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Doral Open

The Doral Open was a professional golf tournament on the PGA Tour in the southeastern United States. It was played annually for 45 seasons, from 1962 to 2006, on the "Blue Monster" course at the Doral Golf Resort & Spa in Doral, Florida, a suburb west of Miami.

Ford Championship at Doral
Tournament information
LocationDoral, Florida
Established1962
Course(s)Doral Golf Resort & Spa
Par72
Length7,481 yards (6,841 m)[1]
Tour(s)PGA Tour
FormatStroke play
Prize fundUS$5,500,000
Month playedMarch
Final year2006
Tournament record score
Aggregate264 Tiger Woods (2005)
To par−24 as above
Final champion
Tiger Woods
Location map
Doral Golf Resort & Spa
Location in the United States
Doral Golf Resort & Spa
Location in Florida

The introduction of the FedEx Cup in 2007 caused a change in the PGA Tour schedule. The WGC-CA Championship, a World Golf Championship event co-sponsored by the PGA Tour, moved from October to March and took the Doral Open's spot on the schedule. This championship was also held at the Blue Monster course for the next decade; it was renamed the WGC-Cadillac Championship in 2011 and continued at Doral through 2016. The resort was sold in 2012 and became Trump National Doral Miami. The PGA Tour Latinoamérica development tour will host the season-ending Shell Championship in December 2018 on the Golden Palm course to continue the PGA Tour's tradition of hosting at Doral.[2]

History edit

The tournament was played at various points in March, and sometimes in late February. Both the tournament's title and sponsor changed over the years, and included Ford Motor Company, Genuity, Ryder, and Eastern Air Lines. The Doral Golf Resort & Spa was formerly known as the Doral Country Club and was the sister hotel to the famous Doral Hotel on the ocean in Miami Beach, Florida.

The tournament usually attracted one of the strongest fields on the PGA Tour outside of the major championships and the World Golf Championships. The champions at Doral include major winners Jack Nicklaus, Tom Weiskopf, Lee Trevino, Billy Casper, Raymond Floyd, Greg Norman, Hubert Green, Ben Crenshaw, Lanny Wadkins, Tom Kite, Nick Faldo, Ernie Els, Jim Furyk, and Tiger Woods.

In 2005, nine of the top ten players in the official world rankings participated. After an exciting final round duel with then-World Number 4 Phil Mickelson, Tiger Woods won by a shot to regain the number one ranking he had lost six months earlier to Vijay Singh, who finished in a tie for third.[3]

The 2006 Ford Championship at Doral marked the end of the Doral Open tournament and the field again included nine of the top ten in the world rankings. Woods repeated as champion, one-stroke ahead of runners-up Camilo Villegas and David Toms.[1]

The historical broadcaster of the event was CBS Sports. With the PGA Tour's first centralized TV deal in 1999, the Southern Swing, including Doral, was assigned to NBC Sports. NBC covered the event until its conclusion as a regular event, and continued for its ten years as a World Golf Championship.

