1926 PGA Championship

1926 PGA Championship
Tournament information
DatesSeptember 20–25, 1926
LocationEast Meadow, New York
Course(s)Salisbury Golf Club
Organized byPGA of America
Tour(s)PGA Tour
FormatMatch play - 5 rounds
Statistics
Par72
Field65 players,[2]
32 to match play
Cut155 (+11), playoff
Prize fund$11,100[1]
Champion
United States Walter Hagen
def. Leo Diegel, 5 and 3
← 1925
1927 →
Salisbury GC is located in the United States
Salisbury GC
Salisbury GC
Salisbury GC is located in New York
Salisbury GC
Salisbury GC

The 1926 PGA Championship was the ninth PGA Championship, held September 20–25 at Salisbury Golf Club on Long Island in East Meadow, New York. Then a match play championship, Walter Hagen defeated Leo Diegel 5 and 3 in the finals to win his third consecutive PGA Championship,[3] his fourth overall, and the eighth of his eleven major titles.

The victory ran Hagen's match record at the PGA Championship in the 1920s to 25–1 (.962), falling only to Gene Sarazen in 38 holes in the 1923 finals. With his third consecutive title, his winning streak stood at fifteen matches. Hagen was also the medalist in the 36-hole qualifier on Monday at 140 (−4).[2] Through 2013, he remains the only winner of three consecutive PGA Championships.

Hagen won the following year in 1927 for his fourth consecutive title, but Diegel stopped the streak in 1928 and repeated in 1929. In both years, Diegel defeated both Hagen and Gene Sarazen, the only winners of the title from 1921 through 1927, in the quarterfinals and semifinals. Hagen had previously stopped Diegel in the 1925 quarterfinals in 40 holes.

Devereux Emmet designed the course in 1914. The 90-hole Salisbury Golf Club ran into financial difficulty during the 1930s and its land was acquired by Nassau County. Originally "Nassau County Park at Salisbury" in 1944, it was renamed Eisenhower Park in 1969. The 1926 venue presently exists as the Red Course.

  1. ^ "Tournament Info for: 1926 PGA Championship". PGA of America. Archived from the original on October 23, 2006. Retrieved May 11, 2013.
  2. ^ a b Rice, Lester (September 21, 1926). "Hagen with 140 tops pro golf qualifying rounds". Milwaukee Sentinel. Universal Service. p. 12.
  3. ^ Vischer, Peter (September 26, 1926). "Walter Hagen beats Diegel for pro title". Miami Daily News. New York World News Service. p. 15.[dead link]