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1977 Open Championship
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| Tournament information | |
|---|---|
| Dates | 6–9 July 1977 |
| Location | Ayrshire, Scotland |
| Course(s) | Ailsa Course, Turnberry |
| Tour(s) | European Tour PGA Tour |
| Statistics | |
| Par | 70[1] |
| Length | 6,875 yards (6,286 m)[1] |
| Field | 156 players 87 after 1st cut 64 after 2nd cut[1] |
| Cut | 150 (+10) (1st cut) 221 (+11) (2nd cut)[1] |
| Prize fund | £100,000[1] $170,000 |
| Winner's share | £10,000 $17,000 |
| Champion | |
| 268 (−12) | |
The 1977 Open Championship was the 106th Open Championship, held 6–9 July on the Ailsa Course at Turnberry, Scotland. Tom Watson won the second of his five Open titles by one stroke over runner-up Jack Nicklaus.[2] The two played together in the final two rounds and had separated themselves from the field under clear skies, leading this Open to be remembered as the "Duel in the Sun." This was the first Open held at Turnberry, which renamed its 18th hole after the duel.[3][4] Three months earlier, Watson had held off Nicklaus to win his first green jacket at the Masters.
In the second round, Mark Hayes rebounded from his opening 76 (+6) with 63 to establish a new single round record at The Open Championship by two strokes. The previous record of 65 was set by Henry Cotton in the second round in 1934 at Royal St. George's and later equaled by nine others.[5][6] Lightning briefly interrupted play in the third round on Friday.[7]
Americans dominated the final leaderboard, filling the top eight spots and eleven of the first twelve.[8][9] The first page of the leaderboard was loaded with future members of the World Golf Hall of Fame.
The leader after 36 holes, Roger Maltbie, finished with 80 for 289 (+9), in a tie for 26th place.
The previous year, Watson was defending champion, but missed the 54-hole cut after an 80 in the third round, while Nicklaus finished in a tie for second.
Duel in the Sun
[edit]Watson's victory is considered by many to be the finest tournament played in the latter half of the 20th century. After two rounds, he and Nicklaus were one shot out of the lead, in a four-way tie for second, and were paired for the third round on Friday.[6] Both shot five-under 65 for 203 (−7), three shots clear of Ben Crenshaw and six ahead of the remainder of the field after 54 holes.[10][11][12]
Paired again for the final round on Saturday afternoon, Nicklaus birdied twice and was up by three strokes after four holes. Watson birdied three of the next four to pull even at two-under for the round, then bogeyed the ninth hole to fall one back at the turn. Nicklaus birdied the 12th hole to go two strokes ahead, then Watson birdied 13 and the par-3 15th, rolling in a putt from off the green to even up the round at three-under.[13]
After halving the 16th with pars, it was on to the reachable par-5 17th, where Nicklaus missed the green to the right but chipped his third to four feet (1.2 m) from the cup. Watson missed an eagle putt and tapped in for birdie, but then Nicklaus two-putted for par to go a stroke down with one hole remaining. On the 18th tee, Watson drove to an ideal position in the fairway, but Nicklaus went right and into the rough. Watson's 7-iron approach stopped pin-high and two feet left of the flag, and with Nicklaus in trouble, appeared to seal the victory. But Nicklaus slashed his 8-iron recovery onto the front of the green and sank his 35-foot (11 m) putt for a remarkable birdie and a bogey-free 66. Now needing a seventh birdie of the round to avoid an 18-hole playoff, Watson sank the two-footer for his second straight 65, second Open, and third major title. With birdies on four of the final six holes, his total of 268 was eight strokes better than the previous best score in the Open.[3][4]
Watson and Nicklaus finished well ahead of the other challengers, and shot the same score every day, except on Saturday. The third-place finisher, reigning U.S. Open champion Hubert Green, shot a final round 67 and was a distant ten strokes behind Nicklaus, who won his third Open (and third career grand slam) the following year at St. Andrews.[13]
Course
[edit]Ailsa Course
| Hole | Name | Yards | Par | Hole | Name | Yards | Par | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ailsa Craig | 355 | 4 | 10 | Dinna Fouter | 452 | 4 | |
| 2 | Mak Siccar | 428 | 4 | 11 | Maidens | 177 | 3 | |
| 3 | Blaw Wearie | 462 | 4 | 12 | Monument | 391 | 4 | |
| 4 | Woe-Be-Tide | 167 | 3 | 13 | Tickly Tap | 411 | 4 | |
| 5 | Fin Me Oot | 411 | 4 | 14 | Risk-An-Hope | 440 | 4 | |
| 6 | Tappie Toorie | 222 | 3 | 15 | Ca' Canny | 209 | 3 | |
| 7 | Roon The Ben | 528 | 5 | 16 | Wee Burn | 409 | 4 | |
| 8 | Goat Fell | 427 | 4 | 17 | Lang Whang | 500 | 5 | |
| 9 | Bruce's Castle | 455 | 4 | 18 | Ailsa Hame ^ | 431 | 4 | |
| Out | 3,455 | 35 | In | 3,420 | 35 | |||
| Source:[14] | Total | 6,875 | 70 | |||||
^ The 18th hole was renamed "Duel in the Sun" in 2003.
