B.C. Open

B.C. Open
Tournament information
Location Endicott, New York, U.S.
Verona, New York (2006)
Established 1971, 1973 (PGA Tour)
Course(s) En-Joie Golf Club
Turning Stone (2006)
Tour(s) PGA Tour
Format Stroke play 72 holes
Prize fund $3 million
Month played July
Final year 2006
Final champion
United States John Rollins
En-Joie GC
Location in the United States
En-Joie GC
Location in New York

The B.C. Open was a PGA Tour golf tournament in New York, held annually from 1971 to 2006. In 1971, it was called the Broome County Open, and the next year it switched to the B.C. Open. In 1973, it became a PGA Tour regular 72-hole money event. It took place simultaneously with The Open Championship from 2000 to 2006, so the leading players were not available and it was one of the smaller events on the PGA Tour schedule. The purse for the final edition in 2006 was $3 million.

The tournament was played at the En-Joie Golf Course in Endicott in Upstate New York for every event through 2005. In 2006, severe flooding of the adjacent Susquehanna River forced the event to move to the Atunyote Golf Club at the Turning Stone Resort & Casino in Verona. The event was operated by Broome County Community Charities, Inc. Since its inception, the B.C. Open has turned back to local charities in excess of $7.4 million through 2003.

It was named after the comic strip B.C., created by Johnny Hart, who was born and raised in Endicott. Johnny Hart's B.C. characters were used in advertising the event.

The B.C. Open was held for the last time on the PGA Tour in 2006 due to a schedule revamp based on the introduction of the FedEx Cup.[1] The success of the Turning Stone event in 2006 led to that venue hosting a "Fall Series" event beginning in 2007, the Turning Stone Resort Championship.

The Broome County Community Charities has hosted a Champions Tour event at the En-Joie Golf Course beginning in 2007, the Dick's Sporting Goods Open.[2]

Winners

YearWinnerCountryScoreTo parMargin
of victory
Runner(s)-up
B.C. Open presented by Turning Stone Resort
2006John Rollins United States269−191 strokeUnited States Bob May
B.C. Open
2005Jason Bohn United States264−241 strokeUnited States J. P. Hayes
Australia Brendan Jones
United States Ryan Palmer
United States John Rollins
2004Jonathan Byrd United States268−201 strokeUnited States Ted Purdy
2003Craig Stadler United States267−211 strokeGermany Alex Čejka
United States Steve Lowery
2002Spike McRoy United States269−191 strokeUnited States Fred Funk
2001Jeff Sluman United States266−22PlayoffAustralia Paul Gow
2000Brad Faxon (2) United States270−181 strokeMexico Esteban Toledo
1999Brad Faxon United States273−15PlayoffUnited States Fred Funk
1998Chris Perry United States273−153 strokesUnited States Peter Jacobsen
1997Gabriel Hjertstedt Sweden275−131 strokeUnited States Andrew Magee
United States Chris Perry
United States Lee Rinker
1996Fred Funk United States197−16PlayoffUnited States Pete Jordan
1995Hal Sutton United States269−151 strokeUnited States Jim McGovern
1994Mike Sullivan United States266−184 strokesUnited States Jeff Sluman
1993Blaine McCallister United States271−131 strokeZimbabwe Denis Watson
1992John Daly United States266−186 strokesUnited States Joel Edwards
United States Ken Green
United States Jay Haas
United States Nolan Henke
1991Fred Couples United States269−153 strokesUnited States Peter Jacobsen
1990Nolan Henke United States268−163 strokesUnited States Mark Wiebe
1989Mike Hulbert United States268−16PlayoffUnited States Bob Estes
1988Bill Glasson United States268−162 strokesUnited States Wayne Levi
United States Bruce Lietzke
1987Joey Sindelar (2) United States266−184 strokesUnited States Jeff Sluman
1986Rick Fehr United States267−172 strokesUnited States Larry Mize
1985Joey Sindelar United States274−101 strokeUnited States Mike Reid
1984Wayne Levi United States275−91 strokeUnited States Russ Cochran
United States Hal Sutton
1983Pat Lindsey United States268−164 strokesUnited States Gil Morgan
1982Calvin Peete United States265−197 strokesUnited States Jerry Pate
1981Jay Haas United States270−143 strokesUnited States Tom Kite
1980Don Pooley United States271−131 strokeUnited States Peter Jacobsen
1979Howard Twitty United States270−141 strokeUnited States Tom Purtzer
1978Tom Kite United States267−175 strokesUnited States Mark Hayes
1977Gil Morgan United States270−145 strokesUnited States Lee Elder
1976Bob Wynn United States271−131 strokeUnited States Bob Gilder
1975Don Iverson United States274−101 strokeUnited States Jim Colbert
Australia David Graham
1974Richie Karl United States273−11PlayoffAustralia Bruce Crampton
1973Hubert Green United States266−186 strokesUnited States Dwight Nevil
Prior to becoming a PGA Tour event

B.C. Open

  • 1972 Bob Payne (two round satellite tournament)

Broome County Open

Tournament highlights

References

Coordinates: 42°05′28″N 76°04′52″W / 42.091°N 76.081°W / 42.091; -76.081

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