6–9 April: The Masters - Winner:
Phil Mickelson The
Augusta National course was lengthened to 7,445 yards for the tournament, generating some advance
controversy. For the first time since 1954 neither
Jack Nicklaus nor
Arnold Palmer played.
Vijay Singh shot 67 to take the first-round lead, but on Day 2
Chad Campbell moved to six under and a three-shot lead. Due to bad weather the third round wasn't completed until Sunday. After 54 holes
Phil Mickelson led by one at 4 under and fifteen players were within four shots of the lead, including the top five in the world rankings (in ranking order
Tiger Woods, Vijay Singh,
Retief Goosen, Mickelson and
Ernie Els). On Sunday Mickelson led for much of the day and finished two ahead of South African
Tim Clark. It was Mickelson's third major championship, his second Masters title in three years and his second consecutive major victory as he also won the 2005 PGA Championship.
15–18 June: U.S. Open - Winner:
Geoff Ogilvy 15-year-old
Tadd Fujikawa of Hawaii became the youngest qualifier in US Open history.[1] Qualifier
Madalitso Muthiya was the first Zambian to play in the U.S. Open. The tournament was played at
Winged Foot for the first time since 1984. Scottish veteran
Colin Montgomerie was the only man to shoot under par in round 1. After 36 holes
Steve Stricker was one shot ahead of the field and the only man under par.
Tiger Woods missed the first cut in a major of his professional career after posting a 12 over par total.
Phil Mickelson shared the third-round lead with the 27-year-old Englishman
Kenneth Ferrie, who was playing in his first U.S. Open. Mickelson led by one shot after 71 holes, but was unable to put it away on number 72. His errant driving, which had troubled him all round, climaxed in a very poor tee shot that was almost out-of-bounds. This was followed by several bad shot selections, leading to a double bogey 6, and a second-place finish to winner
Geoff Ogilvy. First-round leader Colin Montgomerie finished T2 when he, needing only a par at hole number 72 to win, double bogeyed. This was Montgomerie's fifth second-place finish in a major championship and his third at the U.S. Open.
20–23 July: The Open Championship - Winner:
Tiger Woods The Open returned to
Hoylake for the first time since 1967.
Marius Thorp of Norway won the Silver Medal as leading amateur.
Northern Ireland's
Graeme McDowell took a one shot lead on the first day. On Day 2, Tiger Woods moved into the lead early in the day and remained at the top of the leaderboard at the close, one shot ahead of
Ernie Els. During the third round the top of the field bunched up, with several leading players moving into contention, but Woods regained a one stroke lead at the end of the day, over
Chris DiMarco,
Sergio García, and
Ernie Els. Woods shot a 67 in the final round to win by two shots over DiMarco at 270, 18-under par, only one shot short of his own to-par record for all majors. It was his third Open Championship, eleventh major, and he became the first man to pass $60 million in PGA Tour career earnings.
17–20 August: PGA Championship - Winner:
Tiger Woods The tournament was played at
Medinah Country Club near Chicago, which had been extended to 7,561 yards, making it the longest course in major championship history. The event was closely contested for three rounds, with a ten-way tie at one point early in round 3, but Tiger Woods pulled clear on the fourth day to win by five shots over
Shaun Micheel. It was Woods' third PGA Championship win and his twelfth major championship title. Woods also became the first player ever to win the PGA twice on the same course, and the first in the era of the modern Grand Slam to win two major championships in each of two successive years.
28 September - 1 October:
WGC-American Express Championship - Tiger Woods cruised to an 8 stroke victory to win his sixth straight strokeplay tournament and claim this championship for the fifth time in its seven stagings.
PGA Tour -
Tiger Woods topped the money list with winnings of $9,941,563, despite playing only 15 events due to the death of his father mid-year. This was his seventh money list victory, putting him one behind
Jack Nicklaus's record.
Final money list[permanent dead link]
22–24 September:
Ryder Cup - the Ryder Cup was played in Ireland for the first time. Europe were in the lead from the first set of matches. The Europeans went into the last day with a 10–6 lead and extended it to 18½ to 9½ in the singles, matching their best ever result in 2004. This was the first time Europe had won the matches three times in a row.
