1971 U.S. Open (golf)


The 1971 U.S. Open was the 71st U.S. Open, held June 17–21 at the East Course of Merion Golf Club in Ardmore, Pennsylvania, a suburb west of Philadelphia. Lee Trevino, the 1968 champion, won his second U.S. Open, defeating Jack Nicklaus by three strokes in an 18-hole playoff. It was the second of Trevino's six major titles and the second of four times in which Nicklaus was the runner-up to Trevino in a major; Nicklaus won his third U.S. Open the following year.
The U.S. Open was just part of an outstanding year for Trevino in 1971 and following this playoff win, his confidence soared. Two weeks later he won the Canadian Open in a the next week the British Open, and became the first to win those three national opens in the same only Tiger Woods has done it since, in 2000. Trevino won six times on tour in 1971 with two majors and was PGA Player of the Year. He was named athlete of the year by the Associated Press and Sporting News, and was the Sports Illustrated "Sportsman of the Year." Trevino was the first to win the U.S. and British Opens in the same year in 18 years, last accomplished by Ben Hogan in 1953. The others were Gene Sarazen in 1932 and amateur Bobby Jones in 1926 and 1930, his grand slam year. Subsequent winners of both were Tom Watson in 1982 and Woods in 2000.
For Jim Simons, a Pennsylvania native entering his senior year at Wake Forest, his fifth-place finish remains the most recent top ten by an amateur at the U.S. Open. It is the best since Nicklaus' tie for fourth in 1961, following his runner-up finish the year before at age 20 in 1960. The last victory by an amateur at any major was at the U.S. Open in 1933, won by Johnny Goodman of Omaha. Bobby Jones won four U.S. Opens as an amateur, the last in 1930 was part of his grand slam.
This was the third U.S. Open played at Merion, which previously hosted in 1934 and 1950. A fourth was played in 1981, and a fifth in 2013.

Course layout

East Course
Hole123456789Out101112131415161718InTotal
Yards3555351836004264203503601953,4243123704051294143784302244583,1206,544
Par453544443364443444343470

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Lengths of the course for previous U.S. Opens:

Made the cut

Missed the cut

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Round summaries

First round

Thursday, June 17, 1971
PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
1Labron Harris67−3
T2Bob Goalby68−2
T2Doug Sanders68−2
T2Lanny Wadkins 68−2
T5Jim Colbert69−1
T5Jack Nicklaus69−1
T5Bobby Nichols69−1
T8Gay Brewer70E
T8Charles Coody70E
T8Dale Douglass70E
T8Ralph Johnston70E
T8Johnny Miller70E
T8Chi-Chi Rodríguez70E
T8John Schlee70E
T8Leonard Thompson70E
T8Lee Trevino70E
T8Tom Weiskopf70E

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Second round

Friday, June 18, 1971
PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
T1Jim Colbert69-69=138−2
T1Bob Erickson71-67=138−2
3Jerry McGee72-67=139−1
4Gay Brewer70-70=140E
T5Arnold Palmer73-68=141+1
T5Bruce Devlin72-69=141+1
T5George Archer71-70=141+1
T5Chi-Chi Rodríguez70-71=141+1
T5Bobby Nichols69-72=141+1
T5Jack Nicklaus69-72=141+1

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Third round

Saturday, June 19, 1971
Four strokes back after 36 holes, amateur Simons shot a five-under 65 in the third round, one off the U.S. Open record, to take the 54-hole lead. He got out to a fast start on Saturday, and was five-under for the round after ten holes. Simons played even-par on the last eight and ended with seven birdies and two bogeys to lead Nicklaus by two strokes.
PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
1Jim Simons 71-71-65=207−3
2Jack Nicklaus69-72-68=209−1
3Bobby Nichols69-72-69=210E
T4Lee Trevino70-72-69=211+1
T4George Archer71-70-70=211+1
T4Jim Colbert69-69-73=211+1
T4Bob Erickson71-67-73=211+1
T8Ken Still71-72-69=212+2
T8Larry Hinson71-71-70=212+2
T8Bruce Devlin72-69-71=212+2

