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Alex Norén

Swedish professional golfer (born 1982)


Swedish professional golfer (born 1982)

FieldValue
nameAlex Norén
imageAlex Noren Ryder Cup 2025-211 (cropped).jpg
captionNorén at the 2025 Ryder Cup
fullnameAlexander Norén
birth_date
birth_placeStockholm, Sweden
death_date
height
weight
nationality
residenceStockholm, Sweden
Jupiter, Florida, U.S.
spouse
children2
collegeOklahoma State University
yearpro2005
tourPGA Tour
European Tour
extourChallenge Tour
prowins13
eurowins12
japwins
asiawins2
sunwins
auswins
nwidewins
chalwins1
champwins
seneurowins
otherwins
majorwins
mastersT62: 2019
usopenT17: 2020
openT6: 2017
pgaT12: 2024
wghofid
wghofyear
award1
year1
awardssection
module{{Infobox personembed=yes
signatureAlex_Norén_signature.jpg

Jupiter, Florida, U.S. European Tour Alexander Norén (born 12 July 1982) is a Swedish professional golfer who plays on the PGA Tour and the European Tour. He has won twelve tournaments on the European Tour, including the BMW PGA Championship, the Aberdeen Asset Management Scottish Open, the British Masters, HNA Open de France and the Nedbank Golf Challenge. He was a member of the winning 2018 European Ryder Cup team.

Early life

Norén was born in Stockholm, first tried golf at 4 years of age and started playing at Haninge Golf Club. Practicing other sports too, he finally chose to give his priority to golf.

As a 14 year old, he won the unofficial Swedish Youth Championship, Föreningsbanken Cup, at his age level, scoring 146 over 36 holes at Rya Golf Club.

At 15 years of age, he attended the Swedish upper secondary sports school, to combine studying with golf training. He was also employed as junior editor at Svensk Golf, the official magazine of the Swedish Golf Federation.

Amateur career

Norén represented Sweden as an amateur on all levels. He was part of the Swedish team winning the 2002 European Youths' Team Championship at Gdansk G&CC, Poland. He also represented Sweden at the 2004 Eisenhower Trophy in Río Grande, Puerto Rico, were the Swedish team finished as bronze-medalists and Norén tied 3rd individually.

He attended Oklahoma State University in the United States. Highlights include: One top-10 finish during his freshman year, concluding the season ranked No. 13 in Region V and was named to the GCAA All-Central Region team. His sophomore year included the first career top-five finish of his career, tying for third at the Inverness Intercollegiate. He finished the year being named to the Academic All-Big 12 first-team selection and was also selected as a member of the All-Central Region squad. His junior year, he posted six top-10 finishes, was a first-team All-Big 12 selection and was also an All-Central Region pick. He was part of the team that led the Oklahoma State Cowboys to a team victory at the Jerry Pate tournament.

Professional career

Norén turned professional at the end of 2005 and gained a place on Europe's second tier Challenge Tour by reaching the final stage of the European Tour qualifying school. In his rookie season he claimed his maiden professional victory at the Rolex Trophy, and ended the year in 3rd place on the Challenge Tour Rankings to graduate to the elite European Tour for 2007.

Norén had a solid rookie season on the European Tour in 2007 and improved on that the following year to finish in 31st place on the Order of Merit. He made the cut at the 2008 Open Championship and was in the top 10 going into day 3, before eventually finishing in a tie for 19th place.

Norén won his first title on the European Tour in September 2009 at the Omega European Masters, where he finished 20 under par to win by two strokes over Bradley Dredge. Norén finished the season ranked 25th on the Race To Dubai.

2011–2014

In June 2011, Norén won his second European Tour title at the Saab Wales Open played at The Celtic Manor Resort. He won by two strokes from Grégory Bourdy and Anders Hansen finishing at 9 under par. This victory secured him of a place in the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational at Firestone Country Club in August. The following month, Norén won his third European Tour title at the Nordea Masters at Bro Hof Slott Golf Club in his home country of Sweden. He won from wire-to-wire, the first time in his career he had achieved this feat, and opened up an eleven-stroke margin after the third round. Despite difficult conditions in the wind on the final day, Norén finished seven strokes ahead of Richard Finch. He finished the season ranked 14th on the Race to Dubai.

After two positive seasons in 2012 and 2013, where he registered third places at the Aberdeen Asset Management Scottish Open and the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship, Norén missed most of 2014 with tendonitis in both wrists.

