BMW Championship (PGA Tour)

BMW Championship
Tournament information
Location Newtown Square, Pennsylvania (2018)
Established 2007
Course(s) Aronimink Golf Club
Par 70
Length 7,237 yards (6,618 m) in 2018
Tour(s) PGA Tour
Format Stroke play
Prize fund $9 million
Month played September
Tournament record score
Aggregate 261 Marc Leishman (2017)
To par −23 Dustin Johnson (2016)
−23 Marc Leishman (2017)
Current champion
United States Keegan Bradley
Aronimink GC
Location in the United States in 2018

The BMW Championship is a professional golf tournament which is the third of four FedEx Cup playoff events on the PGA Tour schedule. Introduced in 2007, the BMW Championship was previously known as the Western Open. The Western Golf Association, which founded and ran the Western Open, runs the BMW Championship. In 2012, 2013 and 2014, the PGA Tour named the BMW Championship its Tournament of the Year.[1]

Tournament format

The BMW Championship is open to the top 70 PGA Tour golfers following the Dell Technologies Championship (formerly the Deutsche Bank Championship). Only 70 players qualify for the event, therefore there is no cut after two days. FedEx Cup points amassed during the regular PGA Tour season and then during the two preceding playoff events determine the participants. The top 30 FedEx Cup points leaders following the BMW Championship advance to The Tour Championship, where the FedEx Cup Champion will be determined.[2]

The BMW Championship was primarily held at Cog Hill Golf & Country Club in Lemont, Illinois, southwest of Chicago. In 2008, it was held in Missouri at Bellerive Country Club in Town and Country, a suburb west of St. Louis. In 2012, the Ryder Cup was contested at nearby Medinah Country Club, and the championship was moved to Indiana at Crooked Stick Golf Club in Carmel, north of Indianapolis. It was contested in Colorado in 2014 at Cherry Hills Country Club in Cherry Hills Village, a suburb south of Denver.[3]

The 2015 BMW Championship was played at the Conway Farms Golf Club in Lake Forest, Illinois; Jason Day scored a personal record of 61 (−10) during the first round[4] and won the event with a score of −22. The 2016 edition returned to Crooked Stick near Indianapolis, where Dustin Johnson won with a score of −23.[5] Aussie Marc Leishman cruised to victory at the 2017 BMW Championship at Conway Farms Golf Club in Lake Forest, Illinois.

Western Open

For a detailed history of this event, including a list of its champions, see Western Open.

The Western Open was first played 119 years ago in 1899. For many years, the Western was played in and out of the state of Illinois, before eventually settling down in the Chicago area. The Western Golf Association (WGA) ran the Western Open throughout its entire history (1899–2006), and continues to run the tournament under its new title. These are, however, two entirely different events in terms of playing format and invitational criteria. The Western Open was like any other regular PGA Tour stop – although it was once considered to be one of golf's majors. Its invitational criteria mirrored the PGA Tour Exemption Categories with one exception - the winner of the Western Amateur, another WGA-sponsored event, was invited to play in the Western Open. The BMW Championship is part of the FedEx Cup Playoffs, and only the top 70 FedEx Cup points leaders at the start of the BMW event will be eligible to play.

Winners

YearPlayerCountryScoreTo parMargin
of victory
Runner(s)-upCourseLocationPurse ($)Winner's
share ($)
2018Keegan Bradley United States260−20PlayoffEngland Justin RoseAronimink Golf ClubNewtown Square, Pennsylvania9,000,0001,620,000
2017Marc Leishman Australia261−235 strokesUnited States Rickie Fowler
England Justin Rose
Conway Farms Golf ClubLake Forest, Illinois8,750,0001,575,000
2016Dustin Johnson (2) United States265−233 strokesEngland Paul CaseyCrooked Stick Golf ClubCarmel, Indiana8,500,0001,530,000
2015Jason Day Australia262−226 strokesUnited States Daniel BergerConway Farms Golf ClubLake Forest, Illinois8,250,0001,485,000
2014Billy Horschel United States266−142 strokesUnited States Bubba WatsonCherry Hills Country ClubCherry Hills Village, Colorado8,000,0001,440,000
2013Zach Johnson United States268−162 strokesUnited States Nick WatneyConway Farms Golf ClubLake Forest, Illinois8,000,0001,440,000
2012Rory McIlroy Northern Ireland268−202 strokesUnited States Phil Mickelson
England Lee Westwood
Crooked Stick Golf ClubCarmel, Indiana8,000,0001,440,000
2011Justin Rose England271−132 strokesAustralia John SendenCog Hill Golf & Country ClubLemont, Illinois8,000,0001,440,000
2010Dustin Johnson United States275−91 strokeEngland Paul CaseyCog Hill Golf & Country ClubLemont, Illinois7,500,0001,350,000
2009Tiger Woods (2) United States265−198 strokesUnited States Jim Furyk
Australia Marc Leishman
Cog Hill Golf & Country ClubLemont, Illinois7,500,0001,350,000
2008Camilo Villegas Colombia265−152 strokesUnited States Dudley HartBellerive Country ClubTown and Country, Missouri7,000,0001,260,000
2007Tiger Woods United States262−222 strokesAustralia Aaron BaddeleyCog Hill Golf & Country ClubLemont, Illinois7,000,0001,260,000

Future sites

Year Course Location
2019Medinah Country ClubMedinah, Illinois

References

  1. "2013 BMW Championship Earns PGA Tour's Tournament of the Year Honor" (Press release). BMW Group. October 12, 2013.
  2. "FedEx Cup 101". PGA Tour. Retrieved September 7, 2014.
  3. "Cherry Hills to host 2014 BMW Championship". PGA Tour. April 12, 2011.
  4. Martin, Sean (September 18, 2015). "Day's 59 bid comes up short, leads by four". PGA Tour.
  5. "Dustin Johnson wins BMW Championship with talent that's 'jaw-dropping to watch'". Golf Digest. September 11, 2016.

Coordinates: 40°00′42″N 75°24′32″W / 40.0116°N 75.4090°W / 40.0116; -75.4090

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