Round summaries
[edit]First round
[edit]Wednesday, 6 July 1977
| Place | Player | Score | To par |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 66 | −4 | |
| 2 | 67 | −3 | |
| T3 | 68 | −2 | |
| T6 | 69 | −1 | |
| T9 | 70 | E | |
Source:[15]
Second round
[edit]Thursday, 7 July 1977
| Place | Player | Score | To par |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 71-66=137 | −3 | |
| T2 | 72-66=138 | −2 | |
| 68-70=138 | |||
| 68-70=138 | |||
| 68-70=138 | |||
| T6 | 71-68=139 | −1 | |
| 76-63=139 | |||
| T8 | 69-71=140 | E | |
| 70-70=140 | |||
| 72-68=140 | |||
| 71-69=140 | |||
| 70-70=140 | |||
| 66-74=140 |
Source:[6][16]
Amateurs: Garner (+13), McEvoy (+13), Powell (+13), Carrick (+15), Lyle (+15), Pierse (+16), Wilson (+16), Cosh (+21), Chapman (+25).
Third round
[edit]Friday, 8 July 1977
| Place | Player | Score | To par |
|---|---|---|---|
| T1 | 68-70-65=203 | −7 | |
| 68-70-65=203 | |||
| 3 | 71-69-66=206 | −4 | |
| T4 | 70-74-65=209 | −1 | |
| 69-72-68=209 | |||
| 71-66-72=209 | |||
| T7 | 69-74-67=210 | E | |
| 68-70-72=210 | |||
| T9 | 70-73-68=211 | +1 | |
| 76-63-72=211 |
Final round
[edit]Saturday, 9 July 1977
| Place | Player | Score | To par | Money (£) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 68-70-65-65=268 | −12 | 10,000 | |
| 2 | 68-70-65-66=269 | −11 | 8,000 | |
| 3 | 72-66-74-67=279 | −1 | 6,000 | |
| 4 | 68-70-72-70=280 | E | 5,000 | |
| T5 | 70-70-72-69=281 | +1 | 4,250 | |
| 71-69-66-75=281 | ||||
| 7 | 73-73-67-69=282 | +2 | 3,750 | |
| 8 | 70-73-68-72=283 | +3 | 3,500 | |
| T9 | 66-74-73-71=284 | +4 | 2,875 | |
| 76-63-72-73=284 | ||||
| 69-74-67-74=284 | ||||
| 70-74-65-75=284 |
- The exchange rate at the time was approximately 1.72 dollars (US) per pound sterling.[18]
Scorecard
[edit]Final round
Cumulative tournament scores, relative to par
Birdie Bogey
Source:[9]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e "Media guide". The Open Championship. 2011. pp. 59, 203. Archived from the original on 18 April 2012. Retrieved 3 July 2012.
- ^ Jenkins, Dan (18 July 1977). "A braw brawl for Tom and Jack". Sports Illustrated. p. 28.
- ^ a b Deford, Frank (14 July 1986). "The best against the best". Sports Illustrated. p. 58.
- ^ a b Garrity, John (28 July 2008). "The Duel in the Sun: Watson vs. Nicklaus at Turnberry in 1977". Golf.com. Retrieved 4 July 2012.
- ^ "Hayes' 63 an Open record". Glasgow Herald. 8 July 1977. p. 24.
- ^ a b c "Hayes shoots Open record". Spokesman-Review. Spokane, Washington. Associated Press. 8 July 1977. p. 19.
