jim Masserio 75-75-76-80–306 $880
Mike McCullough 76-76-74-80–306 $880
Alan Tapie 77-74-77-79–307 $845
Bob Zender 77-73-79-78–307 $845
a-Jay Haas 78-73-79-77–307
Barney Thompson 72-77-80-78–307 $845
Jack Rule 78-75-73-81–307 $845
Eddie Pearce 75-71-84-78–308 $820
Charles Sifford 77-76-76-80–309 $810
Tom Shaw 77-76-78-81–312 $800
Jim Simons 77-72-81-83–313 $800
Roy Pace 74-76-78-85–313 $800
a-Bill Hyndman 79-72-82-81–314
a-Andy Bean 74-76-83-81–314
Bruce Summerhays 77-76-79-83–315 $800
Comings/Goings and Milestones at the 1974 US Open
This was the final major championship played in by Ken Venturi. He missed the cut. Venturi was the winner of the U.S. Open played 10 years previously, in 1964. Arnold Palmer finished tied for fifth. It was the last time Palmer posted a Top 5 finish in any of the four major championships. It was Palmer’s 10th Top 5 finish in a U.S. Open. Sam Snead had to withdraw due to a rib injury suffered during practice prior to the tournament. He played the U.S. Open only two more times after this, missing the cut both times. Snead, age 62, went on to finish tied for third place at the 1974 PGA Championship. Among those who made the cut was a journeyman player named Mike Reasor. Two months earlier, Reasor made the cut at the Tallahassee Open, but then carded scores of 123 and 114 in the final two rounds, perhaps the worst scores ever on tour.
The 2020 U.S. Open: Players, Dates, Golf Course and Ticket Info
1966 US Open: A Famous Charge, an Infamous Collapse
7 Times Golfers Ripped the USGA Over the US Open Golf Course
1995 U.S. Open: Pavin Comes Through in the Clutch
1950 US Open: Hogan’s Triumphant Return
1998 US Open: Janzen Gets the Better of Stewart … Again
2008 US Open: Tiger Woods Wins a Thriller
2010 US Open
The U.S. Open’s Most Golfed Courses
2007 US Open: Cabrera Survives Oakmont
2009 Masters: A Playoff Victory for Cabrera
2009 US Open: Surviving the Slog at Bethpage Black
Tiger Woods’ US Open Wins, Records and Yearly Scores
The Worst Golf Chokes and Collapses
1999 US Open: Payne Stewart’s Last Win
All-Time Best 18-Hole Scores on PGA Tour: All the Sub-60 Rounds
When you visit the site, Dotdash Meredith and its partners may store or retrieve information on your browser, mostly in the form of cookies. Cookies collect information about your preferences and your devices and are used to make the site work as you expect it to, to understand how you interact with the site, and to show advertisements that are targeted to your interests. You can find out more about our use, change your default settings, and withdraw your consent at any time with effect for the future by visiting Cookies Settings, which can also be found in the footer of the site. Cookies Settings Reject All Accept Cookies
The 1974 U.S. Open is the one called “The Massacre at Winged Foot,” a nicknamed coined by sportscaster Dick Schaap to describe what many of the golfers who played it remember as a tournament with brutal scoring conditions.
Quick Bits
Winner: Hale Irwin, 287 (scores below)Dates: June 13-16, 1974Golf course: Winged Foot (West)U.S. Open number: This was the 74th time the championship was played.
How Hale Irwin Survived the ‘Massacre’ to Win 1974 U.S. Open
The 1974 U.S. Open was a tournament that played into the reputations of two golfers. The champion, Hale Irwin, established his reputation for being good on tough courses, while Tom Watson extended the reputation he had in the early few years of his career for not being able to close out tournaments.
Watson, after a third-round 69, led Irwin by one stroke entering the final round. But Watson stumbled out of the gate in Round 4 with a string of front-nine bogeys, finished with a 79 and dropped into a tie for fifth place. Still, at this early stage in the future Hall-of-Famer’s career, it was Watson’s first-ever Top 10 finish in a major championship.
Irwin was also in the early stages of his career, and also a future Hall-of-Famer. His victory here was just the third of Irwin’s PGA Tour career. He opened the tournament with a 73, two strokes off the first-round lead. An even-par 70 gave Irwin a share of the second round lead, and a third-round 71 left him one stroke off Watson’s lead.
