PGA Tour of Australasia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Australasian Tour)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Short description Template:EngvarB Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Script error: No such module "Infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". The PGA Tour of Australasia, currently titled as the Challenger PGA Tour of Australasia for sponsorship reasons, is a professional golf tour for men, owned and operated by the PGA of Australia.[1] Official events on the tour count for World Golf Ranking points.

History

The tour is recognised as being founded in 1973 when the PGA of Australia instituted an Order of Merit.[2] Despite always including at least one tournament in New Zealand, the tour was known as the PGA Tour of Australia until it adopted its current name in 1991 following the inclusion of three events in Asia.[3]

Most of the leading players on the tour are Australian, with a smaller domestic contingent from New Zealand, but players from many other countries all over the world also participate. The very best Australasian players devote most of their time to the PGA Tour or the European Tour, typically returning home for events after the European and North American seasons end in mid-November, if they choose to play tournaments at home. Therefore, the Australasian Tour is a feeder for the larger tours with its Order of Merit offering a pathway to global tours. Some of the leading events are co-sanctioned by the DP World Tour to encourage higher ranked players to enter and to attract more sponsorship. Players with a background on the tour who have reached the world top 20 since the turn of the Millennium include Jason Day, Steve Elkington, Geoff Ogilvy and Adam Scott. The leading tournaments on the tour include the Australian Open, the Australian PGA Championship and the New Zealand Open.

In November 2005 it was reported by the BBC that the tour was going through difficult times, with the schedule for the 2005/06 summer season reduced to six events, three of them co-sponsored by other tours. The Heineken Classic, which was the richest event in Australasia in 2005, was cancelled in 2006 due to the withdrawal of the sponsor. One factor in the tour's problems is the rise of the nearby Asian Tour. Tour chairman Wayne Grady, and player Mark Hensby both accused Australia's biggest golf icon Greg Norman, who is a US resident, of not doing enough to support the tour. Norman dismissed their comments.[4]

To earn a PGA Tour of Australasia card, one must place in the top 32 of the tour's qualifying schools. To retain a Tour card, a golfer must finish in the top 50 of the Order of Merit. Golfers ranked 51st–70th are given conditional status and those ranked 71st to 100th are given entry to the final stage of Q School. Five-year exemptions are given to Order of Merit winners each season and three-year exemptions should a player win either of the following major events - Australian PGA Championship, Australian Open and New Zealand Open. Entry to The Open Championship is given to the Order of Merit winner.

The top three players on the Order of Merit at the end of the season earn status to play on the European Tour for the following season.[5]

OneAsia Tour

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". In January 2009, it was announced that there would be a new series of events across the Asia-Pacific region, to be organised by the PGA Tour of Australasia in co-operation with China Golf Association, the Japan Golf Tour, the Korean Golf Association and the Korean PGA. The aim of these events would be to raise the profile of professional golf in the region, and compete with the likes of the European Tour. The series would initially consist of six events, three in China, two in Australia and one in South Korea, with plans to expand to at least thirteen in 2010 as events in Japan were added, and over 20 by 2011.[6][7][8]

The introduction of the OneAsia series has not been universally welcomed, with strong opposition coming from the Asian Tour in particular, with support from its members.[9] All of the six events announced for 2009 were existing tournaments, including some already sanctioned by the Asian Tour. One of them, the Pine Valley Beijing Open, was called off a few weeks before it was due to be held. The organisers officially attributed this decision to the state of the course and a clash of dates with The Players Championship on the US-based PGA Tour, but some media commentators dismissed these reasons since the tournament had clashed with the Players Championship the previous year as well, and attributed the cancellation to sponsor discontent with the sanctioning changes.[10]

OneAsia was discussed at the annual meeting of the International Federation of PGA Tours during the 2009 Masters Tournament. The Series would need to become a member of the Federation if it wishes to be able to award Official World Golf Ranking points in its own right. Points are currently available in all events due to those conferred by the PGA Tour of Australasia and the European Tour, as the Chinese and Korean tours are not Federation members. Under present arrangements it is unlikely that any new tournaments launched by OneAsia will receive ranking points, and could prove difficult to attract top players without them. At the meeting OneAsia and the Asian Tour both claimed that the game's powerbrokers understood the strength of their case, but neither received any public endorsements from the others members.[11]

Schedule

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". PGA Tour of Australasia events have mainly been held in Australia, New Zealand and Papua New Guinea although in past seasons, tournaments that have been co-sanctioned with other tours, such as the Johnnie Walker Classic, have been held in several other countries, including India and Thailand.