- ^ Ritche, Murray (9 July 1977). "Lee Trevino relives his nightmare as lightning storm sweeps Open". Glasgow Herald. p. 1.
- ^ a b "1977 Open Championship results". databasegolf.com. Retrieved 4 July 2012.
- ^ a b "Jack's best shot not good enough". Eugene Register-Guard. Oregon. (wire services). 10 July 1977. p. 1B.
- ^ a b "Classic duel set in British Open". Montreal Gazette. Associated Press. 9 July 1977. p. 33.
- ^ a b Jacobs, Raymond (9 July 1977). "Nicklaus, Watson in a two-man tussle". Glasgow Herald. p. 16.
- ^ "Battle of Britain: Nicklaus vs. Watson". Chicago Tribune. wire services. 9 July 1977. p. 1, sec. 2.
- ^ a b "Tom Watson wins; Jack Nicklaus' best one stroke short". Spokesman-Review. Spokane, Washington. Associated Press. 10 July 1977. p. D1.
- ^ "British Open bywords: 'lang whang, tickly tap'". Chicago Tribune. Associated Press. 6 July 1977. p. 2, sec. 4.
- ^ "Longshot U.K. Open leader blasts 'star' system". Montreal Gazette. Associated Press. 7 July 1977. p. 23.
- ^ Jacobs, Raymond (8 July 1977). "An All-American drive for Open". Glasgow Herald. p. 24.
- ^ "How they finished". Glasgow Herald. 11 July 1977. p. 20.
- ^ "British Pound / US Dollar Historical Reference Rates from Bank of England for 1977". PoundSterling. July 1977. Retrieved 18 July 2024.
External links
[edit]1977 Open Championship
View on GrokipediaTournament Overview
Dates and Venue
The 1977 Open Championship, the 106th edition of the tournament, took place from July 6 to 9, 1977.[2] It was held at the Ailsa Course of the Turnberry Resort in South Ayrshire, Scotland, marking the first time this venue hosted the event.[6] The Ailsa Course, a classic links layout along the Ayrshire coast, provided a dramatic seaside setting for the championship.[1] The tournament was organized by The Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews, the traditional governing body for The Open. It formed part of the 1977 European Tour schedule, attracting a strong international field of professional golfers.[7] The course was set up as a par-70 layout measuring 6,875 yards (6,290 meters) in length.[8]Format, Field, and Qualification
The 1977 Open Championship was conducted as a 72-hole stroke play tournament divided into four rounds on the Ailsa Course at Turnberry. It employed a double cut system: after 36 holes, the field was reduced to the top 70 scorers and ties; after 54 holes, it was further reduced to the top 45 scorers and ties, who played the final round. The starting field comprised 156 players hailing from 22 countries, reflecting the event's international appeal. Qualification pathways were multifaceted, granting automatic entry to past Open champions (provided they were under 60 years old), the top 10 finishers from the previous year's Open, and the leading money winners on both the PGA Tour and European Tour. Additional entrants were selected through regional qualifying tournaments held across the United Kingdom and Ireland. This structure ensured a mix of established professionals, recent major performers, and emerging talents.[1] In 1977, 87 players made the 36-hole cut at 150 (+10), while 64 players advanced after the 54-hole cut at 221 (+11).The Course and Conditions
Ailsa Course Layout
The Ailsa Course at Turnberry, host of the 1977 Open Championship, was designed by Scottish golfer and architect Willie Fernie and first opened for play in 1901 as an 18-hole par-70 layout, establishing its foundational links architecture amid the coastal dunes of South Ayrshire.[9] The layout emphasizes strategic shot-making, with undulating terrain that rewards precision and punishes errant play. For the 1977 tournament, the course played to a total length of 6,875 yards, divided into a front nine of 3,435 yards at par 35 and a back nine of 3,440 yards at par 35.[2] This configuration provided a balanced test, blending reachable par-5s with demanding par-4s and strategic par-3s along the shoreline. Notable holes include the par-5 5th, "Majestic," a sweeping dogleg that invites aggressive drives but guards its green with deep bunkers and wind exposure; the par-4 11th, "Railway," a narrow, accuracy-demanding hole flanked by rough and out-of-bounds; and the par-4 18th, a tension-filled finisher that was renamed "Duel in the Sun" in 2003 to commemorate the iconic Watson-Nicklaus showdown.[10] As a quintessential links-style venue, the Ailsa features firm, bouncy fairways that promote low running shots, numerous pot bunkers with steep faces strategically placed to catch wayward approaches, and panoramic views across the Firth of Clyde toward Ailsa Craig.[5] These elements create a dynamic interplay between the natural landscape and golfing demands, where wind and tide influence every round, though weather variations during the event are detailed separately. The course's design philosophy prioritizes recovery options and visual intimidation, making it a perennial favorite among professionals for its blend of beauty and brutality.[11]Weather and Playing Conditions
