1922 U.S. Open (golf)
http://dbpedia.org/resource/1922_U.S._Open_(golf) an entity of type: Thing
The 1922 U.S. Open was the 26th U.S. Open, held July 14–15 at Skokie Country Club in Glencoe, Illinois, a suburb north of Chicago. Gene Sarazen won the first of his seven major championships, one stroke ahead of runners-up John Black and 20-year-old amateur Bobby Jones. Walter Hagen, the winner of the British Open three weeks earlier, opened with 68 to take a three-shot lead over Black on Friday morning. In the second round that afternoon, Black shot a 71 to take a two-stroke lead over Bill Mehlhorn, with Hagen and Sarazen another stroke back.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
1922 U.S. Open (golf)
rdf:langString
1922 U.S. Open
xsd:integer
1922
xsd:float
42.12799835205078
xsd:float
-87.76200103759766
xsd:integer
18007045
xsd:integer
1080105317
xsd:double
42.128
xsd:double
-87.762
rdf:langString
Location in the United States
rdf:langString
Location in Illinois
rdf:langString
Gene Sarazen
xsd:gMonthDay
--07-14
xsd:integer
78
rdf:langString
Stroke play − 72 holes
rdf:langString
(Skokie CC )
rdf:langString
(Skokie CC)
xsd:integer
1923
rdf:langString
left
xsd:integer
1921
<usDollar>
1725.0
xsd:integer
1
xsd:integer
288
xsd:integer
120
230
xsd:string
42.128 -87.762
rdf:langString
none
xsd:integer
5
<usDollar>
500.0
xsd:integer
70
rdf:langString
The 1922 U.S. Open was the 26th U.S. Open, held July 14–15 at Skokie Country Club in Glencoe, Illinois, a suburb north of Chicago. Gene Sarazen won the first of his seven major championships, one stroke ahead of runners-up John Black and 20-year-old amateur Bobby Jones. Walter Hagen, the winner of the British Open three weeks earlier, opened with 68 to take a three-shot lead over Black on Friday morning. In the second round that afternoon, Black shot a 71 to take a two-stroke lead over Bill Mehlhorn, with Hagen and Sarazen another stroke back. Jones had an even-par 70 in the third round to take a share of the 54-hole lead with Mehlhorn, while Black's 75 left him one behind. The leaders could not contend with Sarazen's brilliant play in the final round, recording a two-putt birdie on the finishing hole for a 68 and 288 total. Black needed to par the final two holes to force a playoff, but his tee shot on 17 went out of bounds and led to a double bogey. Needing an eagle on the par-5 18th to tie, Black's second shot landed ten feet (3 m) from the pin, but in a greenside bunker. When he failed to hole out from the sand, Sarazen clinched the title. Sarazen, age 20, became the fourth American-born champion of the U.S. Open, joining John McDermott, Francis Ouimet, and Hagen. He won a second U.S. Open ten years later in 1932.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
13197
<Geometry>
POINT(-87.762001037598 42.127998352051)