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The Barracuda Championship is a professional golf tournament on the PGA Tour in California. Founded in 1999, it is an alternate event played annually in August. Previously held at Montrêux Golf and Country Club outside Reno, Nevada, the tournament moved west in 2020 to Tahoe Mountain Club's Old Greenwood course in nearby Truckee, California.

Barracuda Championship
Tournament information
LocationTruckee, California
Established1999
Course(s)Tahoe Mountain Club
(Old Greenwood Course)
Par71
Length7,480 yards (6,840 m)
Tour(s)PGA Tour (alternate event)
European Tour
FormatModified Stableford
Prize fundUS$4,000,000
Month playedJuly
Tournament record score
Aggregate267 Vaughn Taylor (2005)
To par−21 as above
Score50 points Erik van Rooyen (2021)
Current champion
United States Akshay Bhatia
Location map
Tahoe Mountain Club is located in the United States
Tahoe Mountain Club
Tahoe Mountain Club
Location in the United States
Tahoe Mountain Club is located in California
Tahoe Mountain Club
Tahoe Mountain Club
Location in California

Until 2010, it was held in August, the same week as the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational. For its first three years, it had a full field of 156 players, while the World Golf Championship event had a field of about 40. When the WGC event expanded to about 80 players in 2002, the field for the Reno–Tahoe Open was reduced to 132 players. With the launch of the FedEx Cup in 2007, the tournament and the WGC event were moved from late to early August. In 2010 the Reno–Tahoe Open was played several weeks earlier, opposite the Open Championship in mid-July. This lasted only one year, as it returned to early August in 2011, opposite the WGC-Bridgestone.

The purse in 2022 was $3.7 million, with a winner's share of $666,000. The Reno–Tahoe Open gained its first title sponsor for the 2008 event, the Legends at Sparks Marina. After two years the name was returned to "Reno–Tahoe Open" in 2010. Barracuda Networks became the title sponsor in 2014.[1]

The Reno–Tahoe Open is an alternate event, which means the winner does not earn a Masters Tournament invitation. The winner still earns 24 OWGR points, 300 FedEx Cup points, a two-year tour exemption, and entry to the PGA Championship.

After flooding in West Virginia cancelled the Greenbrier Classic in 2016, the Reno–Tahoe Open was given the honor of awarding entry to the Open Championship to the leading non-exempt player.

In August 2021, it was announced that from 2022 onward, the event would become a co-sanctioned event with the European Tour.[2]

Highlights

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  • 1999: Notah Begay III wins the inaugural event.
  • 2006: Yūsaku Miyazato becomes only the second player in PGA tour history to score two holes-in-one in the same round.[3]
  • 2011: Scott Piercy wins in the final year as a stroke play event.
  • 2016: Greg Chalmers eagles the 18th hole after Gary Woodland made bogey, earning entry into the Open Championship. Chalmers was making his 386th PGA Tour start, the most among active golfers without a win, and only had veteran member status on the PGA Tour.
  • 2017: In his 290th PGA Tour start, Chris Stroud won after planning to retire at season's end.
  • 2019: In just his sixth start as a professional, Collin Morikawa birdies the last three holes to win.

Modified Stableford

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Beginning in 2012, the tournament has used the Modified Stableford scoring system, last used in a PGA Tour event at the 2006 International in Colorado.

Points Strokes taken in relation to par
+8 Double eagle (3 strokes under par)
+5 Eagle (2 strokes under par)
+2 Birdie (1 stroke under par)
0 Par
−1 Bogey (1 stroke over par)
−3 Double bogey or worse (2 strokes or more over par)

This points scale encourages aggressive play, since the reward for scoring under par is higher than the penalty for scoring over par.

