 |
|
IBM introduces fast electronic calculator
Smoking is said to cause cancer risk
Einstein deplores use of atom bomb
|
|
|
1946
The intervention
of World War II did not cool Jimmy Clark. When the Championship was resumed
at the 6,590-yard Welshire Golf Course, Denver, he bettered by a stroke
his own qualifying record with 64-70-134, eight under par and again a 36-hole
record for a USGA stroke competition.
His play also contributed materially to Long Beach's victory in the
team Championship with a record total of 431 for three men playing 18
holes; to Clark's 134 were added Marshall Holt's 143 and Oscar W. Holberg's
154.
Holt eliminated Clark in the first round, Welch went down in the second
round and the eventual winner was Smiley L. Quick, 37, of Los Angeles,
who defeated Louis Stafford, of Portland, Ore., 3 and 2 in the final.
It marked the first time since 1928 that all honors had been won by players
from the same metropolitan area.
Quick, who had tied for 26th place in the Open, was invited to play
the Amateur Championship of the same year and went all the way to the
37th green of the final before bowing to Ted Bishop. It was the closest
approach to a double in the Amateur Public Links and Amateur Championships
and the best performance in three Championships on record.
The entry of this Championship was 3,586, the largest ever received
for any USGA competition. The record stood until 1969. Of these 1,280
were from the Denver section, and preliminary rounds were required there.
A driving contest was held prior to the Championship proper; Leo Roy Gann,
of Tulsa, hit one ball 316 yards, and Einar Hanson, of San Francisco,
averaged 286 yards with three balls.
|