Tournament highlights edit

  • 1962: Billy Casper down by four shots with eight holes to go, comes back to win the inaugural version of the tournament. He beats Pete Bondeson by one shot.[4]
  • 1964: Billy Casper becomes Doral's first repeat winner. He finishes one shot ahead of Jack Nicklaus.[5]
  • 1965: Doug Sanders, winner the week before at the Pensacola Open, comes out victorious at Doral for the first time. He beats Bruce Devlin by one shot.[6]
  • 1969: Tom Shaw holds on to win his first ever PGA Tour title by one shot over Tommy Aaron in spite of making both a triple bogey and a double bogey during the tournament's final nine holes.[7]
  • 1973: Lee Trevino shoots a first round 64 on his way to a wire to wire victory. He finishes one shot ahead of Bruce Crampton and Tom Weiskopf.[8]
  • 1976: Hubert Green shoots a tournament record 270 for 72 holes on his way to a six-shot win over Mark Hayes and Jack Nicklaus.[9]
  • 1977: Andy Bean takes home his first Doral title on his 24th birthday. He edges David Graham by one shot.[10]
  • 1978: Previously a three-time runner-up at Doral, Tom Weiskopf wins by one shot over Jack Nicklaus in spite of a final round 65 by the Golden Bear that included his holing out three wedge shots during the tournament's closing 18 holes.[11]
  • 1979: Monday morning qualifier Mark McCumber wins by one shot over Bill Rogers.[12]
  • 1980: Doral for the first time ever goes to sudden death to determine the winner. On the second playoff hole, Raymond Floyd chips in from just off the green to beat Jack Nicklaus.[13]
  • 1981: Raymond Floyd becomes the first Doral champion to successfully defend his title. He wins by one shot over Keith Fergus and David Graham.[14]
  • 1986: Andy Bean defeats Hubert Green on the fourth hole of a sudden death playoff to become Doral's first three-time winner.[15]
  • 1988: Ben Crenshaw birdies the 72nd hole to win by one shot over Chip Beck and Mark McCumber.[16]
  • 1990: Greg Norman shoots a final round 62. Then on the first hole of a sudden death playoff with Tim Simpson, Mark Calcavecchia, and Paul Azinger, he chips in for eagle to take home the title.[17]
  • 1993: Greg Norman sets a new Doral record for 72 holes of 265 on his way to four stroke victory over Paul Azinger and Mark McCumber.[18]
  • 1994: John Huston, playing most of the final 18 holes by himself after his player partner Fred Couples withdraws due to injury, wins by three shots over Brad Bryant and Billy Andrade.[19]
  • 1999: Steve Elkington shoots a final round 64 to earn his second win at Doral. He edges Greg Kraft by one shot.[20]
  • 2004: On the first hole of a sudden death playoff with Scott Verplank, Craig Parry wins by holing out a 7-iron from 176 yards.[21]
  • 2006: In spite of bogeying the final two holes, Tiger Woods holds on to win Doral for the second consecutive year. He finishes one shot ahead of David Toms and Camilo Villegas.[22]

Winners edit

Year Winner Score To Par Margin of
victory
Runner(s)-up Winner's
share ($)
Ford Championship at Doral
2006   Tiger Woods (2) 268 −20 1 stroke   David Toms
  Camilo Villegas
990,000
2005   Tiger Woods 264 −24 1 stroke   Phil Mickelson 990,000
2004   Craig Parry 271 −17 Playoff   Scott Verplank 900,000
2003   Scott Hoch 271 −17 Playoff   Jim Furyk 900,000
Genuity Championship
2002   Ernie Els 271 −17 2 strokes   Tiger Woods 846,000
2001   Joe Durant 270 −18 2 strokes   Mike Weir 810,000
Doral-Ryder Open
2000   Jim Furyk 265 −23 2 strokes   Franklin Langham 540,000
1999   Steve Elkington (2) 275 −13 1 stroke   Greg Kraft 540,000
1998   Michael Bradley 278 −10 1 stroke   John Huston
  Billy Mayfair
360,000
1997   Steve Elkington 275 −13 2 strokes   Larry Nelson
  Nick Price
324,000
1996   Greg Norman (3) 269 −19 2 strokes   Michael Bradley
  Vijay Singh
324,000
1995   Nick Faldo 273 −15 1 stroke   Peter Jacobsen
  Greg Norman
270,000
1994   John Huston 274 −14 3 strokes   Billy Andrade
  Brad Bryant
252,000
1993   Greg Norman (2) 265 −23 4 strokes   Paul Azinger
  Mark McCumber
252,000
1992   Raymond Floyd (3) 271 −17 2 strokes   Keith Clearwater
  Fred Couples
252,000
1991   Rocco Mediate 276 −12 Playoff   Curtis Strange 252,000
1990   Greg Norman 273 −15 Playoff   Paul Azinger
  Mark Calcavecchia
  Tim Simpson
252,000
1989   Bill Glasson 275 −13 1 stroke   Fred Couples 234,000
1988   Ben Crenshaw 274 −14 1 stroke   Chip Beck
  Mark McCumber
180,000
1987   Lanny Wadkins 277 −11 3 strokes   Seve Ballesteros
  Tom Kite
  Don Pooley
180,000
Doral-Eastern Open
1986   Andy Bean (3) 276 −12 Playoff   Hubert Green 90,000
1985   Mark McCumber (2) 284 −4 1 stroke   Tom Kite 72,000
1984   Tom Kite 272 −16 2 strokes   Jack Nicklaus 72,000
1983   Gary Koch 271 −17 5 strokes   Ed Fiori 54,000
1982   Andy Bean (2) 278 −10 1 stroke   Scott Hoch
  Mike Nicolette
  Jerry Pate
54,000
1981   Raymond Floyd (2) 273 −15 1 stroke   Keith Fergus
  David Graham
45,000
1980   Raymond Floyd 279 −9 Playoff   Jack Nicklaus 45,000
1979   Mark McCumber 279 −9 1 stroke   Bill Rogers 45,000
1978   Tom Weiskopf 272 −16 1 stroke   Jack Nicklaus 40,000
1977   Andy Bean 277 −11 1 stroke   David Graham 40,000
1976   Hubert Green 270 −18 6 strokes   Mark Hayes
  Jack Nicklaus
40,000
1975   Jack Nicklaus (2) 276 −12 3 strokes   Forrest Fezler
  Bert Yancey
30,000
1974   Buddy Allin 272 −16 1 stroke   Jerry Heard 30,000
1973   Lee Trevino 276 −12 1 stroke   Bruce Crampton
  Tom Weiskopf
30,000
1972   Jack Nicklaus 276 −12 2 strokes   Bob Rosburg
  Lee Trevino
30,000
Doral-Eastern Open Invitational
1971   J. C. Snead 275 −13 1 stroke   Gardner Dickinson 30,000
1970   Mike Hill 279 −9 4 strokes   Jim Colbert 30,000
Doral Open Invitational
1969   Tom Shaw 276 −12 1 stroke   Tommy Aaron 30,000
1968   Gardner Dickinson 275 −13 1 stroke   Tom Weiskopf 20,000
1967   Doug Sanders (2) 275 −9 1 stroke   Harold Henning
  Art Wall Jr.
20,000
1966   Phil Rodgers 278 −10 1 stroke   Jay Dolan
  Kermit Zarley
20,000
1965   Doug Sanders 274 −14 1 stroke   Bruce Devlin 11,000
1964   Billy Casper (2) 277 −11 1 stroke   Jack Nicklaus 7,500
Doral C.C. Open Invitational
1963   Dan Sikes 283 −5 1 stroke   Sam Snead 9,000
1962   Billy Casper 283 −5 1 stroke   Paul Bondeson 9,000

