The 2007 U.S. Open
Championship
The United States Open Championship is the annual men's open
golf tournament of the United States of America and it is staged
by the United States Golf Association each June.
The U.S. Open is one of the four major championships in men's golf
and is on the official schedule of both the PGA TOUR and the European
Tour. The U.S. Open is staged at a variety of courses, and they
are usually set up in such a way that low scoring is very difficult
and there is a premium on accurate driving.
Normally, an Open course is longer than normal and will have a
high cut of rough (termed "Open rough" by the American
press and fans), hilly greens and pinched fairways. Some courses
that are attempting to get on the rotation for the Open will normally
be rebuilt to have these features, with Rees Jones being the most
notable of the "Open Doctors" who take on these projects.
The first U.S. Open Men's Championship was played on October
4, 1895, on a nine-hole course in Newport, Rhode Island. It
was a thirty-six hole competition and was played in a single day.
Ten professionals and one amateur entered. The winner was a 21-year-old
Englishman named Horace Rawlins, who had arrived in the U.S. in
January that year to take up a position at the host club.
In the beginning, the U.S. Open Championship was dominated by experienced
British players until 1911, when John J. McDermott became the first
native-born American winner. American golfers soon began to win
regularly and the tournament evolved to become one of the four majors.
The U.S. Open is open to any professional, or to any amateur with
an up-to-date USGA Handicap Index not exceeding 1.4. Players may
obtain a place by being fully exempt or by competing successfully
in Qualifying. The field is 156 players.
Players who are not fully exempt must enter the Qualifying process,
which has two stages, Local Qualifying and Sectional Qualifying.
There is no age limit and the youngest ever qualifier was 15-year-old
Tadd Fujikawa of Hawaii, who qualified in 2006.
U.S. Open champions are automatically invited to play in the other
three majors (The Masters, The Open Championship and the PGA Championship)
for the next five years, and are exempt from qualifying for the
U.S. Open itself for ten years. They also receive membership on
the PGA TOUR for the following five seasons and invitations to The
Players Championship for five years.
The top fifteen finishers at the U.S. Open are fully exempt from
qualifying for the following year's Open, and the top eight are
automatically invited to the following season's Masters.
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