The Byron Nelson

The Byron Nelson is a golf tournament in Texas on the PGA Tour, currently hosted by TPC Craig Ranch in McKinney, northeast of Dallas. Held in May, it is one of two PGA Tour stops in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex – which until the 2020-21 PGA Tour, was the only metropolitan area to host two events on separate courses in the area (Las Vegas and Savannah have since hosted two events on two separate courses, both of which were pandemic-related changes). The tournament is the leading fundraiser for charity on the PGA Tour and has raised more than $143 million.[2] For much of its history, it was the only PGA Tour stop named after a professional golfer, and remains one of only two such events, along with the Arnold Palmer Invitational. As host, Byron Nelson (1912–2006) commonly made appearances during the tournament. It is hosted by the Salesmanship Club of Dallas, a 600-member civic organization, and has benefited the club's nonprofit Momentous Institute since its inception.[3][citation needed]

The Byron Nelson
Tournament information
LocationMcKinney, Texas
Established1944[1]
Course(s)TPC Craig Ranch
Par72
Length7,468 yards (6,829 m)
Organized bySalesmanship Club of Dallas
Tour(s)PGA Tour
FormatStroke play
Prize fundUS$9,500,000
Month playedMay
Tournament record score
Aggregate261 Rory Sabbatini (2009)
261 Aaron Wise (2018)
261 Kang Sung-hoon (2019)
261 Jason Day (2023)
To par−26 Lee Kyoung-hoon (2022)
Current champion
Canada Taylor Pendrith
Location map
TPC Craig Ranch is located in the United States
TPC Craig Ranch
TPC Craig Ranch
Location in the United States
TPC Craig Ranch is located in Texas
TPC Craig Ranch
TPC Craig Ranch
Location in Texas

For its first several decades, the tournament was played at various courses in Dallas. Nelson, a Texas native raised in Fort Worth, was the tournament's first winner in 1944,[4] when it was played at Lakewood Country Club. The following year it was played at Dallas Country Club, and then in 1946 moved to Brook Hollow Golf Club. For the better part of the next decade the event was not contested, until two iterations of it were held in 1956, both at Preston Hollow Country Club. In 1957, the event moved to Glen Lake Country Club before it began a decade-long relationship with Oak Cliff Country Club, from 1958 to 1967.

In 1968, the event was renamed the Byron Nelson Golf Classic[5][6] and its title, through a series of sponsors, has continuously included Nelson's name. That same year the event moved to Preston Trail Golf Club,[6] where it was played through 1982, then moved to venues in Irving: Las Colinas Sports Club (1983–1985) and TPC at Las Colinas (1986–1993).

Beginning in 1994, the tournament was played at two courses, the Tournament Players Course and the Cottonwood Valley Course, both located at the Four Seasons. Previously only the TPC was used, but since the tournament was played in May (during the height of the North Texas storm season), the weather played havoc with the tournament in some years, causing several delays and shortened tournaments. Therefore, the decision was made to add the Cottonwood Valley course in order to shorten the amount of time needed to complete the first two rounds. The first two rounds were played on both courses (each player played one round on each course); after the cut was determined, the TPC is used exclusively for the final two rounds. However, in 2008 the tournament reverted to using only the TPC course, which was significantly renovated.

Hewlett-Packard (HP) bought the previous title sponsor, Electronic Data Systems (EDS) in mid-2008.[7] The agreement ran through 2014, with AT&T becoming the title sponsor in 2015.[8] The tournament moved from the Four Seasons course in Irving to the new Trinity Forest Golf Club, southeast of downtown Dallas, in 2018.[9] Not played in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, it moved north to TPC Craig Ranch in McKinney in 2021. In 2024, CJ Group replaced AT&T as title sponsor under a ten-year agreement, rebranding it as the CJ Cup Byron Nelson (reusing a title previously used for a former early-season event hosted in South Korea).[10][11]