28 June: The PGA Tour announced further details of the
FedEx Cupplayoff system to be introduced in 2007, including confirmation that there will be a
US$35 million-dollar bonus prize fund, with
US$10 million going to the winner.[3]
30 March - 2 April:
Kraft Nabisco Championship: Australia's
Karrie Webb defeated 18, 36 and 54 hole leader
Lorena Ochoa in a playoff to claim her seventh major championship. Ochoa shot a 62 in the first round, setting a tournament record and equalling the record low score in an LPGA major.
29 June - 2 July:
U.S. Women Opened - The tournament was played at
Newport Country Club. The prize fund was
US$3.1 million, a record for a women's golf tournament, with $560,000 going to the winner. The first day's play was cancelled due to fog and 36 holes were played on the Sunday.
Annika Sörenstam and
Pat Hurst tied on level par after 72 holes. Sörenstam won an eighteen-hole Monday playoff to claim her tenth major championship and third U.S. Open.
3–6 August:
Weetabix Women's British Open - The tournament was played at
Royal Lytham & St. Annes for the third time in its history. American
Sherri Steinhauer took the lead after a third round 66 and held the lead in the final round for a three-stroke win over runners-up
Cristie Kerr and
Sophie Gustafson. It was Steinhauer's third British Open win, but her first since the tournament became a major in 2001.
4–7 May:
Michelle Wie made the cut at the
SK Telecom Open on the
Asian Tour. This was the highest ranking men's tour on which a woman has made a cut since
Babe Zaharias did so on the PGA Tour in 1945.
6–9 July:
U.S. Senior Open - Defending champion
Allen Doyle finished two shots ahead of
Tom Watson. It was Doyle's fourth senior major and he was the oldest U.S. Senior Open Champion at 57 years, 348 days.[6]
18–21 October:
Espirito Santo Trophy (Women's Amateur World Team Championship) -
South Africa won the tournament for the first time. They were the first home winners since 1980.[7]
26–29 October:
Eisenhower Trophy (Men's Amateur World Team Championship) - the
Netherlands won for the first time.
Table of results
This table summarises all the results referred to above in date order.
6–9 April: The Masters - Winner:
Phil Mickelson The
Augusta National course was lengthened to 7,445 yards for the tournament, generating some advance
controversy. For the first time since 1954 neither
Jack Nicklaus nor
Arnold Palmer played.
Vijay Singh shot 67 to take the first-round lead, but on Day 2
Chad Campbell moved to six under and a three-shot lead. Due to bad weather the third round wasn't completed until Sunday. After 54 holes
Phil Mickelson led by one at 4 under and fifteen players were within four shots of the lead, including the top five in the world rankings (in ranking order
Tiger Woods, Vijay Singh,
Retief Goosen, Mickelson and
Ernie Els). On Sunday Mickelson led for much of the day and finished two ahead of South African
Tim Clark. It was Mickelson's third major championship, his second Masters title in three years and his second consecutive major victory as he also won the 2005 PGA Championship.
15–18 June: U.S. Open - Winner:
Geoff Ogilvy 15-year-old
Tadd Fujikawa of Hawaii became the youngest qualifier in US Open history.[1] Qualifier
Madalitso Muthiya was the first Zambian to play in the U.S. Open. The tournament was played at
Winged Foot for the first time since 1984. Scottish veteran
Colin Montgomerie was the only man to shoot under par in round 1. After 36 holes
Steve Stricker was one shot ahead of the field and the only man under par.
Tiger Woods missed the first cut in a major of his professional career after posting a 12 over par total.
Phil Mickelson shared the third-round lead with the 27-year-old Englishman
Kenneth Ferrie, who was playing in his first U.S. Open. Mickelson led by one shot after 71 holes, but was unable to put it away on number 72. His errant driving, which had troubled him all round, climaxed in a very poor tee shot that was almost out-of-bounds. This was followed by several bad shot selections, leading to a double bogey 6, and a second-place finish to winner
Geoff Ogilvy. First-round leader Colin Montgomerie finished T2 when he, needing only a par at hole number 72 to win, double bogeyed. This was Montgomerie's fifth second-place finish in a major championship and his third at the U.S. Open.
