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Tasmanian Open

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(Redirected from Foster's Tattersall Tasmanian Open) Australian golf tournament Golf tournament
Tasmanian Open
Tournament information
LocationHobart, Tasmania, Australia
Established1913
Course(s)Kingston Beach Golf Club
Par71
Tour(s)PGA Tour of Australasia
FormatStroke play
Month playedFebruary
Tournament record score
Aggregate269 Ted Ball (1964)
To par−17 Ian Roberts (1985)
Current champion
Australia Samuel Slater
Location map
Kingston Beach GC is located in AustraliaKingston Beach GCKingston Beach GCLocation in AustraliaShow map of AustraliaKingston Beach GC is located in TasmaniaKingston Beach GCKingston Beach GCLocation in TasmaniaShow map of Tasmania

The Tasmanian Open is an annual golf tournament held in Tasmania, Australia.

History

The Tasmanian amateur championship was first played in 1902 as a 36 hole stroke-play event. From 1910 the stroke-play acted as qualifying for a match-play stage, with the leading four players qualifying. In 1913 the 36 hole stroke-play event was opened up to professionals as well as amateurs and the winner became the Tasmanian Open champion. The first winner was an amateur, Eustace Headlam. This was the only event before World War I, the championship being revived in 1919 and was again won by Headlam. There was no Open championship between 1923 and 1929, the event again being restricted to amateurs. The 1922 Open was won by Robert Nettlefold and when it restarted in 1930 it was won by his son, Len Nettlefold, with Jock Robertson, the Kingston Beach professional, the runner-up. Len Nettlefold won the event 7 times in 8 years and won for an eighth time in 1947. In 1938 Alf Toogood, Jock Robertson's successor at Kingston Beach, became the first professional winner and he was followed by Denis Denehey in 1939.

After World War II, amateurs continued to be successful, including 19-year-old Peter Toogood, the son of Alf Toogood, in 1949. Alf himself won the following year, 1950, pushing Peter into second place. Peter Toogood won again in 1951 and would win every year from 1954 to 1959, matching Len Nettlefold's record of 8 championships. The Open was expanded to 72 holes in 1953. Ron Smith, an amateur from Victoria, won with 60-year-old Alf Toogood one of the runners-up.

In 1961, a small group of New South Wales professionals went on a promotional tour of Tasmania, and played in the Open. One of them, Alan Murray won, with two others, second and third. The following year the Tasmanian government gave a grant towards the Open, and the £1,000 prize money attracted a number of professionals. Frank Phillips and Peter Thomson tied on 279, but there was something of anti-climax since Thomson had assumed that Phillips would win and had left for the mainland, forfeiting the championship to Phillips. The £1,000 prize money continued for a few years, rising to A$10,000 by 1975 and reaching A$100,000 in 1988 and 1989. There had only been three professional wins up to 1960 but from 1961 to 1992 the situation reversed, with only one amateur winner in that period, Max Robison in 1978.

The 1991 event had prize money of A$85,000, failing to meet the minimum requirement for a tour event. After 1992, the event failed to attract leading professionals and there has only been one professional winner since 1992, Simon Hawkes in 2016.

