By Kevin Casey
Every corner of competitive golf has its own proving ground – a place where reputations are made, friendships are formed, and players begin to understand what it means to represent something bigger than themselves. In the Northeast and Eastern Canada, that proving ground has long been the Williamson Cup: a two-day, 36-hole team championship that asks elite juniors to do two things at once – post low numbers and represent a region.
The Williamson Cup is one of North America’s premier junior golf team competitions – a unique blend of quality golf, tradition, and camaraderie that has served as a formative experience for aspiring champion golfers for more than six decades.
The tournament was founded in 1964 by A. Fred Williamson, head of the MGA’s junior committee, (pictured above at the inaugural event) to honor his father, a founder of Winged Foot Golf Club and a long-time USGA Executive Committee member. Immediately, the Cup became more than “just another junior.”
Winged Foot hosted the inaugural Williamson Cup, which was called the Inter-City Junior Team Match at first, with four charter associations: the MGA, the Golf Association of Philadelphia, Washington Metropolitan Golf Association, and the Buffalo District Golf Association. In those early years, the event became a fixture on summer calendars and quickly gathered the attention of golf organizations from Maryland to Canada.
Over time, it has become an annual unofficial summit meeting of regional associations – the kind of event where juniors learn that tradition isn’t something you read about, but something you inherit, experience, and are expected to uphold.
What sets the Williamson Cup apart is not just its competitive format – typically a two-day, 36-hole stroke-play event with teams of four counting the best three scores each round – but its formal embrace of golf’s etiquette and social values. From the earliest days, contestants were expected to maintain gentlemanly conduct, adhere to proper dress, and demonstrate graciousness on and off the course.
The Williamson Cup has become a symbol of regional pride. Organizations like the MGA, Western Pennsylvania, Golf Québec, and Golf Ontario are among the longest-standing participants, representing a wide range of North American golf talent.
Throughout its history, the Williamson Cup has rotated among host venues throughout the Northeast and Canada, offering players exposure to some of golf’s most classic courses, including Maryland’s Columbia Country Club, Ontario’s Lookout Point Country Club, New York’s Sleepy Hollow Country Club and Oak Hill Country Club, and Pennsylvania’s Saucon Valley Country Club. The MGA will host the 2026 Williamson Cup at New Jersey’s venerable Knickerbocker Country Club this August (see story on Page 18).
Fred Williamson envisioned the Cup as a “two-day baptism of life away from home,” where junior golfers could test themselves against fierce competition while gaining confidence and lifelong memories. Hundreds of young players (among them current PGA Tour stars Cameron Young, Chris Gotterup, and Denny McCarthy) have competed under the Cup’s banner, many going on to successful careers in amateur and professional golf.
For example, Billy Ziobro was a member of the victorious MGA squad at Maryland’s Chevy Chase Club in 1965, the Cup’s second year. After a successful career as an amateur champion, PGA Tour professional, and resort professional and manager, Ziobro remembers – especially – Fred Williamson.
The Williamson Cup thrives because it provides junior golfers another layer of experience that they may not otherwise receive: the joy – and pressure – of being counted on by teammates and the lasting memory that your best golf sometimes arrives when you play for something greater than yourself.