20–23 July: The Open Championship - Winner:
Tiger Woods The Open returned to
Hoylake for the first time since 1967.
Marius Thorp of Norway won the Silver Medal as leading amateur.
Northern Ireland's
Graeme McDowell took a one shot lead on the first day. On Day 2, Tiger Woods moved into the lead early in the day and remained at the top of the leaderboard at the close, one shot ahead of
Ernie Els. During the third round the top of the field bunched up, with several leading players moving into contention, but Woods regained a one stroke lead at the end of the day, over
Chris DiMarco,
Sergio García, and
Ernie Els. Woods shot a 67 in the final round to win by two shots over DiMarco at 270, 18-under par, only one shot short of his own to-par record for all majors. It was his third Open Championship, eleventh major, and he became the first man to pass $60 million in PGA Tour career earnings.
17–20 August: PGA Championship - Winner:
Tiger Woods The tournament was played at
Medinah Country Club near Chicago, which had been extended to 7,561 yards, making it the longest course in major championship history. The event was closely contested for three rounds, with a ten-way tie at one point early in round 3, but Tiger Woods pulled clear on the fourth day to win by five shots over
Shaun Micheel. It was Woods' third PGA Championship win and his twelfth major championship title. Woods also became the first player ever to win the PGA twice on the same course, and the first in the era of the modern Grand Slam to win two major championships in each of two successive years.
28 September - 1 October:
WGC-American Express Championship - Tiger Woods cruised to an 8 stroke victory to win his sixth straight strokeplay tournament and claim this championship for the fifth time in its seven stagings.
PGA Tour -
Tiger Woods topped the money list with winnings of $9,941,563, despite playing only 15 events due to the death of his father mid-year. This was his seventh money list victory, putting him one behind
Jack Nicklaus's record.
Final money list[permanent dead link]
22–24 September:
Ryder Cup - the Ryder Cup was played in Ireland for the first time. Europe were in the lead from the first set of matches. The Europeans went into the last day with a 10–6 lead and extended it to 18½ to 9½ in the singles, matching their best ever result in 2004. This was the first time Europe had won the matches three times in a row.
28 June: The PGA Tour announced further details of the
FedEx Cupplayoff system to be introduced in 2007, including confirmation that there will be a
US$35 million-dollar bonus prize fund, with
US$10 million going to the winner.[3]
30 March - 2 April:
Kraft Nabisco Championship: Australia's
Karrie Webb defeated 18, 36 and 54 hole leader
Lorena Ochoa in a playoff to claim her seventh major championship. Ochoa shot a 62 in the first round, setting a tournament record and equalling the record low score in an LPGA major.
29 June - 2 July:
U.S. Women Opened - The tournament was played at
Newport Country Club. The prize fund was
US$3.1 million, a record for a women's golf tournament, with $560,000 going to the winner. The first day's play was cancelled due to fog and 36 holes were played on the Sunday.
Annika Sörenstam and
Pat Hurst tied on level par after 72 holes. Sörenstam won an eighteen-hole Monday playoff to claim her tenth major championship and third U.S. Open.
3–6 August:
Weetabix Women's British Open - The tournament was played at
Royal Lytham & St. Annes for the third time in its history. American
Sherri Steinhauer took the lead after a third round 66 and held the lead in the final round for a three-stroke win over runners-up
Cristie Kerr and
Sophie Gustafson. It was Steinhauer's third British Open win, but her first since the tournament became a major in 2001.
4–7 May:
Michelle Wie made the cut at the
SK Telecom Open on the
Asian Tour. This was the highest ranking men's tour on which a woman has made a cut since
Babe Zaharias did so on the PGA Tour in 1945.
6–9 July:
U.S. Senior Open - Defending champion
Allen Doyle finished two shots ahead of
Tom Watson. It was Doyle's fourth senior major and he was the oldest U.S. Senior Open Champion at 57 years, 348 days.[6]
18–21 October:
Espirito Santo Trophy (Women's Amateur World Team Championship) -
South Africa won the tournament for the first time. They were the first home winners since 1980.[7]
26–29 October:
Eisenhower Trophy (Men's Amateur World Team Championship) - the
Netherlands won for the first time.
Table of results
This table summarises all the results referred to above in date order.