Multiple winners edit

Nine men won this tournament more than once.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Ferguson, Doug (March 6, 2006). "Woods gets exactly what he needs to win again at Doral". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). Associated Press. p. D1.
  2. ^ "PGA Tour Latinoamérica moves season-ending tournament to Doral, Florida". PGA Tour. October 17, 2018.
  3. ^ "Tiger wins a close deal at Doral". Spokesman-Review. (Spokane, Washington). Associated Press. March 7, 2005. p. C4.
  4. ^ Casper wins $9,000
  5. ^ Billy Casper wins 7,500 in Doral Open
  6. ^ Sanders picks up $11,000 at Doral
  7. ^ Likeable Tom Shaw victor in Doral Open golf tourney
  8. ^ Trevino cures putting woes to capture Doral
  9. ^ Hubert Green runs away with Doral
  10. ^ Newcomer Andy Bean winner in Doral golf
  11. ^ Routine Greatness
  12. ^ Rookie Mark McCumber collects victory in Doral-Eastern Open
  13. ^ Ray outshoots Jack at the O.K. Doral
  14. ^ Ray Floyd repeats Doral win
  15. ^ Green's collapse gives Bean Doral win
  16. ^ Crenshaw hangs tough for one-shot win at Doral
  17. ^ Diaz, Jamnie (March 5, 1990). "Norman Beats 3 In Doral Playoff". The New York Times. from the original on February 7, 2018.
  18. ^ Doral field devoured by Norman[permanent dead link]
  19. ^ Huston goes it alone to win Doral Open
  20. ^ Elkington rallies at Doral
  21. ^ Parry holes out to win at Doral[permanent dead link]
  22. ^ Woods defends Doral title

External links edit

  • Doral Open results from 1970 to 2006 – Winners, Finishers, Scores and Earnings
  • Trump National Doral Golf Club

