Location | Reno, Nevada, U.S. |
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Established | 1999, 18 years ago |
Course(s) | Montrêux Golf and Country Club |
Par | 72 |
Length | 7,472 yards (6,832 m) |
Tour(s) |
PGA Tour (alternate event) |
Format | Modified Stableford |
Prize fund | $3.2 million |
Month played | August |
Aggregate | 267 Vaughn Taylor (2005) 49 points Geoff Ogilvy (2014) |
To par | −21 Vaughn Taylor (2005) |
Greg Chalmers |
The Barracuda Championship is a professional golf tournament on the PGA Tour in western Nevada. Founded 18 years ago in 1999 as the Reno–Tahoe Open, it is an alternate event played annually in August at the Montrêux Golf and Country Club, located midway between Reno and Lake Tahoe. Opened in 1997, the par-72 course was designed by Jack Nicklaus and plays at 7,472 yards (6,832 m); its average elevation is 5,600 feet (1,710 m) above sea level with an elevation change of 800 feet (240 m).
Until 2010, the tournament was played 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 British Open in mid-July. This lasted only one year, as it returned to early August in 2011, opposite the WGC-Bridgestone.
The purse in 2015 was $3.1 million, with a winner's share of $558,000. 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.