1928 PGA Championship

1928 PGA Championship
Tournament information
DatesOctober 1–6, 1928
LocationLutherville, Maryland
Course(s)Baltimore Country Club
Five Farms (East) Course
Organized byPGA of America
Tour(s)PGA Tour
FormatMatch play - 5 rounds
Statistics
Par70[1]
Field63 players,[1]
32 to match play
Cut160 (+20)
Prize fund$10,400[2]
Champion
United States Leo Diegel
def. United States Al Espinosa, 6 and 5
← 1927
1929 →
Baltimore CC is located in the United States
Baltimore CC
Baltimore CC
Baltimore CC is located in Maryland
Baltimore CC
Baltimore CC

The 1928 PGA Championship was the 11th PGA Championship, held October 1–6 at the Five Farms Course of the Baltimore Country Club in Lutherville, Maryland, north of Baltimore. Then a match play championship, Leo Diegel defeated Al Espinosa 6 and 5 in the finals to win the first of his two consecutive titles.[3]

Prior to the finals, Diegel defeated both Walter Hagen and Gene Sarazen, the winners of the previous seven PGA Championships, in the two preceding matches. He prevailed 2 and 1 over nemesis Hagen in the quarterfinals[4] and 9 and 8 over Sarazen in the semifinals.[3][5] Diegel had lost to Hagen in the 1925 quarterfinals (40 holes) and the 1926 finals.

Five-time champion Hagen had won 22 consecutive matches and four straight titles at the PGA Championship. Prior to his loss to Diegel in the quarterfinals, his match record in the 1920s was 32–1 (.970), falling only to Sarazen in 38 holes in the 1923 finals.

The Five Farms Course, now the East Course, was designed by A. W. Tillinghast and opened two years earlier in September 1926.[6]

Diegel continued the tradition of repeat champions and successfully defended his title in 1929.

  1. ^ a b Vosburgh, F.G. (October 2, 1928). "Al Espinosa heads field in pro meet". Milwaukee Sentinel. Associated Press. p. 11.
  2. ^ "Tournament Info for: 1928 PGA Championship". PGA of America. Archived from the original on October 23, 2006. Retrieved May 11, 2013.
  3. ^ a b Rice, Lester (October 7, 1928). "Diegel cinches pro golf title". Milwaukee Sentinel. United Service Correspondence. p. 1-sec 3.
  4. ^ Vosbrough, F.G. (October 5, 1928). "Diegel beats Walter Hagen in pro event". Milwaukee Sentinel. Associated Press. p. 15.
  5. ^ Vosburgh, F.G. (October 6, 1928). "Espinosa and Diegel survive". Milwaukee Sentinel. Associated Press. p. 13.
  6. ^ "Legacy". Baltimore Country Club. Retrieved May 11, 2013.