In the final round, Irwin and Watson were tied for the lead after eight holes, but Irwin’s birdie on No. 9 gave him a lead he never relinquished. Irwin reached the 72nd hole with a 2-stroke margin over Forrest Fezler and Lou Graham (who won the next year at the 1975 U.S. Open). Irwin successfully negotiated Winged Foot’s treacherous 18th — the hole where Phil Mickelson blew up and lost the 2006 U.S. Open — with his stock-in-trade, an expertly played long iron shot to the green. Irwin two-putted for par to close out a 73 and win the championship at 7-over 287.
“Now that I’ve won one,” Irwin said in the post-tournament news conference, “I want to do something bigger, like two major championships.”
And he did: three majors. Irwin won the U.S. Open again in 1979 and 1990, won 20 PGA Tour titles total, and was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame as part of the Class of 1992.
How Tough Was the Golf Course?
Irwin’s 7-over score is the second-highest winning score in relation to par of any U.S. Open after World War II. Not a single player broke par in the first round. The legend is that the USGA “tricked up” Winged Foot because the governing body felt embarrassed by Johnny Miller’s final-round 63 a year earlier at Oakmont.
Is that true? No question the course conditions were brutal. But keep in mind that the winning score two years earlier at Pebble Beach was 290, higher than Irwin’s winning 287 this year. And the 1974 U.S. Open does not hold the tournament’s post-World War II records for fewest rounds below par, or most rounds over-par, or highest 36-hole cut. Which takes nothing away from just how difficult Winged Foot played in 1974 — which was very difficult. The winning score at Winged Foot in 2006 was 5-over 285.
The four past U.S. Open champions in the field who made the cut all finished double-digits over par: Palmer was 12-over, Gary Player 13-over, Jack Nicklaus (whose first round started with him putting off the green) 14-over and Miller 22-over. Two-time champ Lee Trevino missed the cut after opening 78-78.
The USGA’s habit of making hard courses harder for the U.S. Open, and playing many of them as par-70s, entered into the public consciousness for good after the 1974 U.S. Open, as did the nickname, “The Massacre at Winged Foot.”
During this championship, Sandy Tatum of the USGA was asked if the organization was trying to embarrass the world’s best golfers. “No,” Tatum famously replied, “we’re trying to identify them.”
Said champion Irwin: “We were all dumbfounded by how difficult it was. It was easily the most difficult golf course I had ever seen.”
1974 U.S. Open Golf Tournament Scores
Results from the 1974 U.S. Open golf tournament played on the par-70 West Course of Winged Foot Golf Club in Mamaroneck, New York (a-amateur):
Hale Irwin 73-70-71-73–287 $35,000
Forrest Fezler 75-70-74-70–289 $18,000
Lou Graham 71-75-74-70–290 $11,500
Bert Yancey 76-69-73-72–290 $11,500
Arnold Palmer 73-70-73-76–292 $8,000
Jim Colbert 72-77-69-74–292 $8,000
Tom Watson 73-71-69-79–292 $8,000
Gary Player 70-73-77-73–293 $5,500
Tom Kite 74-70-77-72–293 $5,500
Jack Nicklaus 75-74-76-69–294 $3,750
Bud Allin 76-71-74-73–294 $3,750
John Mahaffey 74-73-75-73–295 $2,633
Frank Beard 77-69-72-77–295 $2,633
Larry Ziegler 78-68-78-71–295 $2,633
Mike Reasor 71-76-76-73–296 $1,933
Tom Weiskopf 76-73-72-75–296 $1,933
Raymond Floyd 72-71-78-75–296 $1,933
David Graham 73-75-76-73–297 $1,700
Dale Douglass 77-72-72-76–297 $1,700
Al Geiberger 75-76-78-68–297 $1,700
Leonard Thompson 75-75-76-72–298 $1,575
J.C. Snead 76-71-76-75–298 $1,575
Larry Hinson 75-76-75-73–299 $1,450
Bruce Crampton 72-77-76-74–299 $1,450
Bobby Mitchell 77-73-73-76–299 $1,450
Lanny Wadkins 75-73-76-76–300 $1,300
Chi Chi Rodriguez 75-75-77-73–300 $1,300
Jim Jamieson 77-73-75-75–300 $1,300
Hubert Green 81-67-76-76–300 $1,300
David Glenz 76-74-75-76–301 $1,160
Rod Funseth 73-75-78-75–301 $1,160
Jerry McGee 77-72-78-74–301 $1,160
Ron Cerrudo 78-75-75-73–301 $1,160