Winners

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Year Tour(s)[a] Winner Score[b] To par Margin of
victory
Runner(s)-up Purse
(US$)
Winner's
share ($)
Barracuda Championship
2024 EUR, PGAT     4,000,000 720,000
2023 EUR, PGAT United States  Akshay Bhatia 40 points Playoff United States  Patrick Rodgers 3,800,000 684,000
2022 EUR, PGAT United States  Chez Reavie 43 points 1 point Sweden  Alex Norén 3,700,000 666,000
2021 PGAT South Africa  Erik van Rooyen 50 points 5 points United States  Andrew Putnam 3,500,000 630,000
2020 PGAT United States  Richy Werenski 39 points 1 point United States  Troy Merritt 3,500,000 630,000
2019 PGAT United States  Collin Morikawa 47 points 3 points United States  Troy Merritt 3,500,000 630,000
2018 PGAT United States  Andrew Putnam 47 points 4 points United States  Chad Campbell 3,400,000 612,000
2017 PGAT United States  Chris Stroud 44 points Playoff England  Greg Owen
United States  Richy Werenski
3,300,000 594,000
2016 PGAT Australia  Greg Chalmers 43 points 6 points United States  Gary Woodland 3,200,000 576,000
2015 PGAT United States  J. J. Henry (2) 47 points Playoff United States  Kyle Reifers 3,100,000 558,000
2014 PGAT Australia  Geoff Ogilvy 49 points 5 points United States  Justin Hicks 3,000,000 540,000
Reno–Tahoe Open
2013 PGAT United States  Gary Woodland 44 points 9 points United States  Jonathan Byrd
Argentina  Andrés Romero
3,000,000 540,000
2012 PGAT United States  J. J. Henry 43 points 1 point Brazil  Alexandre Rocha 3,000,000 540,000
2011 PGAT United States  Scott Piercy 273 −15 1 stroke United States  Pat Perez 3,000,000 540,000
2010 PGAT United States  Matt Bettencourt 277 −11 1 stroke United States  Bob Heintz 3,000,000 540,000
Legends Reno–Tahoe Open
2009 PGAT United States  John Rollins 271 −17 3 strokes Scotland  Martin Laird
United States  Jeff Quinney
3,000,000 540,000
2008 PGAT United States  Parker McLachlin 270 −18 7 strokes England  Brian Davis
United States  John Rollins
3,000,000 540,000
Reno–Tahoe Open
2007 PGAT United States  Steve Flesch 273 −15 5 strokes United States  Kevin Stadler
United States  Charles Warren
3,000,000 540,000
2006 PGAT United States  Will MacKenzie 268 −20 1 stroke United States  Bob Estes 3,000,000 540,000
2005 PGAT United States  Vaughn Taylor (2) 267 −21 3 strokes United States  Jonathan Kaye 3,000,000 540,000
2004 PGAT United States  Vaughn Taylor 278 −10 Playoff Australia  Stephen Allan
United States  Hunter Mahan
United States  Scott McCarron
3,000,000 540,000
2003 PGAT United States  Kirk Triplett 271 −17 3 strokes United States  Tim Herron 3,000,000 540,000
2002 PGAT United States  Chris Riley 271 −17 Playoff United States  Jonathan Kaye 3,000,000 540,000
2001 PGAT United States  John Cook 271 −17 1 stroke United States  Jerry Kelly 3,000,000 540,000
2000 PGAT United States  Scott Verplank 275 −13 Playoff France  Jean van de Velde 3,000,000 540,000
1999 PGAT United States  Notah Begay III 274 −14 3 strokes United States  Chris Perry
United States  David Toms
2,750,000 495,000

Note: Green highlight indicates scoring records.
Sources:[4][5]

Notes

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  1. ^ EUR − European Tour; PGAT − PGA Tour.
  2. ^ From 2012, the event was played using the modified stableford system.

References

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  1. ^ "Barracuda becomes title sponsor for Reno-Tahoe". PGA Tour. July 9, 2014. Archived from the original on July 29, 2014. Retrieved July 22, 2014.
  2. ^ "PGA Tour and European Tour announce details of historic Strategic Alliance". PGA Tour. August 3, 2021. Archived from the original on August 3, 2021. Retrieved August 3, 2021.
  3. ^ Staats, Wayne (October 29, 2018). "These are the only three golfers to make two holes-in-one in same PGA Tour round". PGA of America. Archived from the original on February 26, 2019. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
  4. ^ Barracuda Championship – Winners Archived 2014-07-29 at the Wayback Machine – at pgatour.com
  5. ^ Reno–Tahoe Open – Winners Archived 2014-08-08 at the Wayback Machine – at golfobserver.com (1999–2009)
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39°20′42″N 120°08′35″W / 39.345°N 120.143°W / 39.345; -120.143