25°48′50″N 80°20′24″W / 25.814°N 80.340°W / 25.814; -80.340

doral, open, professional, golf, tournament, tour, southeastern, united, states, played, annually, seasons, from, 1962, 2006, blue, monster, course, doral, golf, resort, doral, florida, suburb, west, miami, ford, championship, doraltournament, informationlocat. The Doral Open was a professional golf tournament on the PGA Tour in the southeastern United States It was played annually for 45 seasons from 1962 to 2006 on the Blue Monster course at the Doral Golf Resort amp Spa in Doral Florida a suburb west of Miami Ford Championship at DoralTournament informationLocationDoral FloridaEstablished1962Course s Doral Golf Resort amp SpaPar72Length7 481 yards 6 841 m 1 Tour s PGA TourFormatStroke playPrize fundUS 5 500 000Month playedMarchFinal year2006Tournament record scoreAggregate264 Tiger Woods 2005 To par 24 as aboveFinal championTiger WoodsLocation mapDoral Golf Resort amp SpaLocation in the United StatesShow map of the United StatesDoral Golf Resort amp SpaLocation in FloridaShow map of Florida The introduction of the FedEx Cup in 2007 caused a change in the PGA Tour schedule The WGC CA Championship a World Golf Championship event co sponsored by the PGA Tour moved from October to March and took the Doral Open s spot on the schedule This championship was also held at the Blue Monster course for the next decade it was renamed the WGC Cadillac Championship in 2011 and continued at Doral through 2016 The resort was sold in 2012 and became Trump National Doral Miami The PGA Tour Latinoamerica development tour will host the season ending Shell Championship in December 2018 on the Golden Palm course to continue the PGA Tour s tradition of hosting at Doral 2 Contents 1 History 2 Tournament highlights 3 Winners 4 Multiple winners 5 References 6 External linksHistory editThe tournament was played at various points in March and sometimes in late February Both the tournament s title and sponsor changed over the years and included Ford Motor Company Genuity Ryder and Eastern Air Lines The Doral Golf Resort amp Spa was formerly known as the Doral Country Club and was the sister hotel to the famous Doral Hotel on the ocean in Miami Beach Florida The tournament usually attracted one of the strongest fields on the PGA Tour outside of the major championships and the World Golf Championships The champions at Doral include major winners Jack Nicklaus Tom Weiskopf Lee Trevino Billy Casper Raymond Floyd Greg Norman Hubert Green Ben Crenshaw Lanny Wadkins Tom Kite Nick Faldo Ernie Els Jim Furyk and Tiger Woods In 2005 nine of the top ten players in the official world rankings participated After an exciting final round duel with then World Number 4 Phil Mickelson Tiger Woods won by a shot to regain the number one ranking he had lost six months earlier to Vijay Singh who finished in a tie for third 3 The 2006 Ford Championship at Doral marked the end of the Doral Open tournament and the field again included nine of the top ten in the world rankings Woods repeated as champion one stroke ahead of runners up Camilo Villegas and David Toms 1 The historical broadcaster of the event was CBS Sports With the PGA Tour s first centralized TV deal in 1999 the Southern Swing including Doral was assigned to NBC Sports NBC covered the event until its conclusion as a regular event and continued for its ten years as a World Golf Championship Tournament highlights edit1962 Billy Casper down by four shots with eight holes to go comes back to win the inaugural version of the tournament He beats Pete Bondeson by one shot 4 1964 Billy Casper becomes Doral s first repeat winner He finishes one shot ahead of Jack Nicklaus 5 1965 Doug Sanders winner the week before at the Pensacola Open comes out victorious at Doral for the first time He beats Bruce Devlin by one shot 6 1969 Tom