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Allan wins 2025 Boeing Classic at The Club at Snoqualmie Ridge

Published 10:14 am Tuesday, August 19, 2025

Steve Allan won the 2025 Boeing Classic by one stroke over second round leader Stewart Cink at Snoqualmie Ridge. Photo by Jim Nicholson
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Steve Allan won the 2025 Boeing Classic by one stroke over second round leader Stewart Cink at Snoqualmie Ridge. Photo by Jim Nicholson

Steve Allan won the 2025 Boeing Classic by one stroke over second round leader Stewart Cink at Snoqualmie Ridge. Photo by Jim Nicholson
Steve Allan won the 2025 Boeing Classic by one stroke over second round leader Stewart Cink at Snoqualmie Ridge. Photo by Jim Nicholson
Local favorite and Seattle native Freddy Couples on the 1st tee at the Boeing Classic at Snoqualmie Ridge golf course. Photo by Jim Nicholson
Boeing 777 flyover to start the Boeing Classic on Aug. 8. Photo by Jim Nicholson

Steve Allan won the 2025 Boeing Classic — held Aug. 8-10 — by one stroke over second round leader Stewart Cink at The Club at Snoqualmie Ridge.

Allan, who started the day four strokes behind Cink, posted a bogey-free final round 65, with seven birdies. Allan’s bunker shot on 18 led to his final birdie and ultimately the title. This was Allan’s third PGA Tour Champions victory of the year. With Allan in the clubhouse at -15, Cink had a chance on #18 trailing by one stroke, but found the bunker on his second shot and carded a par.

The second-round leader has gone on to win the Boeing Classic just twice in the last seven years, and ten times in the previous 20 tournaments.

Ernie Els and Darren Clarke tied for third place at -13. Seattle’s own Hall of Famer Fred Couples finished T47 at +1.

The Boeing Classic was co-founded in 2005 by the Seattle Seahawks and Virginia Mason Franciscan Health (VMFH). The two organizations helped bring the golf event – originally named the Boeing Greater Seattle Classic – to the Pacific Northwest. Boeing has been the title sponsor since the tournament’s inception, which continues to be one of the longest-running title sponsorships on the PGA Tour Champions circuit. It has been contested at The Club at Snoqualmie Ridge each year. The tournament is operated by Virginia Mason Franciscan Health and benefits the Benaroya Research Institute and The First Tee of Greater Seattle.

The Club at Snoqualmie Ridge, which was designed by Jack Nicklaus and originally opened in 1999, was voted the “Most Beautiful Clubhouse” in Washington state by Architectural Digest in 2018 for its “craftsman-inspired decor…and expansive windows.” The Club at Snoqualmie Ridge’s par-72, 7,264-yard championship layout sits at the base of the Cascade Mountains and is renowned for its stunning terrain and amazing wildlife, which includes an eagle sanctuary on the 14th hole.