2015–2016

Norén came back to competitions in January 2015; in June he won his fourth European Tour title by capturing the Nordea Masters in Sweden for the second time in his career. He won by four strokes from Søren Kjeldsen, having held a two-stroke lead after 54 holes.

In the second half of 2016 Norén would hit outstanding form, winning four in eleven starts on the European Tour. In July he won the Aberdeen Asset Management Scottish Open at Castle Stuart, the event before The Open Championship, for his fifth European Tour victory. He won by a single stroke from the Englishman Tyrrell Hatton. This win continued his trend of holding the 54-hole lead in every event that he had won on tour. It also represented the first time that Norén had won in back-to-back seasons.

After finishing runner-up at the Paul Lawrie Matchplay in August, he won the Omega European Masters in September, beating Scott Hend at the first playoff hole. A month later, he captured his third win of the season at the British Masters at The Grove. The win lifted him to the 18th place on the Official World Golf Ranking.

In November, Norén won his fourth title of 2016 at the Nedbank Golf Challenge, capturing $1,166,660, the largest in his career so far. He began the final day six shots behind Wang Jeung-hun only to finish six strokes ahead after a record round of 63 (−9). With the win, he moved to third in the Race to Dubai ranking, and to ninth in the Official World Golf Ranking, becoming only the fourth Swede to enter the top ten of the OWGR after Henrik Stenson, Robert Karlsson and Jesper Parnevik.

In March 2017, Norén was awarded 2016 Best Athlete in Stockholm by the Stockholm Sports Federation and the Stockholm Sport Journalists Club.

2017–2018

In May 2017, Norén won the BMW PGA Championship on the European Tour.

Norén qualified for the PGA Tour for the 2017–18 season through non-member FedEx Cup points. In January 2018, Norén finished runner-up at the Farmers Insurance Open after entering the final round with a one stroke lead. Norén lost to Jason Day on the sixth extra hole of a sudden-death playoff. The players had to come back for a Monday finish, after the first five holes could not separate them. Norén then lost to birdie on the sixth extra hole, after his second shot found the water.

In March 2018, Norén had another notable week, when he finished 3rd place in the WGC-Match Play. He progressed all the way through to the semi-finals, where he faced Kevin Kisner. It was a tight match all the way through, with no player more than 1 up. Norén had a putt to win the match on the 18th hole, but it slid by. He would eventually lose in 19 holes, after a misread putt from off the green cost him a bogey. He then beat Justin Thomas, 5 & 3, in the consolation match.

In July 2018, Norén won the HNA Open de France on the European Tour. This event was held at Le Golf National outside of Paris, France.

In September 2018, Norén qualified for the European team participating in the 2018 Ryder Cup. Europe defeated the U.S. team 17 1/2 to 10 1/2. Coincidentally, the event was also held at Le Golf National. Noren went 2–1–0 and won his singles match against Bryson DeChambeau, playing in the last game on Sunday. Norén secured his win when he holed a long birdie putt on the 18th hole, the very last shot of the whole event, stating the final result and causing the European team to celebrate on the 18th green.

2019–2022

Norén could not maintain his good form through 2019 and fell in the Official World Golf Ranking from 19th at the end of 2018 to 75th a year later. His best 2019 finish on the European Tour as well as on the PGA Tour was tied 11th at the 148th Open Championship at Royal Portrush Golf Club, Northern Ireland.

On 26 July 2020, Norén had his best PGA Tour finish in over two years, when he tied 3rd at the 3M Open in Blaine, Minnesota, with a 268, (−16) score, three shots behind winner Michael Thompson.

At the 120th U.S. Open on 17−20 September 2020 at Winged Foot Golf Club, New York, Norén made the cut at 6 over par with no margin. In the third round, under tough conditions, he shot a 3-under 67, the second lowest round of the day, advancing to 11th place. He finished the tournament a career best tied 17th at 8 over par, 14 strokes behind winner Bryson DeChambeau, but only six strokes from third place.

At the 2021 Rocket Mortgage Classic at Detroit Golf Club, Detroit, Michigan, on July 4, Norén shot an 8-under-par score of 64 in the fourth round, to finish tied fourth, one shot from reaching a playoff for the win. By this achievement, he advanced to 83rd on the Official World Golf Ranking, his best ranking since January 2020.

In July 2022, Norén was the first alternate at the 150th Open Championship, having been onsite until Tuesday, he decided to fly to California to play in the Barracuda Championship. He went on to finish solo-second; finishing one point behind Chez Reavie.