There was a significant increase in the number of regular season tournaments in 2009, following the integration of the former Von Nida Tour events. Typically, only tournaments that were on the tour schedule prior to the merger were eligible for world ranking points. Beginning in 2012, all events will carry world ranking points, with the "State Based and Regional Tournaments" receiving a minimum of 6 points, compared with 16 points for regular events.[12] The tour's flagship event, the Australian Open, awards a minimum of 32 points to the winner.

The tour's richest events are those that are co-sanctioned by the larger global tours, such as the European Tour.

Australian Triple Crown

In Australia, the Triple Crown referred to winning the three major domestic championships, the Australian Open, the Australian Masters and the Australian PGA Championship. Winning all three titles in the same season was a feat only achieved by Robert Allenby in 2005.[13][14]

Order of Merit winners

Season Winner Points
2024–25 Template:Flagicon Elvis Smylie 1,359
2023–24 Template:Flagicon Kazuma Kobori 841
2022–23 Template:Flagicon David Micheluzzi 1,455
Season Winner Prize money (A$)
2021–22 Template:Flagicon Jediah Morgan 190,409
2020–21 Template:Flagicon Brad Kennedy 302,480
2019 Template:Flagicon Ryan Fox 307,925
2018 Template:Flagicon Jake McLeod 255,326
2017 Template:Flagicon Brett Rumford 313,094
2016 Template:Flagicon Matthew Griffin 239,445
2015 Template:Flagicon Nathan Holman 346,702
2014 Template:Flagicon Greg Chalmers (2) 254,525
2013 Template:Flagicon Adam Scott (2) 538,620
2012 Template:Flagicon Peter Senior (4) 268,292
2011 Template:Flagicon Greg Chalmers 554,285
2010 Template:Flagicon Geoff Ogilvy 459,900
2009 Template:Flagicon Michael Sim 315,088
2008 Template:Flagicon Mark Brown 440,027
2007 Template:Flagicon Craig Parry (3) 442,004
2006 Template:Flagicon Nick O'Hern 583,820
2005 Template:Flagicon Adam Scott 545,429
2004 Template:Flagicon Richard Green 365,017
2003 Template:Flagicon Peter Lonard (2) 604,000
2002 Template:Flagicon Craig Parry (2) 641,789
2000–01 Template:Flagicon Aaron Baddeley 662,125
1999–2000 Template:Flagicon Michael Campbell 936,810
1998–99 Template:Flagicon Jarrod Moseley 330,798
1997–98 Template:Flagicon Andrew Coltart 316,107
1996–97 Template:Flagicon Peter Lonard 484,534
1995 Template:Flagicon Craig Parry 334,804
1994 Template:Flagicon Robert Allenby (2) 199,645
1993 Template:Flagicon Peter Senior (3) 243,504
1992 Template:Flagicon Robert Allenby 309,063
1991 Template:Flagicon Rodger Davis (2) 343,277
1990 Template:Flagicon Rodger Davis 375,026
1989 Template:Flagicon Peter Senior (2) 443,196
1988 Template:Flagicon Greg Norman (6) 303,922
1987 Template:Flagicon Peter Senior 94,492
1986 Template:Flagicon Greg Norman (5) 111,211
1985 Template:Flagicon Ossie Moore 60,786
1984 Template:Flagicon Greg Norman (4) 83,190
1983 Template:Flagicon Greg Norman (3)
1982 Template:Flagicon Bob Shearer (4) 95,250
1981 Template:Flagicon Bob Shearer (3) 56,982
1980 Template:Flagicon Greg Norman (2) 57,701
1979 Template:Flagicon Jack Newton 53,203
1978 Template:Flagicon Greg Norman
1977–78 Template:Flagicon Bob Shearer (2)
1976–77 Template:Flagicon Mark Lye
1975–76 Template:Flagicon Bill Dunk
1974–75 Template:Flagicon Bob Shearer 17,257
1973–74 Template:Flagicon Stewart Ginn

