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Professional golf tournament in the United States
Golf tournament
Albertsons Boise Open
👁 Image
Tournament information
LocationBoise, Idaho
Established1990
CourseHillcrest Country Club
Par71
Length6,726 yards (6,150 m)[1]
TourKorn Ferry Tour
FormatStroke play
Prize fundUS$1,000,000
Month playedAugust
Tournament record score
Aggregate256 Martin Piller (2015)
256 Chan Kim (2023)
To par−28 as above
Current champion
👁 Mexico
Emilio González
Location map
Location in the United States
Show map of the United States
Location in Idaho
Show map of Idaho

The Albertsons Boise Open is a professional golf tournament in Idaho on the Korn Ferry Tour, played annually at Hillcrest Country Club in Boise. Held in mid-September for its first 23 years, the new September playoff schedule of the Web.com Tour in 2013 moved the Boise event up to late July. The event returned to mid-September in 2016, and became part of the Web.com Tour Finals as the penultimate event. The schedule was revised for 2019 and it moved to late August.

History

[edit]

The tournament has been played every year since 1990, the first year of the tour, then known as the Ben Hogan Tour.[2] It is one of four original tournaments on the current schedule.[3] Future notable names in the top 20 that first year were Tom Lehman, John Daly, Jeff Maggert, and Stephen Ames;[4] David Toms made the cut.

Golf has been played on the site since the 1920s, originally named Idaho Country Club. Established in 1940, Hillcrest Country Club has been the only home of the tournament since its inception. The Boise Open was a 54-hole tournament for its first six years,[4][5] a fourth round was added in 1996.[6]

This stop in southwestern Idaho consistently offers one of the top purses on the Korn Ferry Tour; it was $1.5 million in 2023, with a winner's share of $270,000. The first purse in 1990 was $100,000, with a winner's share of $20,000;[4] the first six-figure winner's share went to Tim Clark in 2000.[7]

The 2003 event featured 13-year-old Michelle Wie, the youngest ever to play on the tour;[8] she carded 78-76 and missed the cut by twelve strokes.[9][10]

Chris Tidland shot 264 (−20) to win by four strokes in 2008; Fran Quinn shot 270 (−14) in 2009 with a birdie on the final hole to edge third round leader Blake Adams by a single stroke.[11] Hunter Haas shot 263 (−21) in 2010 to win by one stroke over Daniel Summerhays.[12]

At the 2015 edition, retired Army Corporal Chad Pfeifer became the first veteran amputee to play on the Web.com Tour, but missed the cut. He lost his left leg in a 2007 explosion and earned entry through a sponsor exemption.

Albertsons, a major supermarket retailer in the western U.S., has been the title sponsor since 2002. The grocery chain was founded 87 years ago by Joe Albertson in 1939 in Boise, and the company was headquartered in the city until 2006, when it was acquired by Supervalu of Eden Prairie, Minnesota. The company has committed to sponsorship of the tournament through 2016.[13]

Course layout

[edit]

Course in 2014[1]

Hole 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Out 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 In Total
Yards 409 523 561 182 418 414 392 176 407 3,482 359 462 408 216 438 293 535 134 399 3,244 6,726
Par 4 5 5 3 4 4 4 3 4 36 4 4 4 3 4 4 5 3 4 35 71
  • The nines are switched for the members, who play the original nine holes (north) first.
  • The elevation at the clubhouse is approximately 2,800 feet (855 m) above sea level.[14]

