PGA Tour of Australasia Information & PGA Tour of Australasia Links at HealthHaven.com
advertise
add site
services
publishers
database
health videos
Bookmark and Share

search wiki for    ?
web dir firms image gallery news pdf wiki shop video 
about
toolbar
stats
live show
health store
more stuff
JOIN/LOGIN
Featured Results:
Pharmaceutical Engineering - Plant...
Pharmaceutical Engineering - Plant...
ispe2009.com
 Fitness Has Changed The Face Of The PGA Tour
Fitness Has Changed The Face Of The PGA Tour
golfersmd.com
  PGA Golfer Fitness Training - PGA Golf Cardiovascular Training Program
PGA Golfer Fitness Training - PGA Golf Cardiovascular Training Program
stargolffitnesstrainers.c...
 

Contents

The PGA Tour of Australasia is a professional golf tour for men. Official events on the tour count for World Golf Ranking points. The tour was formed in 1973 as the PGA Tour of Australia and adopted its current name in 1991.

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 two or three events each year or even not at all. Therefore the Australasian Tour is a feeder for the larger tours. Some of the leading events are co-sanctioned by the European Tour in order 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 Steve Elkington and Adam Scott. The leading tournaments on the tour include the Australian Open, the Australian PGA Championship, the Australian Masters and the New Zealand Open.

The PGA Tour of Australasia's development tour was the Von Nida Tour (named after Australian golfer Norman Von Nida) which featured around ten events with purses in the region of AUD100,000 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 has been merged into the PGA Tour of Australasia Tour.[1]

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 U.S. resident, of not doing enough to support the tour. Norman dismissed their comments.[2]

[edit] OneAsia Tour

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 PGA European Tour. The series would initially comprise 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.[3][4][5]

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.[6] 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, 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.[7]

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 PGA 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.[8]

[edit] Schedule

The table below shows the 2009 schedule. It only lists official money events on the main tour. Following the merger with the Von Nida Tour, there is a significant increase in the number of tournaments over previous years. The number in brackets after each winner's name is the number of PGA Tour of Australasia events he had won up to and including that tournament. This information is only shown for PGA Tour of Australasia members.

Dates Tournament Location
(Australia unless stated)
Prize fund Winner OWGR
points
Notes
26 Jan-1 Feb Subaru Victorian Open Clayton South, Melbourne, Victoria AUD110,000 Australia Ashley Hall (2) n/a
5-8 Feb Cellarbrations Victorian PGA Championship Point Cook, Melbourne, Victoria AUD110,000 Australia Andre Stolz (4) n/a
19-22 Feb Johnnie Walker Classic Perth, Western Australia GBP1,250,000 New Zealand Danny Lee (n/a) (amateur) 32 Co-sanctioned by the Asian and European Tours
26 Feb-1 Mar Moonah Classic Mornington Peninsula, Victoria USD600,000 Australia Alistair Presnell (1) 16 Co-sanctioned by the Nationwide Tour
5-8 Mar New Zealand PGA Championship Christchurch, New Zealand USD600,000 New Zealand Steven Alker (4) 16 Co-sanctioned by the Nationwide Tour
12-15 Mar Michael Hill New Zealand Open Queenstown, New Zealand USD600,000 United States Alex Prugh (n/a) 16 Co-sanctioned by the Nationwide Tour
22-25 Oct John Hughes Geely WA Open Perth, Western Australia AUD110,000 Australia Michael Curtain (1) n/a
29 Oct - 1 Nov Laurance Scrap Metals WA PGA Championship Bunbury, Western Australia AUD110,000 Australia Andrew Bonhomme (2) n/a
5-8 Nov Cellarbrations Queensland PGA Championship Toowoomba, Queensland AUD110,000 Australia Steven Bowditch (2) n/a
12-15 Nov JBWere Masters Melbourne, Victoria AUD1,500,000 United States Tiger Woods (n/a) 28 Co-sanctioned by the European Tour
19-22 Nov Cellarbrations NSW PGA Championship Wollongong, New South Wales AUD110,000 Australia Aaron Townsend (2) n/a
26-29 Nov New South Wales Open Hunter Valley, New South Wales AUD135,000 Australia Leigh McKechnie (1) n/a
3-6 Dec Australian Open Sydney, New South Wales AUD1,750,000 Australia Adam Scott (2) 32 Co-sanctioned by the OneAsia Tour
10-13 Dec Australian PGA Championship Sunshine Coast, Queensland AUD1,500,000 Australia Robert Allenby (13) 26 Co-sanctioned by the OneAsia Tour

Source: [1]

[edit] Order of Merit winners

PGA Tour of Australia

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links




Product Results (view all...)

search wiki for    ?
web dir firms image gallery news pdf wiki shop video 



↑ top of page ↑about thumbshots