The 1977 Open Championship at Turnberry unfolded under exceptionally hot and dry conditions during a rare Scottish heatwave, with temperatures soaring well above typical summer norms and minimal wind throughout much of the event. This led to firm, fast greens and parched fairways that produced clouds of dust rather than the usual ocean spray, creating an unusually benign playing environment for a links course.[1][12] These conditions starkly contrasted with the rainy, gusty weather often experienced at Open Championships in Scotland, promoting aggressive play and exceptionally low scores that defined the tournament. The sun-drenched atmosphere inspired the nickname "Duel in the Sun" for the fierce rivalry between leaders Tom Watson and Jack Nicklaus, as the heat intensified the physical and competitive demands on the field.[2][13] A brief thunderstorm disrupted the third round on July 8, with lightning prompting a 30-minute suspension of play from 4:50 p.m. to 5:20 p.m., forcing the 26 remaining players—including Nicklaus and Watson, who sheltered in a BBC vehicle—to wait out the inclement weather.[14] The appealing weather, combined with the unfolding drama, attracted record crowds to the venue, swelling attendance and amplifying the event's historic energy.[6]Round Summaries
First Round
The first round of the 1977 Open Championship took place on July 6 at the Ailsa Course in Turnberry, Scotland, under calm conditions with minimal wind, hot and humid weather, and firm greens that favored aggressive play and low scoring. American John Schroeder, a lesser-known PGA Tour player, seized the lead with a brilliant 66 (−4), carding a 35 on the front nine before surging on the back with a 31 featuring birdies on the 10th (chipped in from off the green), 11th (4-foot putt), 17th (bunker shot to tap-in range), and 18th (6-iron approach to 6 feet). His performance edged out the field by one stroke and highlighted the course's vulnerability to precise iron play and short-game creativity.[15] British amateur Martin Foster finished one shot back at 67 (−3), boosted by an eagle on the par-5 17th hole where he hit a 2-iron to 18 feet and converted the putt.[15] Among the favorites, Tom Watson and Jack Nicklaus both posted solid 68s (−2), positioning themselves comfortably near the top without dominating the day.[15] Nicklaus, in particular, ignited his round with a birdie streak on the back nine, sinking putts on the 10th, 11th, 17th, and 18th to close strongly.[15] Other notables included Lee Trevino at 68 (−2), and Johnny Miller and 20-year-old Spaniard Seve Ballesteros at 69 (−1), with Ballesteros managing his score despite hitting just three fairways off the tee.[15] Ben Crenshaw opened with a 71 (+1), a steady but unremarkable effort that kept him in contention early.[2] The round's low scores reflected the benign setup, setting an aggressive tone for the tournament.[15]Second Round
The second round of the 1977 Open Championship was contested on July 7, 1977, amid hot and calm conditions that contributed to several low scores on the Ailsa Course at Turnberry.[16] American Roger Maltbie seized the lead after 36 holes with a strong second-round 66, bringing his total to 137 (−3) and one stroke ahead of the field.[16][17] His performance, which included multiple birdies, positioned him atop the leaderboard entering the weekend.[16] A highlight of the day was Mark Hayes' stunning 63 (−7), the lowest round in Open Championship history to that point and the first such score in the tournament's annals.[1] Starting with a first-round 76, the American rebounded dramatically, carding birdies on the front nine and continuing his hot streak with consecutive birdies on holes 11 and 12, en route to a total of 139 (−1).[16][2] This effort not only tied the major championship record but underscored the American dominance evident in the top positions, with Maltbie, Hayes, Tom Watson, and Jack Nicklaus occupying the first four spots on the leaderboard.[1] Defending champion Tom Watson and six-time Open winner Jack Nicklaus both navigated the round with steady 70s (−2 for the day), reaching 36-hole totals of 138 (−2) and remaining firmly in contention just one stroke behind Maltbie.[2][14] The cut fell at +11 (151), allowing 64 players—including all prominent contenders—to advance to the third round.[2] This outcome ensured a competitive field for the weekend, setting the stage for the emerging rivalry between Watson and Nicklaus.[1]Third Round