Multiple winners

Rank Player Wins Years won
1 Template:Flagicon Greg Norman 6 1978, 1980, 1983, 1984, 1986, 1988
T2 Template:Flagicon Bob Shearer 4 1974–75, 1977–78, 1981, 1982
Template:Flagicon Peter Senior 1987, 1989, 1993, 2012
4 Template:Flagicon Craig Parry 3 1995, 2002, 2007
T5 Template:Flagicon Robert Allenby 2 1992, 1994
Template:Flagicon Greg Chalmers 2011, 2014
Template:Flagicon Rodger Davis 1990, 1991
Template:Flagicon Peter Lonard 1996–97, 2003
Template:Flagicon Adam Scott 2005, 2013

Awards

Season Player of the Year Rookie of the Year
2024–25 Template:Flagicon Elvis Smylie Template:Flagicon Ryan Peake
2023–24 Template:Flagicon Kazuma Kobori Template:Flagicon Kazuma Kobori
2022–23 Template:Flagicon David Micheluzzi Template:Flagicon Haydn Barron
2021–22 Template:Flagicon Dimitrios Papadatos (2) No award
2020–21 Template:Flagicon Brad Kennedy
2019 Template:Flagicon Ryan Fox
2018 Template:Flagicon Matthew Millar (2)
2017 Template:Flagicon Dimitrios Papadatos
2016 Template:Flagicon Adam Blyth
2015 Template:Flagicon Matthew Millar
2002–2014: No awards
2000–01 Template:Flagicon Aaron Baddeley Template:Flagicon Aaron Baddeley
1999–2000 Template:Flagicon Michael Campbell Template:Flagicon Brett Rumford
1998–99 Template:Flagicon Jarrod Moseley Template:Flagicon Geoff Ogilvy
1996–1997: Unknown
1995 Unknown Template:Flagicon Greg Chalmers
1994 Unknown Template:Flagicon Jack O'Keefe
1993 Template:Flagicon Peter Senior Template:Flagicon Michael Campbell
1992 Template:Flagicon Robert Allenby Template:Flagicon Robert Allenby
1991 Unknown
1990 Unknown Template:Flagicon Gabriel Hjertstedt
1989 Unknown Template:Flagicon Louis Brown
1988 Unknown Template:Flagicon Bradley Hughes

Von Nida Tour

Between 2003 and 2008, the PGA Tour of Australasia ran a second-tier tour known as the Von Nida Tour (named after Australian golfer Norman Von Nida) which featured around ten events with purses in the region of Template:Currency each. The main tour events took place in the Southern Hemisphere summer, that is late one calendar year and early the next, while the Von Nida Tour events mainly took place in the local spring and autumn. However the money list was calculated for calendar years. From 2009, the Von Nida Tour merged into the PGA Tour of Australasia Tour.[15]

Von Nida Tour Order of Merit winners

Season Winner Prize money (A$)
2008 Template:Flagicon Michael Long 27,651
2007 Template:Flagicon Andrew Bonhomme 41,497
2006 Template:Flagicon Marc Leishman 54,679
2005 Template:Flagicon Adam Bland 40,180
2004 Template:Flagicon Kim Felton 46,500
2003 Template:Flagicon Scott Hend 52,007

Earlier second-tier tours

Between 2000 and 2001, the PGA Tour of Australasia ran a second-tier tour known as the Development Tour.[16][17]

Notes

Template:Notelist

References

<templatestyles src="Reflist/styles.css" />

  1. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  2. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  3. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  4. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  5. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  6. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  7. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  8. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  9. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  10. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  11. Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
  12. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  13. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  14. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  15. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  16. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  17. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".

Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".

External links

Script error: No such module "Navbox". Script error: No such module "Navbox".