Jump to content

Qatar Masters

Coordinates: 25°23′02″N 51°30′25″E / 25.384°N 51.507°E / 25.384; 51.507
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Jimmymci234 (talk | contribs) at 14:15, 17 May 2020 (→‎Winners). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Commercial Bank Qatar Masters
Tournament information
LocationDoha, Qatar
Established1998
Course(s)Doha Golf Club
Education City Golf Club (2020)
Par72
Length7,400 yards (6,800 m)
Tour(s)European Tour
FormatStroke play
Prize fund$1,750,000 (in 2019)
Month playedMarch
Tournament record score
Aggregate268 Paul Lawrie (1999)
268 Adam Scott (2008)
To par−20 Paul Lawrie (1999)
−20 Adam Scott (2008)
Current champion
Spain Jorge Campillo
Doha GC is located in Qatar
Doha GC
Doha GC
Branden Grace, winner in 2015 and 2016, here posing with the trophy after his second victory.

The Qatar Masters is a European Tour golf tournament held at Doha Golf Club in Doha, Qatar. When founded in 1998, it was one of two European Tour events to be staged in the Arabian Peninsula, but is currently one of six.[1] From 2005 to 2007 the tournament was co-sanctioned by the Asian Tour.

The tournament had modest fields in its early years, but with the aid of "promotional" money paid to top golfers to appear, and being scheduled within a three week period that included events in Dubai and Abu Dhabi, it developed to have one of the European Tour's strongest fields.

In 2018, due to travel restrictions between the UAE and Qatar as a result of the ongoing diplomatic dispute in the Arab World, it was moved to later in the year, and is no longer held at the same time as the Abu Dhabi and Dubai events. The date change coincided with a reduction in prize money, and resulted in a lower field strength than previous editions.[2]

Winners

European Tour event

Year Winner Country Score To par Margin of
victory
Runner(s)-up
Commercial Bank Qatar Masters
2020 Jorge Campillo  Spain 275 −13 Playoff Scotland David Drysdale
2019 Justin Harding  South Africa 275 −13 2 strokes South Africa Christiaan Bezuidenhout
Spain Jorge Campillo
South Korea Choi Jin-ho
South Africa George Coetzee
Spain Nacho Elvira
Sweden Anton Karlsson
France Mike Lorenzo-Vera
South Africa Erik van Rooyen
England Oliver Wilson
2018 Eddie Pepperell  England 270 −18 1 stroke England Oliver Fisher
2017 Wang Jeung-hun  South Korea 272 −16 Playoff Sweden Joakim Lagergren
South Africa Jaco van Zyl
2016 Branden Grace (2)  South Africa 274 −14 2 strokes Spain Rafael Cabrera-Bello
Denmark Thorbjørn Olesen
2015 Branden Grace  South Africa 269 −19 1 stroke Scotland Marc Warren
2014 Sergio García  Spain 272 −16 Playoff Finland Mikko Ilonen
2013 Chris Wood  England 270 −18 1 stroke South Africa George Coetzee
Spain Sergio García
Commercialbank Qatar Masters
2012 Paul Lawrie (2)  Scotland 201 −15 4 strokes Australia Jason Day
Sweden Peter Hanson
2011 Thomas Bjørn  Denmark 274 −14 4 strokes Spain Álvaro Quirós
2010 Robert Karlsson  Sweden 273 −15 3 strokes Spain Álvaro Quirós
2009 Álvaro Quirós  Spain 269 −19 3 strokes South Africa Louis Oosthuizen
Sweden Henrik Stenson
2008 Adam Scott (2)  Australia 268 −20 3 strokes Sweden Henrik Stenson

European Tour and Asian Tour event

Year* Winner Country Score To par Margin
of victory
Runner(s)-up
Asian Euro
Commercialbank Qatar Masters
2007 2007 Retief Goosen  South Africa 273 −15 1 stroke Australia Nick O'Hern
2006 2006 Henrik Stenson  Sweden 273 −15 3 strokes England Paul Broadhurst
Qatar Masters
2005 2005 Ernie Els  South Africa 276 −12 1 stroke Sweden Henrik Stenson

* The first year listed is the one in which the tournament was played and the Asian Tour season which it belonged to. The second year listed is the European Tour season that it fell into.

European Tour event

Year Winner Country Score To par Margin of
victory
Runner(s)-up
Qatar Masters
2004 Joakim Haeggman  Sweden 272 −16 1 stroke Japan Nobuhito Sato
2003 Darren Fichardt  South Africa 275 −13 Playoff South Africa James Kingston
2002 Adam Scott  Australia 269 −19 6 strokes England Nick Dougherty
France Jean-François Remésy
2001 Tony Johnstone  Zimbabwe 274 −14 2 strokes Sweden Robert Karlsson
2000 Rolf Muntz  Netherlands 280 −8 5 strokes Wales Ian Woosnam
1999 Paul Lawrie  Scotland 268 −20 7 strokes Denmark Søren Kjeldsen
Wales Phillip Price
1998 Andrew Coltart  Scotland 270 −18 2 strokes England Andrew Sherborne
Sweden Patrik Sjöland

References

  1. ^ "European Tour - Qatar Masters - History". PGA European Tour. Retrieved 1 January 2019.
  2. ^ "European Tour changes Desert Swing schedule to have Abu Dhabi and Dubai back-to-back". The National. 7 September 2017.

External links

25°23′02″N 51°30′25″E / 25.384°N 51.507°E / 25.384; 51.507