The third round of the 1977 Open Championship took place on July 8, 1977, at the Ailsa Course in Turnberry, Scotland, under overcast skies with a slight breeze that allowed for low scoring.[14] Tom Watson and Jack Nicklaus, who had entered the day one stroke behind the leader at 138 after two rounds, were paired together for the afternoon due to their close proximity on the leaderboard.[1] The duo set the tone early with a series of birdie exchanges on the front nine: Nicklaus birdied the first hole with a sand wedge approach to three feet, Watson responded with a birdie on the third via a four-foot putt, and both converted birdies on the fourth to reach four under par collectively, while parring the fifth.[14] Play was interrupted mid-round by a thunderstorm, with lightning causing a suspension from 4:50 p.m. to 5:20 p.m., during which Watson and Nicklaus took shelter in a BBC television vehicle.[14] Upon resumption, the lead seesawed dramatically: Nicklaus took a two-stroke advantage with a 12-foot birdie putt on the sixth after Watson bogeyed the same hole, but Watson clawed back with a 20-foot birdie on the 15th following Nicklaus's bogey on the 14th, tying the score once more.[14] Both players finished strongly, carding 65s to tie at 203 (−7) after 54 holes, a performance that ignited their legendary duel.[1][14] The rest of the field struggled to keep pace, falling further behind as the leaders' back-and-forth play highlighted their dominance. Ben Crenshaw posted the next-best third-round score of 66 to reach 206 (−2), placing him three strokes back in third, while players like Hubert Green (74 to 212) and others trailed by six or more.[14][18] This gap underscored the emerging two-man race, with the mild conditions favoring precision but unable to bridge the leaders' momentum.[14]Final Round
The final round of the 1977 Open Championship took place on July 9, 1977, at the Ailsa Course in Turnberry, Scotland, with Tom Watson and Jack Nicklaus entering the day tied for the lead at 203 after both carded 65s in the third round.[1][19] Nicklaus seized an early advantage, birdieing the first, second (with a 10-foot putt), and fourth holes (30-foot putt) to build a three-stroke lead by the fourth. Watson countered aggressively on the front nine, sinking birdies on the fifth, seventh, and eighth to draw level at nine under par by the eighth hole, though he bogeyed the ninth after a wayward approach, allowing Nicklaus to birdie the ninth and take a one-stroke lead at the turn.[19][20] The lead fluctuated further on the back nine, where Nicklaus birdied the 12th with a 22-foot putt to extend his advantage to two strokes, but Watson responded immediately with a birdie on the 13th to close the gap to one. Tension peaked at the par-3 15th, where Watson, from hardpan left of the green, holed a dramatic 60-foot birdie putt to tie Nicklaus at 10 under par. Both players parred the 16th, maintaining the deadlock heading into the final stretch.[19][1][21] At the par-5 17th, Watson struck a precise 3-iron second shot to set up a two-putt birdie, taking a one-stroke lead at 11 under, while Nicklaus, after a wayward 4-iron, missed a four-foot birdie putt and settled for par. On the 18th, Watson sealed victory with an 8-iron approach to two feet for a birdie tap-in, finishing with a 65 for a tournament total of 268 (−12). Nicklaus, from rough off the tee, drained a 35-foot birdie putt but ended at 66 for 269 (−11), one stroke behind; no playoff was required under the stroke-play format.[19][1][20] The round unfolded before large crowds drawn by the intense pairing. The top seven finishers were American, with eighth place tied including one British player, underscoring U.S. dominance in the 156-player field from 27 countries.[6][7][22]The Duel in the Sun
Rivalry Between Watson and Nicklaus
