1962 U.S. Open (golf)


The 1962 U.S. Open was the 62nd U.S. Open, held June 14–17 at Oakmont Country Club in Oakmont, Pennsylvania, a suburb northeast of Pittsburgh. Jack Nicklaus defeated 1960 champion Arnold Palmer in an 18-hole Sunday playoff that marked the beginning of their legendary rivalry. For Nicklaus, it was his first professional win, the first of four U.S. Open titles and a record 18 major championships. Though just 22, it was Nicklaus' sixth U.S. Open and tenth major, having played in four Masters. He had won the U.S. Amateur twice and was the top amateur at the previous two Opens, placing second to Palmer in 1960 and fourth in 1961.
Nicklaus earned $15,000 for his first professional win, and Palmer $8,000 as runner-up. Each received a playoff bonus of $2,500 from the Sunday gate receipts.
Only two of the six former champions in the field made the 36-hole cut, Palmer and defending champion Gene Littler.

Course layout

Hole123456789Out101112131415161718InTotal
Yards4553554285443841834032534803,4854703725981613624582342924623,4096,894
Par444543435364453443443571

Source:
Lengths of the course for previous major championships:
The first hole was a par 5 for the previous majors at Oakmont, set at in 1953.

Past champions in the field

Made the cut

Missed the cut

Round summaries

First round

Thursday, June 14, 1962
Defending champion Littler took the first round lead with a 69 before a record opening round gallery of 17,486, mostly following Palmer in the afternoon, paired with Nicklaus. The previous record was 13,916 in 1960 near Denver.
PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
1Gene Littler69−2
T2Bobby Nichols70−1
T2Bob Rosburg70−1
T4Frank Boynton71E
T4J. C. Goosie71E
T4Arnold Palmer71E
T4Gary Player71E
T4Robert Schoener71E
T9Eugene Francis 72+1
T9John Guenther 72+1
T9Stan Leonard72+1
T9Jack Nicklaus72+1

Second round

Friday, June 15, 1962
Palmer carded a 68 in the morning and Bob Rosburg a 69 to co-lead after 36 holes at 139, with Nicklaus three strokes back in a tie for fourth. Palmer and Nicklaus were paired together in the first two rounds. The second round attendance record was broken with 19,971 in the gallery, surpassing the previous mark of 15,225 set in 1961 near Detroit.
PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
T1Arnold Palmer71-68=139−3
T1Bob Rosburg70-69=139−3
3Billy Maxwell71-70=141−1
T4Bobby Nichols70-72=142E
T4Jack Nicklaus72-70=142E
T4Gary Player71-71=142E
T7Miller Barber73-70=143+1
T7Gene Littler69-74=143+1
T9Phil Rodgers74-70=144+2
T9Don Whitt73-71=144+2

Source:

Third round

Saturday, June 16, 1962 -
PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
T1Bobby Nichols70-72-70=212−1
T1Arnold Palmer71-68-73=212−1
T3Phil Rodgers74-70-69=213E
T3Bob Rosburg70-69-74=213E
T5Jack Nicklaus72-70-72=214+1
T5Gary Player71-71-72=214+1
7Gene Littler69-74-72=215+2
8Billy Maxwell71-70-75=216+3
9Art Wall, Jr.73-72-72=217+4
T10Gay Brewer73-72-73=218+5
T10Tommy Jacobs74-71-73=218+5

Final round

Saturday, June 16, 1962 -
After 54 holes at Oakmont, Palmer held a share of the lead with Bobby Nichols, with Phil Rodgers and Bob Rosburg a stroke back, and Nicklaus and Gary Player two back. Rosburg shot a 79 in the final round and quickly fell out of contention, while Nichols and Rodgers carded scores of 73 and 72, respectively, to share 3rd place. But the story of this day was the duel between Palmer and Nicklaus. Although he bogeyed the 9th, Palmer still led Nicklaus as they made the turn. That would change quickly as Nicklaus birdied 11 and Palmer bogeyed 13, evening up the score. Nicklaus missed a birdie attempt at the last to finish with a 69, while Palmer missed a birdie at 18 from that would have won the championship. This set up an 18-hole playoff between golf's most popular player and the game's rising star.
PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo parMoney
T1Jack Nicklaus72-70-72-69=283−1Playoff
T1Arnold Palmer71-68-73-71=283−1Playoff
T3Bobby Nichols70-72-70-73=285+15,500
T3Phil Rodgers74-70-69-72=285+15,500
5Gay Brewer73-72-73-69=287+34,000
T6Tommy Jacobs74-71-73-70=288+42,750
T6Gary Player71-71-72-74=288+42,750
T8Doug Ford74-75-71-70=290+61,767
T8Gene Littler69-74-72-75=290+61,767
T8Billy Maxwell71-70-75-74=290+61,767

Source:

Scorecard

Final round
Hole 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 101112131415161718
Par444543435445344344
Nicklaus+2+2+2+2+2+2+1+1EE−1−1−1−1−1−1−1−1
Palmer−1−2−2−3−3−3−3−3−2−2−2−2−1−1−1−1−1−1

Cumulative tournament scores, relative to par
Source:

Playoff

Sunday, June 17, 1962
The 10,000 that showed up for the playoff on Sunday were decidedly pro-Palmer, constantly taunting the 22-year-old upstart from Ohio. Nicklaus, however, silenced the crowd by going up by four strokes after six holes. Palmer then launched one of his patented charges with birdies at 9, 11, and 12 to close within one, but a three-putt bogey at 13 proved to be costly for Palmer. Nicklaus held him off from there and prevailed by three strokes, carding a 71 to Palmer's 74. Nicklaus won the championship on the greens; he had just one three-putt the entire week, while Palmer had 10. Nicklaus became the youngest winner of the U.S. Open since Bobby Jones in 1923, and became the first since Jones to hold the Open and the U.S. Amateur championship at the same time; he had won the Amateur the previous year before turning pro in the winter. For Palmer, this began a frustrating stretch as a runner-up in four U.S. Opens in six years, with three in playoffs. His words after the tournament proved prophetic, saying of Nicklaus: "Now that the big guy is out of the cage, everybody better run for cover."
PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo parMoney
1Jack Nicklaus71E17,500
2Arnold Palmer74+310,500

Playoff
Hole 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 101112131415161718
Par444543435445344344
NicklausEEE−1−1−2−2−1−1−1−1−1−1−1−1−1−1E
Palmer+1+1+1+1+1+2+2+3+2+2+1E+1+1+1+1+1+3

Source: