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United States Golf Association Totally Explained
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Everything about Usga totally explainedThe United States Golf Association (USGA) is the United States' national association of golf courses, clubs and facilities and the governing body of golf for the U.S. and Mexico. Together with The R&A, the USGA produces and interprets the Rules of Golf. The USGA also provides a national handicap system for golfers, conducts 13 national championships, including the U.S. Open, U.S. Women's Open and U.S. Senior Open, and tests golf equipment for conformity with regulations. In addition, the USGA is a leader in turfgrass research through its Green Section and it provides hundreds of grants to grass-roots programs through its Foundation in Colorado Springs, Colo. The USGA Foundation has provided more than $59 million in grants to programs for underprivileged youth and individuals with disabilities. It is the largest contributor to The First Tee program. The USGA is currently led by Executive Director David B. Fay, and President Jim Vernon, and is headquartered at Golf House in Far Hills, New Jersey.
The Bob Jones Award is the highest honor given by the United States Golf Association in recognition of distinguished sportsmanship in golf. The inaugural award was given in 1955.
History
The USGA was originally formed in 1894 to resolve the question of a national amateur championship. Earlier that year, the Newport Country Club and Saint Andrew's Golf Club both declared the winners of their tournaments the "national amateur champion". That fall delegates from Newport, Saint Andrew's, The Country Club, Chicago Golf Club, and Shinnecock Hills Golf Club met in New York City to form a national governing body, which would administer the championship and also the Rules of Golf for the country. On December 22, 1894, the Amateur Golf Association of the United States was officially formed, and was shortly thereafter renamed the United States Golf Association. Theodore Havemeyer was the first president, and the U.S. Amateur trophy is named in his honor.
The first U.S. Amateur Championship was held in 1895 at the Newport Country Club, with Charles B. Macdonald (who was runner-up at both of the previous year's tournaments) winning the championship. The first U.S. Open was held the following day, almost as an afterthought. It wasn't until 1898 that the two events were held at separate clubs. Today, the USGA administers 13 separate national championships.
The USGA gradually expanded its membership from the original five clubs. There were 267 club members in 1910, and 1,138 clubs by 1932. Membership fell off during the Great Depression and World War II, but recovered by 1947. By 1980 there were over 5,000 clubs, and today membership exceeds 9,700. (External Link )
Competitions organized by the USGA
The USGA organizes or co-organizes the following competitions:
Open championships
An "open" golf championship is one which both professionals and amateurs may enter. In practice, such events are always won by professionals nowadays. The two leading opens in the U.S. are:
The USGA also conducts the U.S. Senior Open for competitors 50 and over. This is one of the five majors recognized by the world's dominant tour for male golfers 50 and over, the Champions Tour. The overwhelming majority of the competitors play regularly on the Champions Tour. Many of the remaining players compete on the Champions Tour's European counterpart, the European Seniors Tour, which recognizes the U.S. Senior Open as one of its three majors. Although a women's senior tour (with a lower age limit of 45 instead of 50), now known as the Legends Tour, has existed since 2001, the USGA hasn't yet created a Senior Women's Open.
U.S. Senior Open - players 50 or older, established 1980.
Individual amateur championships
Professional golf in the U.S. is mainly run by the PGA of America, the PGA Tour and the LPGA. However, the USGA is at the heart of amateur golf in the country and it organizes the 10 national amateur championships. The leading events are open to all age groups, but are usually won by golfers in their early twenties who are working towards a career in professional tournament golf:
U.S. Amateur - anyone may enter provided they meet the Handicap Index requirement (2.4 or less), established 1895.
U.S. Women's Amateur - girls may enter too, established 1895.
There are two championships for players under 18:
U.S. Junior Amateur - established 1948
U.S. Girls' Junior - established 1949
And two for senior golfers:
USGA Senior Amateur - players 55 or older, established 1955
USGA Senior Women's Amateur - women 50 or older, established 1962
Because the two non-age restricted amateur championships are dominated by future professionals, two national championships have been established for "career amateurs" at least 25 years old:
U.S. Mid-Amateur - anyone can enter provided they meet handicap requirement of 3.4 or less, established 1981
U.S. Women's Mid-Amateur - established 1987
There are also two events for "public-course" golfers. Members of private golf clubs are excluded from these championships:
U.S. Amateur Public Links – popularly known as the "Publinx"; established 1922
U.S. Women's Amateur Public Links – popularly known as the "Women's Publinx"; established 1977
State team championships
The USGA's two amateur state team championships are played biennially in odd numbered years. They were both established in 1995. College golfers are not eligible for the three-player teams.
USGA Men's State Team Championships
USGA Women's State Team Championships
International team competitions
The USGA co-organizes two biennial amateur team competitions between the United States and a joint team representing Great Britain and Ireland (in political terms, the United Kingdom and Republic of Ireland):
Walker Cup - 10-man male teams, played in odd-numbered years. The R&A is the co-organizer.
Curtis Cup - 8-woman teams, played in even-numbered years. The Ladies' Golf Union is the co-organizer.
Through its membership of the International Golf Federation the USGA is involved in the administration of the two "World Amateur Team Championships", which are played biennially in even-numbered years.
Eisenhower Trophy - for men
Espirito Santo Trophy - for women
Multiple event winners
Only six golfers have won more than one USGA individual event in the same year:
Chick Evans won the U.S. Open and U.S. Amateur in 1916.
Bobby Jones won the U.S. Open and U.S. Amateur as half of his historic Grand Slam in 1930.
Jay Sigel won the U.S. Amateur and U.S. Mid-Amateur in 1983.
Pearl Sinn won the Women's Amateur Public Links and Women's Amateur in 1988.
Ryan Moore won the U.S. Amateur Public Links and U.S. Amateur in 2004.
Colt Knost won the U.S. Amateur Public Links and U.S. Amateur in 2007.
Five people have won three different USGA individual events in their careers:
JoAnne Carner (née Gunderson) – Girls' Jr - 1956; Women's Am - 1957, 1960, 1962, 1966, 1968; Women's Open - 1971, 1976
Arnold Palmer – Amat - 1954; Open - 1960; Sr Open - 1981
Jack Nicklaus – Amat - 1959, 1961; Open - 1962, 1967, 1972, 1980; Sr Open - 1991, 1993
Carol Semple Thompson – Women's Am - 1973; Women's Mid-Am - 1990, 1997; Sr Women's Am - 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002
Tiger Woods – Jr Amat - 1991, 1992, 1993; Amat - 1994, 1995, 1996; Open - 2000, 2002
Forty-one other people have won two different USGA individual events in their careers:
Francis Ouimet – Open - 1913; Amat - 1914, 1931
Jerome Travers – Amat - 1907, 1908, 1912, 1913; Open - 1915
Chick Evans – Amat - 1916, 1920; Open - 1916
Bobby Jones – Open - 1923, 1926, 1929, 1930; Amat - 1924, 1925, 1927, 1928, 1930
Johnny Goodman – Open - 1933; Amat - 1937
Lawson Little – Amat - 1934, 1935; Open - 1940
Patty Berg – Women's Am - 1938; Women's Open - 1946
Betty Jameson – Women's Am - 1939, 1940; Women's Open - 1947
Babe Zaharias – Women's Am - 1946; Women's Open - 1948, 1950, 1954
Louise Suggs – Women's Am - 1947; Women's Open - 1949, 1952
Mickey Wright – Girls' Jr - 1952; Women's Open - 1958, 1959, 1961, 1964
Gene Littler – Amat - 1953; Open - 1961
Catherine Lacoste – Women's Open - 1967; Women's Am - 1969
Gene Andrews – Publinx - 1954; Sr Amat - 1970
Johnny Miller – Jr Amat - 1964; Open - 1973
Jerry Pate – Amat - 1974; Open - 1976
Dorothy Germain Porter – Women's Am - 1949; Sr Women's Am - 1977, 1980, 1981, 1983
Hollis Stacy – Girls' Jr - 1969, 1970, 1971; Women's Open - 1977, 1978, 1984
William C. Campbell – Amat - 1964; Sr Amat - 1979, 1980
Lori Castillo – Girls' Jr - 1978; Women's Publinx - 1979, 1980
Amy Alcott – Girls' Jr - 1973; Women's Open - 1980
Billy Casper – Open - 1959, 1966; Sr Open - 1983
Jay Sigel – Amat - 1982, 1983; Mid-Am - 1983, 1985, 1987
Heather Farr – Girls' Jr - 1982; Women's Publinx - 1984
Marlene Streit (née Stewart) – Women's Am - 1956; Sr Women's Am - 1985, 1994, 2003
Billy Mayfair – Publinx - 1986; Amat - 1987
Gary Player – Open - 1965; Sr Open - 1987, 1988
Anne Quast (aka Decker, Wells, Sander) – Women's Am - 1958, 1961, 1963; Sr Women's Am - 1987, 1989, 1990, 1993
Pearl Sinn – Women's Publinx - 1988, 1989; Women's Am - 1988
Orville Moody – Open - 1969; Sr Open - 1989
Pat Hurst – Girls' Jr - 1986; Women's Am - 1990
Lee Trevino – Open - 1968, 1971; Sr Open - 1990
Amy Fruhwirth – Women's Am - 1991; Women's Publinx - 1992
Jill McGill – Women's Am - 1993; Women's Publinx - 1994
Kelli Kuehne – Girls' Jr - 1994; Women's Am - 1995, 1996
Dorothy Delasin – - Girls' Jr - 1996; Women's Am - 1998
Hale Irwin – Open - 1974, 1979, 1990; Sr Open - 1998, 2000
Juli Inkster – Women's Am - 1980, 1981, 1982; Women's Open - 1999, 2002
Bruce Fleisher – Amat - 1968; Sr Open - 2001
Ryan Moore – Publinx - 2002, 2004; Amat - 2004
Colt Knost – Publinx - 2007; Amat - 2007
Note: Multiple winners of individual events can be found in that events article.
Further Information
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