Tom Watson, at age 27, entered the 1977 Open Championship as the recent victor of the Masters Tournament in April, marking his first win at Augusta National and solidifying his emergence as a top-tier talent on the PGA Tour.[23] Jack Nicklaus, aged 37 and a 15-time major champion, arrived in peak form after capturing the Memorial Tournament in May, his own event at Muirfield Village, demonstrating his enduring dominance despite entering the later stages of his prime.[24] Both players shared a deep mutual respect forged through years of competition, with Watson viewing Nicklaus as the benchmark of excellence and Nicklaus acknowledging Watson's rapid ascent as a worthy adversary.[25] Their rivalry had intensified earlier that year at the Masters, where Watson held off Nicklaus to win by two strokes, finishing at 276 to Nicklaus's 278 in a tense final round that previewed their head-to-head battles.[26] Watson brought prior Open experience as the 1975 champion at Carnoustie, where he had navigated the challenges of links golf to claim his first Claret Jug at age 25. Nicklaus, with two previous Open titles (1966 and 1970), was no stranger to the event but had not won it since 1970, adding motivation to reclaim the crown on Scottish soil. Heading into Turnberry, both Americans were considered favorites due to their meticulous preparation for links conditions, including time spent adapting to firm fairways and pot bunkers, which contrasted with the more prevalent parkland courses back home.[27] There was no deliberate intent to pair them initially, but their matching scores of 68-70 through two rounds placed them tied near the lead, setting up a pivotal third-round grouping that amplified their personal showdown.[1]Key Moments and Climax
The duel between Tom Watson and Jack Nicklaus intensified in the third round, where the pair, playing together, matched birdies on the first five holes, establishing a rhythm of relentless pressure and precision that pulled them three strokes clear of the field with identical 65s.[14] On the par-4 14th, Nicklaus executed a masterful chip from off the green to within inches for a birdie, while Watson settled for par after missing an eagle attempt, momentarily shifting momentum in a round that felt like a heavyweight contest under the relentless sun.[28] Entering the final round tied at 7-under par, the lead swung dramatically multiple times as the two traded birdies and pars in a back-and-forth battle that evoked the intensity of prizefighters exchanging blows. Nicklaus surged ahead with birdies on the 2nd and 4th to lead by three, but Watson countered with birdies on the 5th, 7th, and 8th to tie by the turn; Nicklaus reclaimed a one-stroke edge with a birdie on the 12th, only for Watson to level it again with a 60-foot birdie putt on the 15th.[27] The crowd's roars amplified the tension, their cheers for each shot adding psychological weight to every decision on the sun-baked Turnberry links.[29] Watson's caddie, Bruce Edwards, played a crucial role in steadying his employer amid the mounting pressure, offering calm advice that helped Watson maintain composure during the emotional strain of the duel. The climax unfolded on the par-5 17th, where Watson reached the green in two and two-putted for birdie while Nicklaus missed a 4-foot birdie putt after chipping close, giving Watson a one-stroke lead heading to the 18th.[29] On the 18th, Nicklaus's errant drive found gorse, but he recovered spectacularly with an 8-iron to the green's edge and holed a 40-foot birdie putt to force Watson to respond; Watson's precise 7-iron approach left a two-footer, which he tapped in for birdie and the one-stroke triumph.[19]Results and Legacy
Final Leaderboard and Prizes
Tom Watson claimed victory in the 1977 Open Championship at Turnberry, finishing with a record-low total of 268 (−12) to win by one stroke over Jack Nicklaus after a dramatic birdie on the 18th hole to secure the Claret Jug.[1] The tournament featured a total purse of £100,000 (approximately $170,000), the first six-figure amount in Open history, with prizes awarded to the top 40 finishers; amateurs were not eligible for prize money.[4] The final leaderboard highlighted the dominance of American players, as shown below for the top 10 finishers:| Position | Player | Score | To Par | Prize Money |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Tom Watson (USA) | 268 | −12 | £10,000 |
| 2 | Jack Nicklaus (USA) | 269 | −11 | £9,000 |
| 3 | Hubert Green (USA) | 279 | −1 | £6,500 |
| 4 | Lee Trevino (USA) | 280 | E | £5,500 |
| T5 | George Burns III (USA) | 281 | +1 | £4,250 |
| T5 | Ben Crenshaw (USA) | 281 | +1 | £4,250 |
| 7 | Arnold Palmer (USA) | 282 | +2 | £3,750 |
| 8 | Raymond Floyd (USA) | 283 | +3 | £3,250 |
| T9 | Tommy Horton (ENG) | 284 | +4 | £2,875 |
| T9 | Mark Hayes (USA) | 284 | +4 | £2,875 |