Rik Massengale 79-72-74-76–301 $1,160
Don Iverson 74-77-76-75–302 $1,060
Johnny Miller 76-75-74-77–302 $1,060
Bob E. Smith 77-74-73-78–302 $1,060
Steve Melnyk 74-79-73-76–302 $1,060
John Buczek 73-73-83-73–302 $1,060
Mark Hayes 73-77-76-77–303 $980
Dave Eichelberger 76-77-76-74–303 $980
Kermit Zarley 74-73-78-78–303 $980
Homero Blancas 77-71-79-76–303 $980
Dave Stockton 79-74-78-72–303 $980
Bob Stone 75-74-77-78–304 $935
Tom Ulozas 77-75-74-78–304 $935
Jerry Heard 73-77-75-79–304 $935
Jim Dent 76-73-79-76–304 $935
Lynn Janson 77-74-77-77–305 $905
Bobby Nichols 72-77-80-76–305 $905
George Knudson 78-75-75-78–306 $880
Jim Masserio 75-75-76-80–306 $880
Mike McCullough 76-76-74-80–306 $880
Alan Tapie 77-74-77-79–307 $845
Bob Zender 77-73-79-78–307 $845
a-Jay Haas 78-73-79-77–307
Barney Thompson 72-77-80-78–307 $845
Jack Rule 78-75-73-81–307 $845
Eddie Pearce 75-71-84-78–308 $820
Charles Sifford 77-76-76-80–309 $810
Tom Shaw 77-76-78-81–312 $800
Jim Simons 77-72-81-83–313 $800
Roy Pace 74-76-78-85–313 $800
a-Bill Hyndman 79-72-82-81–314
a-Andy Bean 74-76-83-81–314
Bruce Summerhays 77-76-79-83–315 $800
Comings/Goings and Milestones at the 1974 US Open
This was the final major championship played in by Ken Venturi. He missed the cut. Venturi was the winner of the U.S. Open played 10 years previously, in 1964. Arnold Palmer finished tied for fifth. It was the last time Palmer posted a Top 5 finish in any of the four major championships. It was Palmer’s 10th Top 5 finish in a U.S. Open. Sam Snead had to withdraw due to a rib injury suffered during practice prior to the tournament. He played the U.S. Open only two more times after this, missing the cut both times. Snead, age 62, went on to finish tied for third place at the 1974 PGA Championship. Among those who made the cut was a journeyman player named Mike Reasor. Two months earlier, Reasor made the cut at the Tallahassee Open, but then carded scores of 123 and 114 in the final two rounds, perhaps the worst scores ever on tour.
The 1974 U.S. Open is the one called “The Massacre at Winged Foot,” a nicknamed coined by sportscaster Dick Schaap to describe what many of the golfers who played it remember as a tournament with brutal scoring conditions.
Quick Bits
- Winner: Hale Irwin, 287 (scores below)Dates: June 13-16, 1974Golf course: Winged Foot (West)U.S. Open number: This was the 74th time the championship was played.
How Hale Irwin Survived the ‘Massacre’ to Win 1974 U.S. Open
The 1974 U.S. Open was a tournament that played into the reputations of two golfers. The champion, Hale Irwin, established his reputation for being good on tough courses, while Tom Watson extended the reputation he had in the early few years of his career for not being able to close out tournaments.
Watson, after a third-round 69, led Irwin by one stroke entering the final round. But Watson stumbled out of the gate in Round 4 with a string of front-nine bogeys, finished with a 79 and dropped into a tie for fifth place. Still, at this early stage in the future Hall-of-Famer’s career, it was Watson’s first-ever Top 10 finish in a major championship.
Irwin was also in the early stages of his career, and also a future Hall-of-Famer. His victory here was just the third of Irwin’s PGA Tour career. He opened the tournament with a 73, two strokes off the first-round lead. An even-par 70 gave Irwin a share of the second round lead, and a third-round 71 left him one stroke off Watson’s lead.
In the final round, Irwin and Watson were tied for the lead after eight holes, but Irwin’s birdie on No. 9 gave him a lead he never relinquished. Irwin reached the 72nd hole with a 2-stroke margin over Forrest Fezler and Lou Graham (who won the next year at the 1975 U.S. Open). Irwin successfully negotiated Winged Foot’s treacherous 18th — the hole where Phil Mickelson blew up and lost the 2006 U.S. Open — with his stock-in-trade, an expertly played long iron shot to the green. Irwin two-putted for par to close out a 73 and win the championship at 7-over 287.
