Transitions Championship

Transitions Championship
Tournament information
Location Palm Harbor, Florida
Established 2000
Course(s) Innisbrook
Par 71
Length 7,340 yards
Tour(s) PGA Tour
Format Stroke play
Prize fund $5,500,000
Month played March
Tournament record score
Aggregate 266 Vijay Singh (2004)
To par −18 Vijay Singh (2004)
Current champion
Gary Woodland

The Transitions Championship is a men's professional golf tournament on the PGA Tour, and is played annually on the Copperhead Course at Innisbrook Resort and Golf Club in Palm Harbor, Florida.

Contents

History

The tournament was founded in 2000 as the Tampa Bay Classic. It was originally an alternate event played the same week as the Presidents Cup in 2000, and the same week as the WGC-American Express Championship in 2002. It was supposed to be played the same week as the WGC-American Express Championship on September 13–16, 2001. However, the September 11 attacks forced the cancellations of both tournaments.[1]

From 2003 to 2006, the Tampa Bay event had a slot in the schedule to itself as the last full-field event before the Tour Championship. The Chrysler Corporation was the title sponsor.

Since 2007, the Tampa Bay event has been played in March. For a time the tournament was without a title sponsor, leading to speculation on its fate beyond 2007. Then, on January 24, 2007, tournament officials and the PGA Tour announced a six-year sponsorship agreement with the PODS of Clearwater, Florida.[2] However, the company chose to exercise an option to withdraw as title sponsor after the 2008 event, and tournament officials searched to find a replacement.[3] On June 4, 2008, Transitions Optical, Inc., the photochromic lens manufacturer headquartered locally in Largo, Florida, was announced as the new title sponsor.[4]

The players with the most wins in the event are Retief Goosen (2003 and 2009), and K. J. Choi (2002 and 2006). Goosen is also the tournament's leading money winner, with over $2,000,000 in earnings at the event.

The tournament record was set by Vijay Singh in 2004 with a −18 winning total of 266.

Winners

Date Winner Country Score 1st Prize ($) Purse ($)
Transitions Championship
Mar 20, 2011 Gary Woodland  United States 269 (−15) 990,000 5,500,000
Mar 21, 2010 Jim Furyk  United States 271 (−13) 972,000 5,400,000
Mar 22, 2009 Retief Goosen  South Africa 276 (−8) 972,000 5,400,000
PODS Championship
Mar 9, 2008 Sean O'Hair  United States 280 (−4) 954,000 5,300,000
Mar 11, 2007 Mark Calcavecchia  United States 274 (−10) 954,000 5,300,000
Chrysler Championship
Oct 29, 2006 K. J. Choi  South Korea 271 (−13) 954,000 5,300,000
Oct 30, 2005 Carl Pettersson  Sweden 275 (−9) 954,000 5,300,000
Oct 31, 2004 Vijay Singh  Fiji 266 (−18) 900,000 5,000,000
Nov 2, 2003 Retief Goosen  South Africa 272 (−12) 864,000 4,800,000
Tampa Bay Classic presented by Buick
Sep 22, 2002 K. J. Choi  South Korea 267 (−17) 468,000 2,600,000
Tampa Bay Classic
Sep 16, 2001 Canceled due to the September 11 attacks
Oct 22, 2000 John Huston  United States 271 (−13) 432,000 2,400,000

Note: Green highlight indicates scoring records.

Multiple winners

Two players have won this tournament more than once through 2011.

References

External links