The B.C. Open was a PGA Tour golf tournament in New York, held annually from 1971 to 2006. In 1971, it was called the Broome County Open, and the next year it switched to the B.C. Open. In 1973, it became a PGA Tour regular 72-hole money event. From 2000 to 2006, it took place during the same week as The Open Championship, so the leading players were not available and it was one of the smaller events on the PGA Tour schedule. The purse for the final edition in 2006 was $3 million.

B.C. Open
Tournament information
LocationEndicott, New York
Established1971
Course(s)En-Joie Golf Club
Par72
Length7,482 yards (6,842 m)
Tour(s)PGA Tour
FormatStroke play
Prize fundUS$3,000,000
Month playedJuly
Final year2006
Tournament record score
Aggregate264 Jason Bohn (2005)
To par−24 as above
Final champion
United States John Rollins
Location map
En-Joie GC is located in the United States
En-Joie GC
En-Joie GC
Location in the United States
En-Joie GC is located in New York
En-Joie GC
En-Joie GC
Location in New York

The tournament was played at the En-Joie Golf Course in Endicott in Upstate New York for every event through 2005. In 2006, severe flooding of the adjacent Susquehanna River forced the event to move to the Atunyote Golf Club at the Turning Stone Resort & Casino in Verona. The event was operated by Broome County Community Charities, Inc. Since its inception, the B.C. Open has turned back to local charities in excess of $7.4 million through 2003.

It was named after the comic strip B.C., created by Johnny Hart, who was born and raised in Endicott. Johnny Hart's B.C. characters were used in advertising the event.

The B.C. Open was held for the last time on the PGA Tour in 2006 due to a schedule revamp based on the introduction of the FedEx Cup.[1] The success of the Turning Stone event in 2006 led to that venue hosting a "Fall Series" event beginning in 2007, the Turning Stone Resort Championship.

The Broome County Community Charities has hosted a Champions Tour event at the En-Joie Golf Course beginning in 2007, the Dick's Sporting Goods Open.[2]

Tournament highlights

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Winners

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YearWinnerScoreTo parMargin of
victory
Runner(s)-upWinner's
share ($)
B.C. Open
2006 John Rollins269−191 stroke Bob May540,000
2005 Jason Bohn264−241 stroke J. P. Hayes
Brendan Jones
Ryan Palmer
John Rollins
540,000
2004 Jonathan Byrd268−201 stroke Ted Purdy540,000
2003 Craig Stadler267−211 stroke Alex Čejka
Steve Lowery
540,000
2002 Spike McRoy269−191 stroke Fred Funk378,000
2001 Jeff Sluman266−22Playoff Paul Gow360,000
2000 Brad Faxon (2)270−181 stroke Esteban Toledo360,000
1999 Brad Faxon273−15Playoff Fred Funk288,000
1998 Chris Perry273−153 strokes Peter Jacobsen270,000
1997 Gabriel Hjertstedt275−131 stroke Andrew Magee
Chris Perry
Lee Rinker
234,000
1996 Fred Funk197[a]−16Playoff Pete Jordan180,000
1995 Hal Sutton269−151 stroke Jim McGovern180,000
1994 Mike Sullivan266−184 strokes Jeff Sluman162,000
1993 Blaine McCallister271−131 stroke Denis Watson144,000
1992 John Daly266−186 strokes Joel Edwards
Ken Green
Jay Haas
Nolan Henke
144,000
1991 Fred Couples269−153 strokes Peter Jacobsen144,000
1990 Nolan Henke268−163 strokes Mark Wiebe126,000
1989 Mike Hulbert268−16Playoff Bob Estes90,000
1988 Bill Glasson268−162 strokes Wayne Levi
Bruce Lietzke
90,000
1987 Joey Sindelar (2)266−184 strokes Jeff Sluman72,000
1986 Rick Fehr267−172 strokes Larry Mize72,000
1985 Joey Sindelar274−101 stroke Mike Reid54,000
1984 Wayne Levi275−91 stroke Russ Cochran
Hal Sutton
54,000
1983 Pat Lindsey268−164 strokes Gil Morgan54,000
1982 Calvin Peete265−197 strokes Jerry Pate49,500
1981 Jay Haas270−143 strokes Tom Kite49,500
1980 Don Pooley271−131 stroke Peter Jacobsen49,500
1979 Howard Twitty270−141 stroke Tom Purtzer49,500
1978 Tom Kite267−175 strokes Mark Hayes45,000
1977 Gil Morgan270−145 strokes Lee Elder40,000
1976 Bob Wynn271−131 stroke Bob Gilder40,000
1975 Don Iverson274−101 stroke Jim Colbert
David Graham
35,000
1974 Richie Karl273−11Playoff Bruce Crampton30,000
1973 Hubert Green266−186 strokes Dwight Nevil20,000
1972 Bob Payne136−81 stroke Dave Marad4,000
Broome County Open
1971 Butch Harmon68−4Playoff Chuck Courtney
Norman Rack
Hal Underwood
2,000

Notes

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  1. ^ Shortened to 54 holes due to weather.

References

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  1. ^ PGA TOUR unveils inaugural FedEx Cup schedule
  2. ^ Champions Tour to come to site of B.C. Open next year
  3. ^ Green captures B.C. golf
  4. ^ B.C. Open winner almost quit
  5. ^ Duo shares B.C. lead
  6. ^ Kite lands a winner
  7. ^ Twitty wins B.C. golf as opponents falter
  8. ^ Peete recovers to claim B.C. Open title
  9. ^ Levi winner of B.C. Open title
  10. ^ Sindelar's 69 wins B.C. Open by four shots over Jeff Sluman
  11. ^ Fred Couples B.C. winner
  12. ^ Daly grabs 6-shot win in B.C. Open
  13. ^ McCallister wins B.C. Open title
  14. ^ "Results plus". The New York Times. September 18, 1995. p. C-7. Archived from the original on 2016-03-06.
  15. ^ "Golf: Roundup – B.C. Open". The New York Times. Associated Press. September 29, 1997. Archived from the original on 2017-12-29.
  16. ^ Faxon wins again at B.C. Open
  17. ^ "McRoy, Down 7, Rallies To Earn His First Title". The New York Times.
  18. ^ Stadler captures B.C. Open
  19. ^ Rollins nips May to win B.C. Open
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42°05′28″N 76°04′52″W / 42.091°N 76.081°W / 42.091; -76.081