Tournament highlights

  • 1956: Peter Thomson, a five-time winner of The Open Championship shoots a final round 63, then makes birdie on the first two holes of sudden death to defeat Gene Littler and Cary Middlecoff. It was his one and only PGA Tour victory in the United States.[12]
  • 1976: Mark Hayes becomes the first wire to wire winner of the Nelson.[13]
  • 1981: Bruce Lietzke defeated Tom Watson in a playoff spoiling Watson's bid for a 4th straight Nelson triumph.[14]
  • 1985: Bob Eastwood defeated Payne Stewart in a playoff after coming to the 72nd hole trailing Stewart by three shots. Eastwood made birdie on the final hole while Stewart made double bogey. Stewart made yet another double bogey on the first hole of sudden death to give Eastwood the title.[15]
  • 1994: Neal Lancaster won the first ever six-player sudden death playoff in PGA Tour history. He made a birdie on the first playoff hole to defeat Tom Byrum, Mark Carnevale, David Edwards, Yoshi Mizumaki, and David Ogrin.[16]
  • 2005: Tiger Woods' record streak of 142 cuts made came to an end at this tournament.
  • 2006: After graduating from Q school, Brett Wetterich's win propels him to a surprise Ryder Cup appearance.
  • 2008: Australian Adam Scott sank a 48-foot putt on the third playoff hole to clinch victory over American Ryan Moore.
  • 2010: At age 16, Jordan Spieth (the defending U.S. Junior Amateur champion, and a student at nearby Jesuit College Preparatory School) became the youngest player to play in the tournament, courtesy of a sponsor's exemption (the first one granted since 1995). Spieth would make the cut (becoming the sixth-youngest person in PGA Tour history to make a professional tour event cut) and finish 16th overall. (In 2011 Spieth would again be granted a sponsor's exemption and would again make the cut, finishing 32nd overall.)
  • 2013: Keegan Bradley hits a course-record 60 (−10) in the first round. Bradley leads the first three rounds, but Bae Sang-moon earned the win.[17]
  • 2018: Aaron Wise sets the tournament record.
  • 2019: Kang Sung-hoon won his first PGA Tour title in his 159th start. Scott Piercy went bogey-free for the entire tournament, becoming the first to do so in a 72-hole PGA Tour event since Charles Howell III at the 2010 Greenbrier Classic.

