Australian Masters

Australian Masters
Tournament information
Location Melbourne, Australia
Established 1979
Course(s) 2012 - Kingston Heath, rotates annually
Par 72
Length 6,278 m (6,866 yards)
Tour(s) PGA Tour of Australasia
European Tour (2006-09)
Format Stroke play
Prize fund A$1,000,000
Month played December
Tournament record score
Aggregate 268 Bradley Hughes (1998)
To par -24 (as above)
Current champion
Ian Poulter

The Australian Masters, currently known as the JBWere Masters for sponsorship reasons, is an annual golf tournament on the PGA Tour of Australasia. The tournament was founded in 1979, and was co-sanctioned by the European Tour for the first time in 2006, with a significant 20% increase in the prize fund. Because the tournament is played late in the calendar year, in November or December, it formed part of the following year's European Tour schedule from 2006 through 2008. With the European Tour's decision to realign its schedule with the calendar year for 2010, the 2009 event was the first to be part of the current calendar year's tour schedule. The co-sanctioning with the European Tour was dropped after the 2009 event.

Until 2008, the Australian Masters was always held at the Huntingdale Golf Club in South Oakleigh, Victoria, Australia, but from 2009, a rotation system will be introduced and the event will be staged at different courses in the Melbourne area.[1]

Home golfers have dominated the event, with former world number one Greg Norman unsurprisingly having the most success, winning the Gold Jacket on six occasions. Overseas players to have taken the title include European Ryder Cup stars, Bernhard Langer and Colin Montgomerie.

On 18 March 2009 the Victorian State Government announced a major coup, confirming that then World Number 1 Tiger Woods would play in the 2009 event at its new venue, Kingston Heath.[2] The announcement caused a minor public backlash due to 50% of Woods' A$3 million appearance fee being paid by taxpayer funds. Woods' appearance was tipped to generate close to A$20 million for the Victorian economy via tourism and other related areas.[3]

The 2011 event was held at Victoria Golf Club.

Contents

Winners

As a sole-sanctioned event

Year Winner Score Course
JBWere Masters
2011 Ian Poulter 269 (-15) Victoria Golf Club
2010 Stuart Appleby 274 (-10) Victoria Golf Club

As a European Tour co-sanctioned event

Year Winner Score Course
JBWere Masters
2009 (2009) Tiger Woods  274 (-14) Kingston Heath GC
Sportsbet Australian Masters
2008 (2009) Rod Pampling  276 (-12)PO Huntingdale GC
MasterCard Masters
2007 (2008) Aaron Baddeley  275 (-13)PO Huntingdale GC
2006 (2007) Justin Rose  276 (-12) Huntingdale GC

Years in brackets show the European Tour season the event fell into.

Prior to European Tour co-sanctioning

Year Winner Score
MasterCard Masters
2005 Robert Allenby  271 (-17)PO
2004 Richard Green  271 (-17)PO
2003 Robert Allenby  277 (-11)PO
2002 Peter Lonard  279 (-9)PO
Ericsson Masters
2001 Colin Montgomerie  278 (-10)
2000 Michael Campbell  282 (-10)
1999 Craig Spence  276 (-16)
1998 Bradley Hughes  268 (-24)
1997 Peter Lonard  276 (-16)
1996 Craig Parry  279 (-13)
Australian Masters
1995 Peter Senior  280
1994 Craig Parry  282
1993 Bradley Hughes  281
1992 Craig Parry  283
1991 Peter Senior  278
1990 Greg Norman  273
1989 Greg Norman  280
1988 Ian Baker-Finch  278
1987 Greg Norman  273
1986 Mark O'Meara  284
1985 Bernhard Langer  281
1984 Greg Norman  285
1983 Greg Norman  285
1982 Graham Marsh  289
1981 Greg Norman  289
1980 Gene Littler  288
1979 Barry Vivian  289

Future sites

As the tournament follows a rotation policy around the various courses in Melbourne's sandbelt region, the course changes its location from year to year.

References

External links