Shaw holds on to win his first ever PGA Tour title by one shot over Tommy Aaron in spite of making both a triple bogey and a double bogey during the tournament s final nine holes 7 1973 Lee Trevino shoots a first round 64 on his way to a wire to wire victory He finishes one shot ahead of Bruce Crampton and Tom Weiskopf 8 1976 Hubert Green shoots a tournament record 270 for 72 holes on his way to a six shot win over Mark Hayes and Jack Nicklaus 9 1977 Andy Bean takes home his first Doral title on his 24th birthday He edges David Graham by one shot 10 1978 Previously a three time runner up at Doral Tom Weiskopf wins by one shot over Jack Nicklaus in spite of a final round 65 by the Golden Bear that included his holing out three wedge shots during the tournament s closing 18 holes 11 1979 Monday morning qualifier Mark McCumber wins by one shot over Bill Rogers 12 1980 Doral for the first time ever goes to sudden death to determine the winner On the second playoff hole Raymond Floyd chips in from just off the green to beat Jack Nicklaus 13 1981 Raymond Floyd becomes the first Doral champion to successfully defend his title He wins by one shot over Keith Fergus and David Graham 14 1986 Andy Bean defeats Hubert Green on the fourth hole of a sudden death playoff to become Doral s first three time winner 15 1988 Ben Crenshaw birdies the 72nd hole to win by one shot over Chip Beck and Mark McCumber 16 1990 Greg Norman shoots a final round 62 Then on the first hole of a sudden death playoff with Tim Simpson Mark Calcavecchia and Paul Azinger he chips in for eagle to take home the title 17 1993 Greg Norman sets a new Doral record for 72 holes of 265 on his way to four stroke victory over Paul Azinger and Mark McCumber 18 1994 John Huston playing most of the final 18 holes by himself after his player partner Fred Couples withdraws due to injury wins by three shots over Brad Bryant and Billy Andrade 19 1999 Steve Elkington shoots a final round 64 to earn his second win at Doral He edges Greg Kraft by one shot 20 2004 On the first hole of a sudden death playoff with Scott Verplank Craig Parry wins by holing out a 7 iron from 176 yards 21 2006 In spite of bogeying the final two holes Tiger Woods holds on to win Doral for the second consecutive year He finishes one shot ahead of David Toms and Camilo Villegas 22 Winners editYear Winner Score To Par Margin ofvictory Runner s up Winner sshare Ford Championship at Doral 2006 nbsp Tiger Woods 2 268 20 1 stroke nbsp David Toms nbsp Camilo Villegas 990 000 2005 nbsp Tiger Woods 264 24 1 stroke nbsp Phil Mickelson 990 000 2004 nbsp Craig Parry 271 17 Playoff nbsp Scott Verplank 900 000 2003 nbsp Scott Hoch 271 17 Playoff nbsp Jim Furyk 900 000 Genuity Championship 2002 nbsp Ernie Els 271 17 2 strokes nbsp Tiger Woods 846 000 2001 nbsp Joe Durant 270 18 2 strokes nbsp Mike Weir 810 000 Doral Ryder Open 2000 nbsp Jim Furyk 265 23 2 strokes nbsp Franklin Langham 540 000 1999 nbsp Steve Elkington 2 275 13 1 stroke nbsp Greg Kraft 540 000 1998 nbsp Michael Bradley 278 10 1 stroke nbsp John Huston nbsp Billy Mayfair 360 000 1997 nbsp Steve Elkington 275 13 2 strokes nbsp Larry Nelson nbsp Nick Price 324 000 1996 nbsp Greg Norman 3 269 19 2 strokes nbsp Michael Bradley nbsp Vijay Singh 324 000 1995 nbsp Nick Faldo 273 15 1 stroke nbsp Peter Jacobsen nbsp Greg Norman 270 000 1994 nbsp John Huston 274 14 3 strokes nbsp Billy Andrade nbsp Brad Bryant 252 000 1993 nbsp Greg Norman 2 265 23 4 strokes nbsp Paul Azinger nbsp Mark McCumber 252 000 1992 nbsp Raymond Floyd 3 271 17 2 strokes nbsp Keith Clearwater nbsp Fred Couples 252 000 1991 nbsp Rocco Mediate 276 12 Playoff nbsp Curtis Strange 252 000 1990 nbsp Greg Norman 273 15 Playoff nbsp Paul Azinger nbsp Mark Calcavecchia nbsp Tim Simpson 252 000 1989 nbsp Bill Glasson 275 13 1 stroke nbsp Fred Couples 234 000 1988 nbsp Ben