Winners

YearWinnerScoreTo parMargin of
victory
Runner(s)-upPurse
(US$)
Winner's
share ($)
Ref.
CJ Cup Byron Nelson
2024 Taylor Pendrith261−231 stroke Ben Kohles9,500,0001,710,000
AT&T Byron Nelson
2023 Jason Day (2)261−231 stroke Austin Eckroat
Kim Si-woo
9,500,0001,710,000
2022 Lee Kyoung-hoon (2)262−261 stroke Jordan Spieth9,100,0001,638,000
2021 Lee Kyoung-hoon263−253 strokes Sam Burns8,100,0001,458,000
2020Canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic[18]
2019 Kang Sung-hoon261−232 strokes Matt Every
Scott Piercy
7,900,0001,422,000
2018 Aaron Wise261−233 strokes Marc Leishman7,700,0001,386,000
2017 Billy Horschel268−12Playoff Jason Day7,500,0001,350,000
2016 Sergio García (2)265−15Playoff Brooks Koepka7,300,0001,314,000
2015 Steven Bowditch259[a]−184 strokes Charley Hoffman
Scott Pinckney
Jimmy Walker
7,100,0001,278,000
HP Byron Nelson Championship
2014 Brendon Todd266−142 strokes Mike Weir6,900,0001,242,000
2013 Bae Sang-moon267−132 strokes Keegan Bradley6,700,0001,206,000
2012 Jason Dufner269−111 stroke Dicky Pride6,500,0001,170,000
2011 Keegan Bradley277−3Playoff Ryan Palmer6,500,0001,170,000
2010 Jason Day270−102 strokes Blake Adams
Brian Gay
Jeff Overton
6,500,0001,170,000
2009 Rory Sabbatini261−192 strokes Brian Davis6,500,0001,170,000
EDS Byron Nelson Championship
2008 Adam Scott273−7Playoff Ryan Moore6,400,0001,152,000
2007 Scott Verplank267−131 stroke Luke Donald6,300,0001,134,000
2006 Brett Wetterich268−121 stroke Trevor Immelman6,200,0001,116,000
2005 Ted Purdy265−151 stroke Sean O'Hair6,200,0001,116,000
2004 Sergio García270−10Playoff Robert Damron
Dudley Hart
5,800,0001,044,000
2003 Vijay Singh265−152 strokes Nick Price5,600,0001,008,000
Verizon Byron Nelson Classic
2002 Shigeki Maruyama266−142 strokes Ben Crane4,800,000864,000
2001 Robert Damron263−17Playoff Scott Verplank4,500,000810,000
GTE Byron Nelson Classic
2000 Jesper Parnevik269−11Playoff Davis Love III
Phil Mickelson
4,000,000720,000
1999 Loren Roberts262−18Playoff Steve Pate3,000,000540,000
GTE Byron Nelson Golf Classic
1998 John Cook265−153 strokes Fred Couples
Harrison Frazar
Hal Sutton
2,500,000450,000
1997 Tiger Woods263−172 strokes Lee Rinker1,800,000324,000
1996 Phil Mickelson265−152 strokes Craig Parry1,500,000270,000
1995 Ernie Els263−173 strokes Robin Freeman
Mike Heinen
D. A. Weibring
1,300,000234,000
1994 Neal Lancaster132[b]−9Playoff Tom Byrum
Mark Carnevale
David Edwards
Yoshi Mizumaki
David Ogrin
1,200,000216,000
1993 Scott Simpson270−101 stroke Billy Mayfair
Corey Pavin
D. A. Weibring
1,200,000216,000
1992 Billy Ray Brown199[c]−11Playoff Ben Crenshaw
Raymond Floyd
Bruce Lietzke
1,100,000198,000
1991 Nick Price270−101 stroke Craig Stadler1,100,000198,000
1990 Payne Stewart202[c]−82 strokes Lanny Wadkins1,000,000180,000
1989 Jodie Mudd265−15Playoff Larry Nelson1,000,000180,000
1988 Bruce Lietzke (2)271−9Playoff Clarence Rose750,000135,000
Byron Nelson Golf Classic
1987 Fred Couples266−14Playoff Mark Calcavecchia600,000108,000
1986 Andy Bean269−111 stroke Mark Wiebe600,000108,000
1985 Bob Eastwood272−8Playoff Payne Stewart500,00090,000
1984 Craig Stadler276−81 stroke David Edwards500,00090,000
1983 Ben Crenshaw273−71 stroke Brad Bryant
Hal Sutton
400,00072,000
1982 Bob Gilder266−145 strokes Curtis Strange350,00063,000
1981 Bruce Lietzke281+1Playoff Tom Watson300,00054,000
1980 Tom Watson (4)274−61 stroke Bill Rogers300,00054,000
1979 Tom Watson (3)275−5Playoff Bill Rogers300,00054,000
1978 Tom Watson (2)272−81 stroke Lee Trevino200,00040,000
1977 Raymond Floyd276−82 strokes Ben Crenshaw200,00040,000
1976 Mark Hayes273−112 strokes Don Bies200,00040,000
1975 Tom Watson269−152 strokes Bob E. Smith175,00035,000
1974 Buddy Allin269−154 strokes Homero Blancas
Charles Coody
Lee Trevino
Tom Watson
150,00030,000
1973 Lanny Wadkins277−3Playoff Dan Sikes150,00030,000
1972 Chi-Chi Rodríguez273−7Playoff Billy Casper125,00025,000
1971 Jack Nicklaus (2)274−62 strokes Frank Beard
Jerry McGee
125,00025,000
1970 Jack Nicklaus274−6Playoff Arnold Palmer100,00020,000
1969 Bruce Devlin277−31 stroke Frank Beard
Bruce Crampton
100,00020,000
1968 Miller Barber270−101 stroke Kermit Zarley100,00020,000
Dallas Open Invitational
1967 Bert Yancey274−101 stroke Roberto De Vicenzo
Kermit Zarley
100,00020,000
1966 Roberto De Vicenzo276−81 stroke Joe Campbell
Raymond Floyd
Harold Henning
85,00015,000
1965: No tournament
1964 Charles Coody271−131 stroke Jerry Edwards40,0005,800
1963: No tournament
1962 Billy Maxwell277−34 strokes Johnny Pott35,0005,300
1961 Earl Stewart278−61 stroke Gay Brewer
Arnold Palmer
Doug Sanders
30,0004,300
1960 Johnny Pott275−5Playoff Ted Kroll
Bo Wininger
25,0003,500
1959 Julius Boros274−101 stroke Dow Finsterwald
Earl Stewart
Bo Wininger
25,0003,500
1958 Sam Snead (3)272−8Playoff Julius Boros
John McMullin
Gary Player
25,0003,500
1957 Sam Snead (2)264−2010 strokes Bob Inman
Billy Maxwell
Cary Middlecoff
40,0008,000[19]
Texas International Open
1956
(Jun)
Peter Thomson267−13Playoff Gene Littler
Cary Middlecoff
70,00013,478[20]
Dallas Centennial Open
1956
(May)
Don January268−121 stroke Dow Finsterwald
Doug Ford
30,0006,000[21]
1947-1955: No tournament
Dallas Invitational
1946 Ben Hogan284+42 strokes Herman Keiser
Paul Runyan
10,0002,000[22]
Dallas Open
1945 Sam Snead276−124 strokes Jug McSpaden10,0002,000[23]
Texas Victory Open
1944 Byron Nelson276−810 strokes Jug McSpaden10,0002,000[24]

Note: Green highlight indicates scoring records.
Sources:[4][25][26][27]

Multiple winners

Seven players have won this tournament more than once through 2023.

See also

Notes

References

External links

33°08′28″N 96°43′12″W / 33.141°N 96.720°W / 33.141; -96.720