Winners

[edit]
Korn Ferry Tour (Current Finals system) 2023–2024
Korn Ferry Tour (Old Finals system) 2016–2019, 2021–2022
Korn Ferry Tour (Championship Series) 2020
Korn Ferry Tour (Regular) 1990–2015, 2025–
# Year Winner Score To par Margin of
victory
Runner(s)-up
Albertsons Boise Open
36th 2025 👁 Mexico
Emilio González
262 −22 1 stroke 👁 United States
Jeffrey Kang
35th 2024 👁 United States
Matt McCarty
263 −21 2 strokes 👁 United States
William Mouw
👁 United States
Kevin Roy
34th 2023 👁 United States
Chan Kim
256 −28 2 strokes 👁 United States
David Kocher
33rd 2022 👁 United States
Will Gordon
263 −21 Playoff 👁 South Africa
M. J. Daffue
👁 United States
Philip Knowles
32nd 2021 👁 United States
Greyson Sigg
265 −19 1 stroke 👁 England
Aaron Rai
👁 United States
J. J. Spaun
31st 2020 👁 Germany
Stephan Jäger
262 −22 2 strokes 👁 United States
Dan McCarthy
👁 United States
Brandon Wu
30th 2019 👁 United States
Matthew NeSmith
265 −19 1 stroke 👁 United States
Brandon Hagy
👁 Norway
Viktor Hovland
29th 2018 👁 South Korea
Bae Sang-moon
265 −19 1 stroke 👁 United States
Anders Albertson
👁 United States
Adam Schenk
👁 Canada
Roger Sloan
28th 2017 👁 United States
Chesson Hadley
268 −16 1 stroke 👁 United States
Ted Potter Jr.
👁 United States
Jonathan Randolph
27th 2016 👁 United States
Michael Thompson
261 −23 3 strokes 👁 Argentina
Miguel Ángel Carballo
26th 2015 👁 United States
Martin Piller
256 −28 6 strokes 👁 Argentina
Jorge Fernández-Valdés
25th 2014 👁 United States
Steve Wheatcroft
260 −24 Playoff 👁 New Zealand
Steven Alker
24th 2013 👁 United States
Kevin Tway
261 −23 Playoff 👁 United States
Spencer Levin
23rd 2012 👁 United States
Luke Guthrie
262 −22 4 strokes 👁 Australia
Scott Gardiner
👁 United States
Richard H. Lee
👁 United States
Michael Putnam
👁 United States
Steve Wheatcroft
22nd 2011 👁 United States
Jason Kokrak
266 −18 2 strokes 👁 United States
John Mallinger
21st 2010 👁 United States
Hunter Haas
263 −21 1 stroke 👁 United States
Daniel Summerhays
20th 2009 👁 United States
Fran Quinn
270 −14 1 stroke 👁 United States
Blake Adams
19th 2008 👁 United States
Chris Tidland
264 −20 4 strokes 👁 United States
Scott Piercy
18th 2007 👁 Canada
Jon Mills
263 −21 1 stroke 👁 United States
D. A. Points
17th 2006 👁 United States
Kevin Stadler
264 −20 1 stroke 👁 United States
Glen Day
16th 2005 👁 Australia
Greg Chalmers
269 −15 Playoff 👁 United States
Danny Ellis
15th 2004 👁 United States
Scott Gump
270 −14 2 strokes 👁 New Zealand
Michael Long
👁 United States
Jimmy Walker
14th 2003 👁 United States
Roger Tambellini
267 −17 6 strokes 👁 United States
Tripp Isenhour
👁 United States
Charles Warren
13th 2002 👁 United States
Jason Gore
273 −11 2 strokes 👁 United States
Emlyn Aubrey
👁 United States
Barry Cheesman
Buy.com Boise Open
12th 2001 👁 New Zealand
Michael Long
270 −14 1 stroke 👁 South Africa
Tjaart van der Walt
11th 2000 👁 South Africa
Tim Clark
269 −15 6 strokes 👁 United States
Patrick Burke
👁 United States
Steve Haskins
Nike Boise Open
10th 1999 👁 United States
Carl Paulson
266 −18 4 strokes 👁 United States
Joel Edwards
👁 United States
Michael Muehr
9th 1998 👁 United States
Mike Sposa
265 −19 2 strokes 👁 United States
Notah Begay III
👁 United States
Dennis Paulson
8th 1997 👁 Malaysia
Iain Steel
267 −17 3 strokes 👁 United States
Carl Paulson
7th 1996 👁 United States
Matt Gogel
270 −14 1 stroke 👁 United States
David Berganio Jr.
👁 United States
Stewart Cink
👁 United States
Brett Quigley
6th 1995 👁 United States
Frank Lickliter
200 −13 1 stroke 👁 United States
Kevin Burton
👁 United States
Craig Kanada
5th 1994 👁 United States
Keith Fergus
198 −15 Playoff 👁 United States
Bill Murchison
4th 1993 👁 United States
Tommy Moore
199 −14 3 strokes 👁 United States
Olin Browne
Ben Hogan Boise Open
3rd 1992 👁 United States
Jaime Gomez
202 −11 1 stroke 👁 United States
Sean Murphy
2nd 1991 👁 United States
Russell Beiersdorf
202 −11 Playoff 👁 United States
Rich Parker
1st 1990 👁 United States
Ricky Smallridge
199 −14 3 strokes 👁 United States
David Hobby
👁 United States
Robert Thompson
👁 United States
Greg Whisman

Source:[15]

Bolded golfers graduated to the PGA Tour via the Korn Ferry Tour regular-season money list, in years that the event was not part of the old Korn Ferry Tour Finals system. In years that the event was part of that system, all winners and runners-up earned PGA Tour cards.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "2014 Albertons Boise Open – Course". PGA Tour. Retrieved July 17, 2014.
  2. ^ "Smallridge wins Hogan". Lewiston Morning Tribune. Idaho. September 24, 1990. p. 2B.
  3. ^ "Tour celebrates 20th year, will play 29 official events". PGA Tour. December 3, 2008. Archived from the original on October 3, 2012. Retrieved September 10, 2012.
  4. ^ a b c "Ben Hogan Boise Open results". Ocala Star-Banner. Florida. September 24, 1990. p. 2C. Retrieved September 10, 2012.
  5. ^ "Nike Boise Open". Eugene Register-Guard. Oregon. September 25, 1995. p. 4B.
  6. ^ "Nike Boise Open". Eugene Register-Guard. Oregon. September 23, 1996. p. 4B.
  7. ^ "Buy.com Tour at Boise". Eugene Register-Guard. Oregon. September 18, 2000. p. 6B.
  8. ^ Prise, Kevin (February 4, 2016). "Jaramillo the second-youngest to compete". PGA Tour.
  9. ^ "Wie not discouraged by missed cut". Eugene Register-Guard. Oregon. Associated Press. September 20, 2003. p. D3.
  10. ^ "Wie out in Boise, but stays upbeat". Lewiston Morning Tribune. Idaho. Associated Press. September 20, 2003. p. 2B.
  11. ^ "New England golfer wins Boise Open by taking lead on final hole". Idaho Statesman. Boise. September 21, 2009.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
  12. ^ "Hunter Haas wins Boise Open". ESPN. Associated Press. September 19, 2010. Retrieved September 10, 2012.
  13. ^ "Albertsons Boise Open presented by Kraft extended through 2016". PGA Tour. April 22, 2013. Retrieved July 19, 2013.
  14. ^ "Hillcrest Country Club, Boise, Idaho". Acme Mapper. Retrieved September 14, 2012.
  15. ^ "Albertsons Boise Open – Past Winners". PGA Tour. Retrieved July 17, 2014.

External links

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43°35′10″N 116°14′20″W / 43.586°N 116.239°W / 43.586; -116.239