Czech Open (golf)

Czech Open
Tournament information
Location Czech Republic
Established 1994
Course(s) Prosper Golf Resort
Par 72
Length 7,452 yards (6,814 m)
Tour(s) European Tour
Format Stroke play
Prize fund 1,500,000
Month played August
Tournament record score
Aggregate 237 Per-Ulrik Johansson (1994)
To par -20 Bernhard Langer (1997)
(European Tour events only)
Current champion
Oliver Fisher

The Czech Open is a golf tournament on the European Tour which is held annually in the Czech Republic.

The tournament first appeared on the European Tour schedule between 1994 to 1997 as the Chemapol Trophy Czech Open, and was the first European Tour event staged east of the former Iron Curtain after the fall of the Berlin Wall. The first three of those events were held at the Golf Club Mariánské Lázně in Mariánské Lázně, before moving to the Prague Karlstein Golf Club, overlooked by Karlštejn Castle, just outside Prague. Germany's former World Number 1 Bernhard Langer was much the most distinguished of the four champions.

The Czech Open was cancelled in 1998 at the request of the sponsors, following flood disasters in the Czech Republic the previous year, and lost its place on the European Tour schedule as a result.[1] In its final year, the prize fund was £804,788, which was above average for a European Tour event at that time.

Having been contested on the satellite Alps Tour in 2008, the Czech Open returned to the European Tour schedule for the 2009 season, when it was be played at the Miguel Ángel Jiménez designed Prosper Golf Resort in Čeladná towards the end of July with a prize fund of 2.5 million.[2] It was titled as the Moravia Silesia Open in 2009, and retitled again in 2010 to the Czech Open.

Winners

Year Winner Score
Czech Open
2011 Oliver Fisher 275 (-13)
2010 Peter Hanson 278 (-10)
Moravia Silesia Open presented by ALO Diamonds
2009 Oskar Henningsson 275 (-13)
Czech Golf Open
2008 Clemens Prader 203 (-13)
Chemapol Trophy Czech Open
1997 Bernhard Langer 264 (-20)
1996 Jonathan Lomas 272 (-12)
1995 Peter Teravainen 268 (-16)
1994 Per-Ulrik Johansson 237 (-11)

References

External links