“Now that I’ve won one,” Irwin said in the post-tournament news conference, “I want to do something bigger, like two major championships.”
And he did: three majors. Irwin won the U.S. Open again in 1979 and 1990, won 20 PGA Tour titles total, and was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame as part of the Class of 1992.
How Tough Was the Golf Course?
Irwin’s 7-over score is the second-highest winning score in relation to par of any U.S. Open after World War II. Not a single player broke par in the first round. The legend is that the USGA “tricked up” Winged Foot because the governing body felt embarrassed by Johnny Miller’s final-round 63 a year earlier at Oakmont.
Is that true? No question the course conditions were brutal. But keep in mind that the winning score two years earlier at Pebble Beach was 290, higher than Irwin’s winning 287 this year. And the 1974 U.S. Open does not hold the tournament’s post-World War II records for fewest rounds below par, or most rounds over-par, or highest 36-hole cut. Which takes nothing away from just how difficult Winged Foot played in 1974 — which was very difficult. The winning score at Winged Foot in 2006 was 5-over 285.
The four past U.S. Open champions in the field who made the cut all finished double-digits over par: Palmer was 12-over, Gary Player 13-over, Jack Nicklaus (whose first round started with him putting off the green) 14-over and Miller 22-over. Two-time champ Lee Trevino missed the cut after opening 78-78.
The USGA’s habit of making hard courses harder for the U.S. Open, and playing many of them as par-70s, entered into the public consciousness for good after the 1974 U.S. Open, as did the nickname, “The Massacre at Winged Foot.”
During this championship, Sandy Tatum of the USGA was asked if the organization was trying to embarrass the world’s best golfers. “No,” Tatum famously replied, “we’re trying to identify them.”
Said champion Irwin: “We were all dumbfounded by how difficult it was. It was easily the most difficult golf course I had ever seen.”
1974 U.S. Open Golf Tournament Scores
Results from the 1974 U.S. Open golf tournament played on the par-70 West Course of Winged Foot Golf Club in Mamaroneck, New York (a-amateur):
Hale Irwin 73-70-71-73–287 $35,000
Forrest Fezler 75-70-74-70–289 $18,000
Lou Graham 71-75-74-70–290 $11,500
Bert Yancey 76-69-73-72–290 $11,500
Arnold Palmer 73-70-73-76–292 $8,000
Jim Colbert 72-77-69-74–292 $8,000
Tom Watson 73-71-69-79–292 $8,000
Gary Player 70-73-77-73–293 $5,500
Tom Kite 74-70-77-72–293 $5,500
Jack Nicklaus 75-74-76-69–294 $3,750
Bud Allin 76-71-74-73–294 $3,750
John Mahaffey 74-73-75-73–295 $2,633
Frank Beard 77-69-72-77–295 $2,633
Larry Ziegler 78-68-78-71–295 $2,633
Mike Reasor 71-76-76-73–296 $1,933
Tom Weiskopf 76-73-72-75–296 $1,933
Raymond Floyd 72-71-78-75–296 $1,933
David Graham 73-75-76-73–297 $1,700
Dale Douglass 77-72-72-76–297 $1,700
Al Geiberger 75-76-78-68–297 $1,700
Leonard Thompson 75-75-76-72–298 $1,575
J.C. Snead 76-71-76-75–298 $1,575
Larry Hinson 75-76-75-73–299 $1,450
Bruce Crampton 72-77-76-74–299 $1,450
Bobby Mitchell 77-73-73-76–299 $1,450
Lanny Wadkins 75-73-76-76–300 $1,300
Chi Chi Rodriguez 75-75-77-73–300 $1,300
Jim Jamieson 77-73-75-75–300 $1,300
Hubert Green 81-67-76-76–300 $1,300
David Glenz 76-74-75-76–301 $1,160
Rod Funseth 73-75-78-75–301 $1,160
Jerry McGee 77-72-78-74–301 $1,160
Ron Cerrudo 78-75-75-73–301 $1,160
Rik Massengale 79-72-74-76–301 $1,160
Don Iverson 74-77-76-75–302 $1,060
Johnny Miller 76-75-74-77–302 $1,060
Bob E. Smith 77-74-73-78–302 $1,060
Steve Melnyk 74-79-73-76–302 $1,060
John Buczek 73-73-83-73–302 $1,060
Mark Hayes 73-77-76-77–303 $980
Dave Eichelberger 76-77-76-74–303 $980
Kermit Zarley 74-73-78-78–303 $980
Homero Blancas 77-71-79-76–303 $980
Dave Stockton 79-74-78-72–303 $980
Bob Stone 75-74-77-78–304 $935
Tom Ulozas 77-75-74-78–304 $935
Jerry Heard 73-77-75-79–304 $935
Jim Dent 76-73-79-76–304 $935