In November 2022, Norén finished tied second at the DP World Tour Championship in Dubai, advancing to 41st on the Official World Golf Ranking and giving him an opportunity to stay inside the top 50 on the world rankings at the end of the year and to receive an invitation to the 2023 Masters Tournament.

2025

Norén didn't begin the 2025 season until May at the PGA Championship. He started the final round three shots behind leader, Scottie Scheffler, ultimately finishing in a tie for 17th place.

In August, Norén won the Betfred British Masters at The Belfry, for the second time in his career. The following week, he was announced as the final European vice captain for the Ryder Cup at Bethpage Black. Three weeks after his British Masters win, Norén won the BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth, defeating Adrien Saddier on the first hole of a playoff, also moving to 18th in the Official World Golf Ranking.

Awards, honors

In 2009, he received Elit Sign number 136 by the Swedish Golf Federation based on world ranking achievements.

In 2011, he was awarded honorary member of the PGA of Sweden.

Professional wins (13)

European Tour wins (12)

Legend
Flagship events (1)
Race to Dubai finals series (1)
Rolex Series (3)
Other European Tour (8)
No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victoryRunner(s)-up
16 Sep 2009Omega European Masters1−20 (65-70-63-66=264)2 strokesWAL Bradley Dredge
25 Jun 2011Saab Wales Open−9 (67-67-71-70=275)2 strokesFRA Grégory Bourdy, DNK Anders Hansen
324 Jul 2011Nordea Masters−15 (67-66-63-77=273)7 strokesENG Richard Finch
47 Jun 2015Nordea Masters (2)−12 (70-68-67-71=276)4 strokesDNK Søren Kjeldsen
510 Jul 2016Aberdeen Asset Management Scottish Open−14 (70-66-68-70=274)1 strokeENG Tyrrell Hatton
64 Sep 2016Omega European Masters1 (2)−17 (69-63-66-65=263)PlayoffAUS Scott Hend
716 Oct 2016British Masters−18 (67-65-65-69=266)2 strokesAUT Bernd Wiesberger
813 Nov 2016Nedbank Golf Challenge−14 (69-67-75-63=274)6 strokesKOR Wang Jeung-hun
928 May 2017BMW PGA Championship−11 (68-75-72-62=277)2 strokesITA Francesco Molinari
101 Jul 2018HNA Open de France−7 (73-72-65-67=277)1 strokeSCO Russell Knox, USA Julian Suri,
ENG Chris Wood
1124 Aug 2025Betfred British Masters (2)−16 (68-72-65-67=272)1 strokeDEN Nicolai Højgaard, NZL Kazuma Kobori
1214 Sep 2025BMW PGA Championship (2)−19 (67-68-66-68=269)PlayoffFRA Adrien Saddier

1Co-sanctioned by the Asian Tour

European Tour playoff record (2–0)

No.YearTournamentOpponentResult
12016Omega European MastersAUS Scott HendWon with birdie on first extra hole
22025BMW PGA ChampionshipFRA Adrien SaddierWon with birdie on first extra hole

Challenge Tour wins (1)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victoryRunners-up
120 Aug 2006Rolex Trophy−22 (66-67-62-71=266)3 strokesSWE Johan Axgren, ENG Gareth Davies

Challenge Tour playoff record (0–1)

No.YearTournamentOpponentResult
12006Kai Fieberg Costa Rica OpenSWE Johan AxgrenLost to birdie on third extra hole

Playoff record

PGA Tour playoff record (0–1)

No.YearTournamentOpponentsResult
12018Farmers Insurance OpenAUS Jason Day, USA Ryan PalmerDay won with birdie on sixth extra hole
Palmer eliminated by birdie on first hole

Other playoff record (0–1)

No.YearTournamentOpponentResult
12025Hero World ChallengeJPN Hideki MatsuyamaLost to birdie on first extra hole

Results in major championships

Results not in chronological order in 2020.

