Thomas Nørret

Thomas Nørret
Personal information
Born (1974-02-17) 17 February 1974
Kolding, Denmark
Height 1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)
Weight 90 kg (200 lb; 14 st)
Nationality  Denmark
Residence Kolding, Denmark
Spouse Mette (m. 1998)
Children Victor (b. 2000),
Mathias (b. 2002),
Frida (b. 2006)
Career
Turned professional 1999
Former tour(s) European Tour
Challenge Tour
Professional wins 3
Number of wins by tour
Challenge Tour 1

Thomas Nørret (born 17 February 1974) is a Danish professional golfer.

Career

Nørret turned professional in 1999 at the relatively late age of 25, having spent time studying in both Denmark and the United States. He immediately joined the second-tier Challenge Tour and found instant success, posting two runners-up finishes in his debut season and finishing 25th in the final standings, just outside the automatic qualifiers for the European Tour. Nørret became a Challenge Tour regular over the following seasons, claiming his first win in 2002 at the Volvo Finnish Open[1] after a six-month break, but never improved on his 1999 performance, and in 2009 he took a break from tournament golf to manage young players, returning only for a few events in 2006 and 2009. In 2010 Nørret made a comeback, playing several Challenge Tour events before progressing through qualifying school to reach the European Tour for the first time at the age of 36.

At the 2011 Austrian Golf Open on the European Tour, Nørret took a two stroke lead into the final round after shooting 9-under-par over the first three days.[2] He then shot a final round level par to finish solo fourth, his best result on the European Tour so far.

Professional wins (3)

Challenge Tour wins (1)

No. DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of victoryRunner-up
1 14 Jul 2002 Volvo Finnish Open –15 (68-68-72-65=273) 1 stroke Germany Gary Birch Jr

Nordic League wins (1)

No. DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of victoryRunner(s)-up
1 26 Sep 2002 Wilson Open –14 (69-68-65=202) 4 strokes Denmark Jesper Lassen Nielsen
2 9 Mar 2010 La Manga Masters –7 (68-71-73=212) Playoff Denmark Kasper Linnet Jørgensen, Norway Marius Thorp

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.