Nothing Special   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

The Turkish Airlines Open is a European Tour golf tournament played annually in Turkey since 2013. In both 2013 and 2014 the tournament was the penultimate event of the European Tour Final Series.

Turkish Airlines Open
Tournament information
LocationBelek, Antalya, Turkey
Established2013
Course(s)Montgomerie Maxx Royal
Par72
Length7,159 yards (6,546 m)
Tour(s)European Tour
FormatStroke play
Prize fundUS$7,000,000
Month playedNovember
Final year2019
Tournament record score
Aggregate264 Victor Dubuisson (2013)
To par−24 as above
Final champion
England Tyrrell Hatton
Location map
Montgomerie Maxx Royal is located in Turkey
Montgomerie Maxx Royal
Montgomerie Maxx Royal
Location in Turkey

The first three tournaments were held at the Montgomerie Maxx Royal. In October 2015, it was announced that Turkish Airlines would continue as headline sponsor the tournament for a further three years and it will move to Regnum Carya Golf Club from 2016.[1]

Victor Dubuisson won the first event in 2013 by two shots from Jamie Donaldson.

In 2013 qualification was open to the top 50 in the Official World Golf Ranking three weeks before the event, five tournament invitations, three Turkish players, with the remainder from the 2013 Race to Dubai to make up a field of 78. Following the Turkish Airlines Open the leading 60 players in the Race to Dubai qualified for the season-ending DP World Tour Championship, Dubai, provided they had participated in two of the first three tournaments of the Final Series and played in enough 2013 European Tour events.

In 2014 qualification was open to the top 60 in the Official World Golf Ranking three weeks before the event, four tournament invitations, three Turkish players invited by the Turkish Golf Federation, with the remainder from the 2014 Race to Dubai to make up a field of 78. Following the Turkish Airlines Open the leading 60 players in the Race to Dubai will qualify for the season-ending DP World Tour Championship, Dubai. In 2016, qualification criteria were revised. The field consists of the top 70 available players from the Race to Dubai, three Turkish players, and five unrestricted tournament invitations. Alternates are drawn from the Race to Dubai standings beyond the top 70 available.

In 2015, the tournament was brought forward to the start of the Final Series due to the 2015 G-20 Antalya summit. Jaco van Zyl carded an opening round of 61 that would have broken the course record if preferred lies had not been in operation. The South African shared the lead with Victor Dubuisson going into the final round but the Frenchman birdied three of his last four holes on the way to a 66 that secured him his second win in Turkey and his second ever victory on the European Tour.

Winners

edit
European Tour (Rolex Series) 2017–2019
European Tour (Race to Dubai finals series) 2013–2016
# Year Winner Score To par Margin of
victory
Runner(s)-up Purse
(US$)
Winner's
share ($)
Venue
2020 Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic[2]
7th 2019 England  Tyrrell Hatton 264 −20 Playoff France  Benjamin Hébert
United States  Kurt Kitayama
France  Victor Perez
Austria  Matthias Schwab
South Africa  Erik van Rooyen
7,000,000 2,000,000 Montgomerie Maxx
6th 2018 England  Justin Rose (2) 267 −17 Playoff China  Li Haotong 7,000,000 1,166,660 Regnum Carya
5th 2017 England  Justin Rose 266 −18 1 stroke Belgium  Nicolas Colsaerts
South Africa  Dylan Frittelli
7,000,000 1,166,660 Regnum Carya
4th 2016 Denmark  Thorbjørn Olesen 264 −20 3 strokes England  David Horsey
China  Li Haotong
7,000,000 1,166,600 Regnum Carya
3rd 2015 France  Victor Dubuisson (2) 266 −22 1 stroke South Africa  Jaco van Zyl 7,000,000 1,166,600 Montgomerie Maxx
2nd 2014 United States  Brooks Koepka 271 −17 1 stroke England  Ian Poulter 7,000,000 1,166,600 Montgomerie Maxx
1st 2013 France  Victor Dubuisson 264 −24 2 strokes Wales  Jamie Donaldson 7,000,000 1,166,600 Montgomerie Maxx

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Turkish Airlines on board with European Tour until 2018". PGA European Tour. 28 October 2015.
  2. ^ "Two Rolex Series events cancelled; three new events on European Tour". Sky Sports. 28 August 2020. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
edit

36°51′04″N 31°04′08″E / 36.851°N 31.069°E / 36.851; 31.069