Jun 20

June 20 in Golf History

On June 20 in golf history — 1964: Ken Venturi wins U.S. Open battling heat at Congressional, plus 5 more moments from 1964–2018.

June 19 All days June 21

On This Day in Golf

1964 Championship

Ken Venturi wins U.S. Open battling heat at Congressional

Ken Venturi, fighting heat exhaustion in 100-degree conditions, completed a 36-hole final day to win the 1964 U.S. Open at Congressional for a triumphant comeback.

Ken Venturi
1976 Championship

Jerry Pate wins U.S. Open with iconic 5-iron

Jerry Pate struck a dramatic 5-iron over water to two feet on the 72nd hole at Atlanta Athletic Club to win the 1976 U.S. Open in his rookie year.

Jerry Pate
1982 Championship

Tom Watson chips in to win U.S. Open at Pebble Beach

Tom Watson holed a famous chip from deep rough on the 17th hole at Pebble Beach to beat Jack Nicklaus and win the 1982 U.S. Open, the only U.S. Open of his career.

Tom Watson
1988 Championship

Curtis Strange wins U.S. Open playoff at Brookline

Curtis Strange beat Nick Faldo in a Monday 18-hole playoff at The Country Club in Brookline to win the 1988 U.S. Open, his first major title.

Curtis Strange
1993 Record

Lee Janzen wins first U.S. Open at Baltusrol

Lee Janzen shot 272 to tie the U.S. Open scoring record and win the 1993 championship at Baltusrol by two over Payne Stewart.

Lee Janzen
2018 In Memoriam

Peter Thomson, five-time Open champion, dies

Australia's Peter Thomson, who won five Open Championships between 1954 and 1965, died on this day at age 88.

Peter Thomson