Winners

Year Winner Score To par Margin of
victory
Runner(s)-up Venue Ref.
Tasmanian Open
1992 Australia Darren Cole 281 −3 2 strokes Australia Taylor Murphy Mowbray
Tattersall's Tasmanian Open
1991 Australia Chris Gray 280 −8 2 strokes Australia Jon Evans
Australia Bradley Hughes
Australia Robert Stephens
Royal Hobart
1990: No tournament
1989 Australia Ian Stanley 279 −1 Playoff Australia Peter O'Malley Devonport
Tasmanian Open
1988 Australia Brett Ogle 284 −4 1 stroke Australia Brett Johns (a) Tasmania
Foster's Tattersall Tasmanian Open
1987 Australia Brian Jones 283 −5 1 stroke United States Mike Colandro Tasmania
Foster's Tasmanian Open
1986 Australia Stewart Ginn (4) 281 −7 Playoff Sweden Magnus Persson Royal Hobart
1985 Australia Ian Roberts 271 −17 2 strokes Australia Ian Baker-Finch Riverside
Tasmanian Open
1984 Australia Mike Clayton 275 −13 2 strokes Australia John Clifford
Australia Wayne Grady
Kingston Beach
1983 Australia Bob Shaw 271 −9 1 stroke Australia Ian Stanley Devonport
Tattersall's Tasmanian Open
1982 Australia Colin Bishop 286 −2 1 stroke Australia Mike Cahill
Australia Rodger Davis
Australia Stewart Ginn
Australia Jack Newton
Tasmania
1981 Australia Roger Stephens 276 −12 2 strokes Australia Colin Bishop Launceston
1980 Australia Stewart Ginn (3) 280 −8 3 strokes Australia Brian Jones Royal Hobart
1979 United States Marty Bohen 271 −9 4 strokes New Zealand Terry Kendall Devonport
1978 Australia Max Robison (a) 287 −1 4 strokes Australia Ian Stanley Tasmania
1977 Australia Bill Dunk (2) 272 −12 4 strokes Australia Mike Cahill Mowbray
Tasmanian Open
1976 Australia David Good 283 −5 Playoff Australia Stewart Ginn
Australia Brian Jones
Australia Ian Stanley
Royal Hobart
1975 Australia Stewart Ginn (2) 272 −8 Playoff Australia Ross Metherell Devonport
1974 Australia Bob Shearer 281 −7 Playoff Australia Ted Ball Tasmania
1973 Australia Stewart Ginn 280 −4 2 strokes Australia David Good
Australia Ian Paul
Australia Randall Vines
Claremont
1972 Australia Bill Dunk 272 −8 5 strokes Devonport
1971 Australia Frank Phillips (2) 285 −3 3 strokes Australia Tim Woolbank Tasmania
1970 Australia David Graham 282 1 stroke New Zealand Terry Kendall Kingston Beach
1969 Australia Alan Murray (3) 280 −8 1 stroke Australia Randall Vines Riverside
1968 Australia Randall Vines 274 −14 17 stroke New Zealand Walter Godfrey Royal Hobart
1967 Australia Bob Stanton Devonport
1966 Australia Tim Woolbank Claremont
1965 Australia Alan Murray (2) 287 1 stroke Australia Ted Ball Launceston
1964 Australia Ted Ball 269 9 strokes Australia Peter Thomson Kingston Beach
1963 Australia Peter Mills 278 7 strokes Australia Darrell Welch Riverside
1962 Australia Frank Phillips 279 Playoff Australia Peter Thomson Royal Hobart
1961 Australia Alan Murray 281 4 strokes Australia Darrell Welch Launceston
1960 Australia Des Turner (a)
1959 Australia Peter Toogood (a) (8)
1958 Australia Peter Toogood (a) (7)
1957 Australia Peter Toogood (a) (6)
1956 Australia Peter Toogood (a) (5)
1955 Australia Peter Toogood (a) (4)
1954 Australia Peter Toogood (a) (3) 283 −1 7 strokes Australia Len Bowditch (a) Royal Hobart
1953 Australia Ron Smith (a) 298 +6 1 stroke Australia Peter Brown (a)
Australia Alf Toogood
Launceston
1952 Australia Lance Baynton (a) 149 Playoff Australia Len Bowditch (a)
Australia John Toogood (a)
Kingston Beach
1951 Australia Peter Toogood (a) (2) 143 9 strokes Australia G. S. Bailey Launceston
1950 Australia Alf Toogood (2) 142 3 strokes Australia Peter Toogood (a) Royal Hobart
1949 Australia Peter Toogood (a) 143 Playoff Australia Ron Smith (a) Launceston
1948 Australia E. J. Willing (a) 148 2 strokes Australia Peter Brown (a) Kingston Beach
1947 Australia Len Nettlefold (a) (8) 152 Playoff Australia Alf Toogood Launceston
1946 Australia Len Bowditch (a) 147 1 stroke Australia Alf Toogood Royal Hobart
1940–1945: No tournament due to World War II
1939 Australia Denis Denehey 148 2 strokes Australia Len Nettlefold (a) Launceston
1938 Australia Alf Toogood 148 3 strokes Australia Denis Denehey Kingston Beach
1937 Australia Len Nettlefold (a) (7) 144 1 stroke Australia Alf Toogood Launceston
1936 Australia Len Nettlefold (a) (6) 132 9 strokes England C. G. Thynne (a) Royal Hobart
1935 Australia Len Nettlefold (a) (5) 147 4 strokes Australia Bill Robertson Launceston
1934 Australia Len Nettlefold (a) (4) 145 2 strokes Australia Jock Robertson Kingston Beach
1933 Australia Terence Brown (a) 152 1 stroke Australia Ellis Davies (a)
Australia J. Melrose (a)
Launceston
1932 Australia Len Nettlefold (a) (3) 142 3 strokes Australia Eustace Headlam Royal Hobart
1931 Australia Len Nettlefold (a) (2) 143 5 strokes Australia Jock Robertson Launceston
1930 Australia Len Nettlefold (a) 148 1 stroke Australia Jock Robertson Kingston Beach
1923–1929: No tournament
1922 Australia Robert Nettlefold (a) 154 1 stroke Australia Eustace Headlam (a)
Australia Len Nettlefold (a)
Hobart
1921 Australia Thomas Archer Jr. (a) 157 1 stroke Australia R O'Connor (a) Launceston
1920 Australia Hugh Smith (a) 157 3 strokes Australia Felix Headlam (a) Hobart
1919 Australia Eustace Headlam (a) (2) 152 3 strokes Australia Henry Allport (a) Launceston
1914–1918: No tournament due to World War I
1913 Australia Eustace Headlam (a) 152 7 strokes Australia George Fawcett (a) Launceston
  1. Stanley won at the first hole of a sudden-death playoff.
  2. Ginn won at the second hole of a sudden-death playoff.
  3. Good won at the fifth hole of a sudden-death playoff.
  4. Ginn won at the first hole of a sudden-death playoff.
  5. Phillips won by forfeit.
  6. Baynton won a 6 hole playoff by 2 strokes.
  7. Toogood won a 6 hole playoff by 2 strokes.
  8. Nettlefold won a 6 hole playoff by 1 stroke.

Source:

References

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