Scottish Open (golf)

Scottish Open
Tournament information
Location Scotland
Established 1972
Course(s) Castle Stuart Golf Links
Par 72
Length 7,050 yards (6,447 m)
Tour(s) European Tour
Format Stroke play
Prize fund £3,000,000
Month played July
Tournament record score
Aggregate 262 Peter O'Malley (1992)
To par -20 Ian Woosnam (1987)
Current champion
Luke Donald

The Scottish Open, which has been sponsored by Barclays Capital since 2002, is one of the richer golf tournaments on the European Tour. It is currently played at Castle Stuart Golf Links in Inverness in the North of Scotland. The tournament traditionally takes place the week before The Open Championship, which is itself frequently played elsewhere in Scotland.

Contents

History

The Scottish Open was first held in 1972 at Downfield Golf Club near Dundee, but after the second event at St Andrews in 1973 there was a twelve year hiatus before its return to the European Tour calendar in 1986, replacing the Glasgow Open. The tournament was held at Haggs Castle Golf Club in its first year back, before moving to Gleneagles until 1994. It was then hosted at Carnoustie for two years, but it was to disappear from the calendar again following the 1996 season.

Its place on the European Tour schedule from 1997 was taken by the Loch Lomond World Invitational, which had been first held the previous year. From 2001, it was decided that the Loch Lomond event would be known as the Scottish Open, and all prior editions would be granted Scottish Open status which resulted in the anomaly of having two champions in 1996.[1]

From 2001 until 2010, the Scottish Open was played at Loch Lomond. Some concern was expressed that the host course, which is very different from the links courses on which the Open Championship is played, puts European Tour players at a disadvantage in the subsequent major, compared to their leading rivals from the PGA Tour, who traditionally spend a week practising for the Open on links courses in Ireland.

There was a possibility that the event would move to the Dundonald links course in Ayrshire, but in 2006 the company's chief executive Keith Williams commented, "From our point of view, we would also perhaps regard Dundonald as being three years away from hosting a championship of this calibre."[2]

On 24 January 2011, it was announced that the 2011 Barclays Scottish Open would be held at Castle Stuart Golf Links, near Inverness, due to the financial difficulty being suffered by Loch Lomond. Play was reduced to 54 holes (three rounds) in the 2011 tournament due to heavy rain causing flooding and landslides at Castle Stuart.[3]

In 1972 the prize fund was £10,000, and by 2008 it had increased to £3 million, making it the largest in a European Tour event that is not co-sanctioned by the PGA Tour.[2]

Winners

Year Venue Winner Country Score Runner(s)-up
Barclays Scottish Open
2011 Castle Stuart Golf Links Luke Donald  England 197 (−19) Fredrik Andersson Hed
2010 Loch Lomond GC Edoardo Molinari  Italy 272 (−12) Darren Clarke
2009 Loch Lomond GC Martin Kaymer  Germany 269 (−15) Gonzalo Fernández-Castaño, Raphaël Jacquelin
2008 Loch Lomond GC Graeme McDowell  Northern Ireland 271 (−13) James Kingston
2007 Loch Lomond GC Grégory Havret  France 272 (−14) Phil Mickelson
2006 Loch Lomond GC Johan Edfors  Sweden 271 (−13) Luke Donald, Andrés Romero,
Charl Schwartzel
2005 Loch Lomond GC Tim Clark  South Africa 265 (−19) Darren Clarke, Maarten Lafeber
2004 Loch Lomond GC Thomas Levet  France 269 (−15) Michael Campbell
2003 Loch Lomond GC Ernie Els  South Africa 267 (−17) Darren Clarke, Phillip Price
2002 Loch Lomond GC Eduardo Romero  Argentina 273 (−11) Fredrik Jacobson
The Scottish Open at Loch Lomond
2001 Loch Lomond GC Retief Goosen  South Africa 268 (−16) Thomas Bjørn
Standard Life Loch Lomond
2000 Loch Lomond GC Ernie Els  South Africa 273 (−11) Tom Lehman
1999 Loch Lomond GC Colin Montgomerie  Scotland 268 (−16) Sergio García, Michael Jonzon,
Mats Lanner
The Standard Life Loch Lomond
1998 Loch Lomond GC Lee Westwood  England 276 (−8) Robert Allenby, Dennis Edlund,
David Howell, Eduardo Romero,
Ian Woosnam
Gulfstream Loch Lomond World Invitational
1997 Loch Lomond GC Tom Lehman  United States 265 (−19) Ernie Els
Loch Lomond World Invitational
1996* Loch Lomond GC Thomas Bjørn  Denmark 277 (−7) Jean van de Velde
Scottish Open
1996* Carnoustie Ian Woosnam  Wales 289 (+1) Andrew Coltart
1995 Carnoustie Wayne Riley  Australia 276 (−12) Nick Faldo
Bell's Scottish Open
1994 King's Course, Gleneagles Carl Mason  England 265 (−15) Peter Mitchell
1993 King's Course, Gleneagles Jesper Parnevik  Sweden 271 (−9) Payne Stewart
1992 King's Course, Gleneagles Peter O'Malley  Australia 262 (−18) Colin Montgomerie
1991 King's Course, Gleneagles Craig Parry  Australia 268 (−12) Mark McNulty
1990 King's Course, Gleneagles Ian Woosnam  Wales 269 (−15) Mark McNulty
1989 King's Course, Gleneagles Michael Allen  United States 272 (−8) José María Olazábal, Ian Woosnam
1988 King's Course, Gleneagles Barry Lane  England 271 (−13) Sandy Lyle, José Rivero
1987 King's Course, Gleneagles Ian Woosnam  Wales 264 (−20) Peter Senior
1986 Haggs Castle David Feherty  Northern Ireland 270 (−14) Ian Baker-Finch, Christy O'Connor Jnr
1974–1985 No tournament
Sunbeam Electric Scottish Open
1973 St. Andrews, Old Course Graham Marsh  Australia 286 (−2) Peter Oosterhuis
1972 Downfield, Dundee Neil Coles  England 283 (−5) Brian Huggett

* – Two events held in 1996

References

External links