Tournament20082009201020112012201320142015201620172018
Masters TournamentCUTCUT
U.S. OpenT51CUTCUTCUTCUTT25
The Open ChampionshipT19CUTCUTT9WDT46T6T17
PGA ChampionshipT34T66CUTT49T67CUT
Tournament2019202020212022202320242025
Masters TournamentT62CUT
PGA ChampionshipT54T22T55CUTCUTT12T17
U.S. OpenCUTT17CUTCUTCUT
The Open ChampionshipT11NTCUTT23T13

CUT = missed the half-way cut

WD = withdrew

"T" = tied

NT = no tournament due to COVID-19 pandemic

Summary

TournamentWins2nd3rdTop-5Top-10Top-25EventsCuts madeTotals00002124021
Masters Tournament00000041
PGA Championship000003139
U.S. Open000002113
The Open Championship000027128
  • Most consecutive cuts made – 4 (2019 Open – 2021 PGA)
  • Longest streak of top-10s – 1 (twice)

Results in The Players Championship

Tournament20172018201920202021202220232024
The Players Championship10T17CUTCCUTT26CUTT19

CUT = missed the halfway cut

"T" indicates a tie for a place

C = Cancelled after the first round due to the COVID-19 pandemic

Results in World Golf Championships

Results not in chronological order prior to 2015.

Tournament200920102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023
Championship69T20T56T55T14T62
Match PlayR64R32QF3T17NT1T18T52
InvitationalT53T53T28T31T12
ChampionsT19T49T54T12T31T18NT1NT1NT1

1Cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic

QF, R16, R32, R64 = Round in which player lost in match play

NT = No tournament

"T" = tied

Note that the Championship and Invitational were discontinued from 2022. The Champions was discontinued from 2023.

Team appearances

Amateur

  • European Boys' Team Championship (representing Sweden): 1998, 1999, 2000
  • Jacques Léglise Trophy (representing the Continent of Europe): 2000
  • European Youths' Team Championship (representing Sweden): 2002 (winners)
  • European Amateur Team Championship (representing Sweden): 2003, 2005
  • Eisenhower Trophy (representing Sweden): 2004
  • Palmer Cup (representing Europe): 2004 (winners), 2005

Professional

  • Royal Trophy (representing Europe): 2010 (winners)
  • Seve Trophy (representing Continental Europe): 2011
  • World Cup (representing Sweden): 2011, 2016
  • EurAsia Cup (representing Europe): 2018 (winners)
  • Ryder Cup (representing Europe): 2018 (winners)
  • Hero Cup (representing Continental Europe): 2023 (winners)

Notes

References

References

  1. "Alex Noren - My story".
  2. (September 1996). "Rafflande avslutning".
  3. "Alex Noren". Oklahoma State University Athletics.
  4. (6 September 2009). "Noren edges Dredge to Masters win". BBC Sport.
  5. Shuttleworth, Peter. (5 June 2011). "Noren wins second European Tour title at the Welsh Open". BBC Sport.
  6. (24 July 2011). "Noren triumphs in home country for second win of 2011". Sky Sports.
  7. (12 July 2015). "Injury keeps Noren away from St Andrews". European Tour.
  8. (10 July 2016). "Noren the King of Castle Stuart". PGA European Tour.
  9. (4 September 2016). "Alex Noren buries 30-footer to win Omega European Masters in playoff".
  10. (13 November 2016). "With This Win – Alex Noren". PGA European Tour.
  11. Hellsten, CM. (8 March 2017). "Alex Norén har utsetts till Stockholms främste idrottare". Svensk Golf.
  12. (29 January 2018). "Jason Day beats Alex Noren on sixth playoff hole to win Farmers Insurance Open". ESPN.
  13. (30 September 2018). "Europe wins back Ryder Cup, beating US 17 1/2-10 1/2". The Hamilton Spectator.
  14. Smith, Ben. (18 July 2022). "Alex Noren was ticked at himself over Open decision...then this happened".
  15. Ferguson, Doug. (18 May 2025). "Alex Noren was out of golf for 7 months and now in the final group at a major". AP News.
  16. (24 August 2025). "British Masters: Alex Noren beats Nicolai Hojgaard to title at The Belfry as Matt Fitzpatrick's bid falters". Sky Sports.
  17. (2 September 2025). "Alex Noren Named Final European Vice Captain for the 2025 Ryder Cup". Ryder Cup.
  18. Bradshaw, Joe. (14 September 2025). "Noren beats Saddier in play-off to win PGA Championship". BBC Sport.
  19. "Svenska Golfförbundet, Utmärkelser, Elitmärket". Swedish Golf Federation.
  20. "PGA of Sweden, Utmärkelser, Hedersmedlemar". PGA of Sweden.
  21. [http://www.ega-golf.ch/page/european-youths-team-championship European Youths Team Championship] European Golf Association
  22. Jansson, Anders. (2004). "Golf – Den stora sporten". Swedish Golf Federation.
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