Lynn Janson 77-74-77-77–305 $905
Bobby Nichols 72-77-80-76–305 $905
George Knudson 78-75-75-78–306 $880
Jim Masserio 75-75-76-80–306 $880
Mike McCullough 76-76-74-80–306 $880
Alan Tapie 77-74-77-79–307 $845
Bob Zender 77-73-79-78–307 $845
a-Jay Haas 78-73-79-77–307
Barney Thompson 72-77-80-78–307 $845
Jack Rule 78-75-73-81–307 $845
Eddie Pearce 75-71-84-78–308 $820
Charles Sifford 77-76-76-80–309 $810
Tom Shaw 77-76-78-81–312 $800
Jim Simons 77-72-81-83–313 $800
Roy Pace 74-76-78-85–313 $800
a-Bill Hyndman 79-72-82-81–314
a-Andy Bean 74-76-83-81–314
Bruce Summerhays 77-76-79-83–315 $800
Comings/Goings and Milestones at the 1974 US Open
This was the final major championship played in by Ken Venturi. He missed the cut. Venturi was the winner of the U.S. Open played 10 years previously, in 1964. Arnold Palmer finished tied for fifth. It was the last time Palmer posted a Top 5 finish in any of the four major championships. It was Palmer’s 10th Top 5 finish in a U.S. Open. Sam Snead had to withdraw due to a rib injury suffered during practice prior to the tournament. He played the U.S. Open only two more times after this, missing the cut both times. Snead, age 62, went on to finish tied for third place at the 1974 PGA Championship. Among those who made the cut was a journeyman player named Mike Reasor. Two months earlier, Reasor made the cut at the Tallahassee Open, but then carded scores of 123 and 114 in the final two rounds, perhaps the worst scores ever on tour.
Comings/Goings and Milestones at the 1974 US Open
This was the final major championship played in by Ken Venturi. He missed the cut. Venturi was the winner of the U.S. Open played 10 years previously, in 1964.
Arnold Palmer finished tied for fifth. It was the last time Palmer posted a Top 5 finish in any of the four major championships. It was Palmer’s 10th Top 5 finish in a U.S. Open.
Sam Snead had to withdraw due to a rib injury suffered during practice prior to the tournament. He played the U.S. Open only two more times after this, missing the cut both times. Snead, age 62, went on to finish tied for third place at the 1974 PGA Championship.
Among those who made the cut was a journeyman player named Mike Reasor. Two months earlier, Reasor made the cut at the Tallahassee Open, but then carded scores of 123 and 114 in the final two rounds, perhaps the worst scores ever on tour.
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The 2020 U.S. Open: Players, Dates, Golf Course and Ticket Info
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1966 US Open: A Famous Charge, an Infamous Collapse
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7 Times Golfers Ripped the USGA Over the US Open Golf Course
1995 U.S. Open: Pavin Comes Through in the Clutch
1995 U.S. Open: Pavin Comes Through in the Clutch
1950 US Open: Hogan’s Triumphant Return
1950 US Open: Hogan’s Triumphant Return
1998 US Open: Janzen Gets the Better of Stewart … Again
1998 US Open: Janzen Gets the Better of Stewart … Again
2008 US Open: Tiger Woods Wins a Thriller
2008 US Open: Tiger Woods Wins a Thriller
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2010 US Open
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The U.S. Open’s Most Golfed Courses
2007 US Open: Cabrera Survives Oakmont
2007 US Open: Cabrera Survives Oakmont
2009 Masters: A Playoff Victory for Cabrera
2009 Masters: A Playoff Victory for Cabrera
2009 US Open: Surviving the Slog at Bethpage Black
2009 US Open: Surviving the Slog at Bethpage Black
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Tiger Woods’ US Open Wins, Records and Yearly Scores
The Worst Golf Chokes and Collapses
The Worst Golf Chokes and Collapses
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1999 US Open: Payne Stewart’s Last Win
All-Time Best 18-Hole Scores on PGA Tour: All the Sub-60 Rounds
All-Time Best 18-Hole Scores on PGA Tour: All the Sub-60 Rounds
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