Crenshaw 274 14 1 stroke nbsp Chip Beck nbsp Mark McCumber 180 000 1987 nbsp Lanny Wadkins 277 11 3 strokes nbsp Seve Ballesteros nbsp Tom Kite nbsp Don Pooley 180 000 Doral Eastern Open 1986 nbsp Andy Bean 3 276 12 Playoff nbsp Hubert Green 90 000 1985 nbsp Mark McCumber 2 284 4 1 stroke nbsp Tom Kite 72 000 1984 nbsp Tom Kite 272 16 2 strokes nbsp Jack Nicklaus 72 000 1983 nbsp Gary Koch 271 17 5 strokes nbsp Ed Fiori 54 000 1982 nbsp Andy Bean 2 278 10 1 stroke nbsp Scott Hoch nbsp Mike Nicolette nbsp Jerry Pate 54 000 1981 nbsp Raymond Floyd 2 273 15 1 stroke nbsp Keith Fergus nbsp David Graham 45 000 1980 nbsp Raymond Floyd 279 9 Playoff nbsp Jack Nicklaus 45 000 1979 nbsp Mark McCumber 279 9 1 stroke nbsp Bill Rogers 45 000 1978 nbsp Tom Weiskopf 272 16 1 stroke nbsp Jack Nicklaus 40 000 1977 nbsp Andy Bean 277 11 1 stroke nbsp David Graham 40 000 1976 nbsp Hubert Green 270 18 6 strokes nbsp Mark Hayes nbsp Jack Nicklaus 40 000 1975 nbsp Jack Nicklaus 2 276 12 3 strokes nbsp Forrest Fezler nbsp Bert Yancey 30 000 1974 nbsp Buddy Allin 272 16 1 stroke nbsp Jerry Heard 30 000 1973 nbsp Lee Trevino 276 12 1 stroke nbsp Bruce Crampton nbsp Tom Weiskopf 30 000 1972 nbsp Jack Nicklaus 276 12 2 strokes nbsp Bob Rosburg nbsp Lee Trevino 30 000 Doral Eastern Open Invitational 1971 nbsp J C Snead 275 13 1 stroke nbsp Gardner Dickinson 30 000 1970 nbsp Mike Hill 279 9 4 strokes nbsp Jim Colbert 30 000 Doral Open Invitational 1969 nbsp Tom Shaw 276 12 1 stroke nbsp Tommy Aaron 30 000 1968 nbsp Gardner Dickinson 275 13 1 stroke nbsp Tom Weiskopf 20 000 1967 nbsp Doug Sanders 2 275 9 1 stroke nbsp Harold Henning nbsp Art Wall Jr 20 000 1966 nbsp Phil Rodgers 278 10 1 stroke nbsp Jay Dolan nbsp Kermit Zarley 20 000 1965 nbsp Doug Sanders 274 14 1 stroke nbsp Bruce Devlin 11 000 1964 nbsp Billy Casper 2 277 11 1 stroke nbsp Jack Nicklaus 7 500 Doral C C Open Invitational 1963 nbsp Dan Sikes 283 5 1 stroke nbsp Sam Snead 9 000 1962 nbsp Billy Casper 283 5 1 stroke nbsp Paul Bondeson 9 000Multiple winners editNine men won this tournament more than once 3 wins Andy Bean 1977 1982 1986 Raymond Floyd 1980 1981 1992 Greg Norman 1990 1993 1996 2 wins Billy Casper 1962 1964 Doug Sanders 1965 1967 Jack Nicklaus 1972 1975 Mark McCumber 1979 1985 Steve Elkington 1997 1999 Tiger Woods 2005 2006References edit a b Ferguson Doug March 6 2006 Woods gets exactly what he needs to win again at Doral Eugene Register Guard Oregon Associated Press p D1 PGA Tour Latinoamerica moves season ending tournament to Doral Florida PGA Tour October 17 2018 Tiger wins a close deal at Doral Spokesman Review Spokane Washington Associated Press March 7 2005 p C4 Casper wins 9 000 Billy Casper wins 7 500 in Doral Open Sanders picks up 11 000 at Doral Likeable Tom Shaw victor in Doral Open golf tourney Trevino cures putting woes to capture Doral Hubert Green runs away with Doral Newcomer Andy Bean winner in Doral golf Routine Greatness Rookie Mark McCumber collects victory in Doral Eastern Open Ray outshoots Jack at the O K Doral Ray Floyd repeats Doral win Green s collapse gives Bean Doral win Crenshaw hangs tough for one shot win at Doral Diaz Jamnie March 5 1990 Norman Beats 3 In Doral Playoff The New York Times Archived from the original on February 7 2018 Doral field devoured by Norman permanent dead link Huston goes it alone to win Doral Open Elkington rallies at Doral Parry holes out to win at Doral permanent dead link Woods defends Doral titleExternal links editDoral Open results from 1970 to 2006 Winners Finishers Scores and Earnings PGA Tour s tournament site Trump National Doral Golf Club 25 48 50 N 80 20 24 W 25 814 N 80 340 W 25 814 80 340 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Doral Open amp oldid 1212002544, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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