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Scorecard

Third round
Hole 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 101112131415161718
Par453544443444344434
Simons+2+1+1+1+1EE−1−2−3−3−2−3−3−3−4−3−3
NicklausEEEEE−1−1−1−1−1−1−1−1−1−1−1−1−1

Cumulative tournament scores, relative to par
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Final round

Sunday, June 20, 1971
In the final pairing with Nicklaus, 21-year-old Simons retained the lead through the first nine holes of the final round, and was one shot back on the 18th tee. Needing a birdie to tie, his tee shot found the thick rough; a double bogey six yielded a 76 and he finished three strokes back in a tie for fifth place. Trevino took the lead with a birdie at 14, but then missed an 8-footer for par at the last. He backed off before the putt after a disturbance in the gallery. Nicklaus' birdie putt for the win on the 72nd green also narrowly missed, and settled for par to force a Monday afternoon playoff. Bob Rosburg also had a chance to join the playoff with a birdie at the last, but he three-putted for bogey and finished two shots back.
PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo parMoney
T1Lee Trevino70-72-69-69=280EPlayoff
T1Jack Nicklaus69-72-68-71=280EPlayoff
T3Jim Colbert69-69-73-71=282+29,000
T3Bob Rosburg71-72-70-69=282+29,000
T5George Archer71-70-70-72=283+36,500
T5Johnny Miller70-73-70-70=283+36,500
T5Jim Simons 71-71-65-76=283+30
8Raymond Floyd71-75-67-71=284+45,000
T9Gay Brewer70-70-73-72=285+53,325
T9Larry Hinson71-71-70-73=285+53,325
T9Bobby Nichols69-72-69-75=285+53,325
T9Bert Yancey75-69-69-72=285+53,325

Scorecard

Final round
Hole 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 101112131415161718
Par453544443444344434
Trevino+1EEEEEE+1+1+1+1EE−1−1−1−1E
Nicklaus−1−1−1−2EEEEEEEEEEEEEE
Simons−3−2−2−2−1−1−1−1−1EEEE+1+1+1+1+3

Cumulative tournament scores, relative to par
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Playoff

Monday, June 21, 1971
Prior to the playoff, the first at the U.S. Open since 1966, Trevino and Nicklaus, both 31, were involved in a famous incident on the first tee involving a toy rubber snake. Trevino had acquired it at a zoo gift shop and used it earlier in the week along with a pith helmet and hatchet during a whimsical photo shoot emphasizing Merion's thick and penal rough. Hot and humid in the early afternoon, Trevino reached into his golf bag for a fresh glove and came across the snake and took it out to entertain the crowd. Nicklaus then asked him to toss it over, which Trevino did. Nicklaus picked it up, laughed with the crowd, then threw it back to Trevino. It would later be written that Trevino had tossed the snake at Nicklaus in an attempt to unnerve his rival; in reality, Nicklaus was the one who asked him to throw the snake.
When the playoff began, Trevino bogeyed the first hole and Nicklaus took the lead, but then hit two poor bunker shots on the next two, allowing Trevino to open a two-stroke lead. Although Nicklaus cut into the lead several times, to within one stroke as late as the 12th tee, Trevino never relinquished it. He carded a 68 to Nicklaus' 71 to win by three. Nicklaus won his third U.S. Open the following year in 1972 at Pebble Beach, and a record-tying fourth at Baltusrol at age 40 in 1980.
Television coverage by ABC Sports for the Monday playoff was scheduled for just an hour, beginning at 4:30 p.m. EDT. A 35-minute weather delay after the sixth hole allowed for lengthened coverage.
PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo parMoney
1Lee Trevino68−230,000
2Jack Nicklaus71+115,000

Scorecard

Playoff
Hole 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 101112131415161718
Par453544443444344434
Trevino+1+1+1+1+1+1+1EEEE−1−1−1−2−2−2−2
NicklausE+1+3+3+2+2+2+2+1+2+1+1+1+1EE+1+1

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