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Online
PGA golf gambling odds provides odds on all the
major professional golf tournaments. For most of
the year, there is at least one golf tournament happening
each week. The events that attract the most interest from
golf enthusiast include the Masters, the US Open and the
British Open.
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2008 US Open Results - location - times |
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After playing to a tie
through 90 holes in the U.S. Open, Tiger Woods and Rocco
Mediate marched to the seventh tee at Torrey Pines on
Monday afternoon for a sudden-death playoff.
Tiger Woods held up his
third U.S. Open championship trophy after defeating
Rocco Mediate (just left of Woods) in a 19-hole playoff
Monday at Torrey Pines Golf Course. Woods needed to
birdie the 18th hole to force an extra hole, then won
the title with a par. |
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2007 US Open Results - location - times |
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Oakmont Country Club will
host the 2007 US Open. Oakmont, located about 15 miles
outside Pittsburgh is no stranger to the US Open Golf
Tournament. The first US Open held there was in 1927 and
has been held there a total 7 times with the last
tournament taking place there in 1994.
The 2006 U.S. Open
Championship had it all - intense action, stunning
surprises and a dramatic finish. Phil Mickelson went
into the final hole with a commanding lead, needing only
a par to clinch the title. But after an unexpected
double bogey, the lead slipped away from Lefty, and
29-year-old Australian Geoff Ogilvy took home the
coveted trophy. How will the excitement unfold in '07?
Be there at Oakmont Country Club to experience the 107th
U.S. Open! |

Winner shoots a 69 in final round and withstands
challenges from Woods, Furyk. Angel Cabrera makes a par
putt on 18 to become the leader after 4 days of battling
fierce competition. His lead held up despite a late
charge by Tiger Woods.
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2006 US Open Results - location - times |
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Winged Foot Country Club, site of the
106th U.S. Open golf championship to be played
June 15-18, and memorable occasions from majors played
there:
Winged Foot lived up to its reputation
as a fierce test, as Ogilvy finished at 5-over par.
Ogilvy, 29,
becomes the first Australian to win the U.S. Open in 25
years, and the first Australian to win a major
since 1995.
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Geoff Ogilvy fought for four rounds, then
watched Phil Mickelson double bogey the 18th hole,
handing Ogilvy
the 2006 U.S. Open title. |
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2005 US Open Results - location - times |
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From June
13-19, 2005, Pinehurst had the honor of hosting the U.S.
OPEN Championship. New Zealander, Michael Campbell won
the National Championship with a score of even par. The
resort became a part of American golf history when Payne
Stewart captured the title in '99. Stewart's 15-foot
putt on the final hole secured his 2nd U.S. OPEN title
and marked one of the most dramatic and memorable
moments in U.S. OPEN history. |

Campbell's success in
America took a huge turn in 2005, when he managed to
hold of
a charge from Tiger Woods at Pinehurst No. 2 in North
Carolina to win the U.S. Open,
the first New Zealander to win a major golf title since
Bob Charles in 1963. |
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2004 US Open Results - location - times |
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US Open
began in 1913 and has evolved into America's most important
golf event. Get into the action with the 104th US Open
and witness the world's greatest golfers test their skills
on the demanding Shinnecock Hills course.

South Africa’s Retief Goosen held his nerve
to clinch the US Open for a second time,
edging out Phil Mickelson by two shots with a closing
one-over-par 71 on the last day of the US open.
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Shinnecock Hills
is one of the five clubs that founded the USGA.
The club has the first and oldest clubhouse in the
U.S., which opened in 1892 and was designed by Stanford
White. Shinnecock Hills Country Club Golf Course
in Southampton, NY is widely known as one of the
most prestigious courses in the world. It is home
to some of the biggest tournaments in golf. This
narrow, links-style design was built on undulating
terrain and will test all aspects of your game.
There is one water hazard that rarely comes into
play, but sand bunkers seem to be placed in all
the right spots throughout the design. There are
various shaped greens full of subtle breaks and
severe undulations. All the fairways are defined
by multiple cuts of rough, and if you find yourself
in the long native grasses, you'll probably not
make par on the hole.
Bet On the US Open Now!
US Open odds & lines here!
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Winner or
the 103rd US Open 2003 |
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Defending
Champion: Jim Furyk
After entering
the final round with a three-stroke lead,
Jim Furyk shot 72 at Olympia Fields Country Club to earn his first major
championship with a U.S. Open record-tying
score of 272.
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Shinnecock
Hills course history
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The course
opened in 1891 with 12 holes designed by
William F Davis. Three years later, Willie
Dunn Jr. completed the layout by adding
six additional holes. Six new holes were
built in 1916-17 in response to the railroad's
demands that play no longer continue across
tracks which ran through the course. The
new holes, designed by Charles MacDonald,
were built on newly purchased land north
of the clubhouse. From 1929 through 1931,
William Flynn built 12 new holes and altered
all but one of the remaining six to form
the course's current par-70 (35-35) layout.
Shinnecock
Hills plays to a yardage of either 6,927
or 6,944, depending on the tee used at the
17th hole. The par-3 hole measures 169 and
186 yards from the two tee locations.
Two previous
U.S. Open Championships have been held at
Shinnecock Hills. In 1896, James Foulis
defeated defending champion Horace Rawlins,
152 to 155, in the second ever U.S. Open.
Ninety years later, Raymond Floyd edged
Lanny Wadkins and Chip Beck by two strokes
to win the 1986 U.S. Open.
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Shinnecock is one of the five founding clubs
of the USGA, which was formed in 1894.
US Open began in 1913 and has evolved into
America's most important golf event. Get into the
action with the 104th US Open and witness
the world's greatest golfers test their skills on
the demanding Shinnecock Hills course.
The club was built on land that formerly
belonged to the Shinnecock Indian Tribe and
many Shinnecock Indians assisted in the construction
of the course.
The
course is a narrow links-style design built
on undulating terrain that will test all aspects
of your game. There is a water hazard that rarely
comes into play, however the bunkers seem
to be well placed and there are various shaped greens with subtle breaks and severe undulations.
The rough comprises of long native grasses that
can cause many problems after a wayward shot places
you in there. The Club is one of five founding members
of the United States Golf Association (USGA)
and boosts the first and the oldest clubhouse in
the US. It was also the first club to allow women
in its membership.
Yardage:
6,996 yards
Par: 35-35 – 70
Defending champion: Jim Furyk
Opened: 1891
Designer: Willie Davis (redesigned
by William Flynn in 1931) |
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Shinnecock Hills plays to a yardage of either
6,927 or 6,944, depending on the tee used at the
17th hole. The par-3 hole measures 169 and 186 yards
from the two tee locations.
Consistently ranked among the top-10 courses
in the U.S., Shinnecock has proven in its three
previous Opens that it can more than stand up to
the best golfers in the world. At the two most recent
Opens played here, the lowest winning total was
Raymond Floyd's 1-under 279 in 1986.
Shinnecock was one of the first clubs to
encourage females and juniors to participate. In
fact, the first four U.S. Women's Amateur champions
came from Shinnecock – Lucy Barnes (1895) and Beatrix
Hoyt (1896-98).
Controversy surrounded the 1896 U.S. Open
when the competitors threatened to boycott the championship
if Willie Bunn, a Shinnecock Indian, John Shippen,
who happened to be half African-American, were permitted
to compete. But USGA President Theodore Havemeyer
proclaimed the competition would go on even if Bunn
and Shippen were the only to participants. That
announcement ended any potential boycott and the championship proceeded with no further complications.
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