1947 Walker Cup

The 1947 Walker Cup, the 11th Walker Cup Match, was played on 16 and 17 May 1947, on the Old Course at St Andrews, Scotland. The United States won by 8 matches to 4.[1][2]

11th Walker Cup Match
Dates16–17 May 1947
VenueOld Course at St Andrews
LocationSt Andrews, Scotland
Captains

4 8
United States wins the Walker Cup

The match should have been played in the United States; the previous match, in 1938, having been played at St. Andrews. However, the R&A decided that it would have been impossible to send a team to the United States. Rather than postpone the match, the USGA agreed that the match would take place in Britain.[3]

Format

Four 36-hole matches of foursomes were played on Friday and eight singles matches on Saturday. Each of the 12 matches was worth one point in the larger team competition. If a match was all square after the 36th hole extra holes were not played. The team with most points won the competition. If the two teams were tied, the previous winner would retain the trophy.

Teams

Nine players for the United States and Great Britain & Ireland participated in the event plus one non-playing captain for each team. The U.S. team was announced in January and included Cary Middlecoff.[4] Middlecoff immediately withdrew from the team, as he intended turning professional, and was replaced by the first reserve George Hamer.[5] The British team was announced less than a week before the match after a series of trial matches.[6] The United States used the same eight players on both day, Hamer being left out. For Great Britain and Ireland, Micklem was left out of the foursomes while Kyle was left out of the singles.[7][8][9]

Great Britain & Ireland

&
Captain: John Beck

United States


Captain: Francis Ouimet

Friday's foursomes

& Results
Carr/Ewing 3 & 2 Bishop/Riegel
Crawley/Lucas 5 & 4 Ward/Quick
Kyle/Wilson 5 & 4 Turnesa/Kammer
White/Stowe 4 & 3 Stranahan/Chapman
2 Foursomes 2
2 Overall 2

Saturday's singles

& Results
Leonard Crawley 5 & 3 Bud Ward
Joe Carr 5 & 3 Ted Bishop
Gerald Micklem 6 & 5 Skee Riegel
Cecil Ewing 6 & 5 Willie Turnesa
Charlie Stowe 2 & 1 Frank Stranahan
Ronnie White 4 & 3 Fred Kammer
James Wilson 8 & 6 Smiley Quick
Laddie Lucas 4 & 3 Dick Chapman
2 Singles 6
4 Overall 8
gollark: You just don't understand my genius.
gollark: It is a proof, it says so. This is irrelevant to the main question - what do we do about Tux1's alteriosity?
gollark: Or is it altitude?
gollark: Anyway, this should demonstrate Tux1's alternatecy excellently.
gollark: ```coqTheorem gollarks_alts : forall (alt : Tux1), owner alt = gollark.Proof. intro. simpl. reflexivity. Qed.```

References

  1. "All Square in Walker Cup". Glasgow Herald. 17 May 1947. p. 5.
  2. "American Fighting Quality Key to Success". Glasgow Herald. 19 May 1947. p. 2.
  3. "Walker Cup match to be played at St Andrews". Glasgow Herald. 11 October 1946. p. 2.
  4. "Twelve Names in U.S. Walker Cup Selection". Glasgow Herald. 13 January 1947. p. 2.
  5. "U.S. Walker Cup Team Change". Glasgow Herald. 20 January 1947. p. 2.
  6. "Selectors Rely on Experience". Glasgow Herald. 12 May 1947. p. 6.
  7. "Irish Pair lead Britain in Foursomes". Glasgow Herald. 15 May 1947. p. 6.
  8. "British Golfers Supremely Confident". Glasgow Herald. 16 May 1947. p. 6.
  9. "1947 – St. Andrews". walkercup.co.uk. Retrieved 8 December 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.