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Australian Masters

Golf tournament


Golf tournament

FieldValue
nameAustralian Masters
imageAustralian Masters logo.jpg
locationMelbourne, Australia
coordinates
establishment1979
courseHuntingdale Golf Club
par71
yardage7682 yd
tourPGA Tour of Australasia
European Tour
orgIMG
formatStroke play
purse
month_playedNovember
final_year2015
aggregate268 Bradley Hughes (1998)
to-par−24 as above
final_championAUS Peter Senior
mapAustralia#Victoria
map_labelHuntingdale GC
map_captionLocation in Australia##Location in Victoria
map_reliefyes
map_size200px

European Tour | to-par = −24 as above The Australian Masters was an annual golf tournament on the PGA Tour of Australasia held in Victoria, Australia from 1979 to 2015.

History

The tournament is the brainchild of schoolteacher David Inglis. The Australian Masters was intended to be, in the words of Inglis, "an unashamed copy" of the Masters Tournament, the famous tournament in the United States. The event would be played at the same course every year and a ceremonial jacket would placed on the champion. In this case, the course would be Huntingdale Golf Club.

Inglis had no experience running a golf tournament and recruited Ian Stanley, a leading Australian touring professional, to give him advice. Stanley was able to secure commitments from top golfers like Graham Marsh, Lee Trevino, Bob Shearer, and Greg Norman. Prize money was originally supposed to be $50,000 but, due to an inability to find enough sponsors, a decision was made to reduce the purse to $30,000. Multiple players threatened to withdraw and a decision was made to cancel the tournament. However, at the last minute David Haines, a member at Huntingdale, was able to secure an additional $10,000 and the tournament could go on. New Zealand golfer Barry Vivian won the event by one over Shearer. The tournament lost $50,000 but managed to be profitable thereafter.

In 1989 the International Management Group took control of the management of the tournament.

Though the Australian Masters usually was part of the PGA Tour of Australasia's calendar, the event was not on the Order of Merit in 1992. The PGA Tour of Australasia requested that the field expand from 100 players to a full-field of 120 players. International Management Group (IMG), which ran the event, rejected the request. Frank Williams, an employee of IMG, justified the decision by stating, "The sponsors expect the Masters to be different from other Australian tournaments and it was sold to them as a limited-field special event."

The tournament was co-sanctioned by the European Tour from 2006 to 2009, 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.

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. 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.

The event is owned by IMG. The event was not played in 2016 and its future is reported to be in doubt.

The tournament's iconic broadcast theme music used during the 1980s and 1990s was "Send Them Victorious" by Graham De Wilde, with tournament's tagline "The Tradition Continues" in use for the duration of its existence. Greg Norman won the Masters a record six times. The final event featured 56-year-old Peter Senior as the champion. It was his third win in this event and became the first player to win the Australian Open, the Australian PGA Championship and the Australian Masters all in his fifties. Future major winner who was an amateur at the time Bryson DeChambeau finished tied in second place.

Venues

Until 2008, the Australian Masters was always held at the Huntingdale Golf Club in South Oakleigh. From 2009, a rotation system was introduced and the event was staged at different courses in the Melbourne area.

The following venues have been used since the founding of the Australian Masters in 1979.

VenueLocationFirstLastTimes
Huntingdale Golf ClubVictoria1979201531
Kingston Heath Golf ClubVictoria200920122
Victoria Golf ClubVictoria201020112
Royal Melbourne Golf ClubVictoria201320131
Metropolitan Golf ClubVictoria201420141

Winners

YearTour(s)WinnerScoreTo parMargin of
victoryRunner(s)-upVenueRef.Uniqlo MastersBetEasy MastersTalisker MastersJBWere MastersSportsbet Australian MastersMastercard MastersEricsson MastersAustralian MastersMicrosoft Australian MastersPyramid Australian MastersAustralian Masters
2015ANZAUS Peter Senior (3)276−82 strokesUSA Bryson DeChambeau (a)
AUS Andrew Evans
AUS John SendenHuntingdale
2014ANZAUS Nick Cullen279−91 strokeAUS James Nitties
AUS Adam Scott
AUS Josh YoungerMetropolitan
2013ANZAUS Adam Scott (2)270−142 strokesUSA Matt KucharRoyal Melbourne
2012ANZAUS Adam Scott271−174 strokesENG Ian PoulterKingston Heath
2011ANZENG Ian Poulter269−153 strokesAUS Marcus FraserVictoria
2010ANZAUS Stuart Appleby274−101 strokeAUS Adam BlandVictoria
2009ANZ, EURUSA Tiger Woods274−142 strokesAUS Greg ChalmersKingston Heath
2008ANZ, EURAUS Rod Pampling276−12PlayoffAUS Marcus FraserHuntingdale
2007ANZ, EURAUS Aaron Baddeley275−13PlayoffSWE Daniel ChopraHuntingdale
2006ANZ, EURENG Justin Rose276−122 strokesAUS Greg Chalmers
AUS Richard GreenHuntingdale
2005ANZAUS Robert Allenby (2)271−17PlayoffUSA Bubba WatsonHuntingdale
2004ANZAUS Richard Green271−17PlayoffAUS Greg Chalmers
AUS David McKenzieHuntingdale
2003ANZAUS Robert Allenby277−11PlayoffAUS Jarrod Moseley
AUS Craig Parry
AUS Adam ScottHuntingdale
2002ANZAUS Peter Lonard (2)279−9PlayoffAUS Gavin Coles
AUS Adam ScottHuntingdale
2001ANZSCO Colin Montgomerie278−101 strokeAUS Nathan GreenHuntingdale
2000ANZNZL Michael Campbell282−104 strokesAUS Brett RumfordHuntingdale
1999ANZAUS Craig Spence276−161 strokeAUS Greg NormanHuntingdale
1998ANZAUS Bradley Hughes (2)268−245 strokesAUS Mathew GogginHuntingdale
1997ANZAUS Peter Lonard276−16PlayoffAUS Peter O'MalleyHuntingdale
1996ANZAUS Craig Parry (3)279−132 strokesAUS Bradley HughesHuntingdale
1995ANZAUS Peter Senior (2)280−121 strokeAUS Wayne Grady
AUS Lucas Parsons
USA Tom WatsonHuntingdale
1994ANZAUS Craig Parry (2)282−103 strokesZAF Ernie ElsHuntingdale
1993ANZAUS Bradley Hughes281−11PlayoffAUS Peter SeniorHuntingdale
1992AUS Craig Parry283−93 strokesAUS Greg NormanHuntingdale
1991ANZAUS Peter Senior278−141 strokeAUS Greg NormanHuntingdale
1990ANZAUS Greg Norman (6)273−192 strokesAUS Mike Clayton
ENG Nick Faldo
USA John MorseHuntingdale
1989ANZAUS Greg Norman (5)280−125 strokesENG Russell Claydon (a)Huntingdale
1988ANZAUS Ian Baker-Finch283−9PlayoffAUS Roger Mackay
AUS Craig ParryHuntingdale
1987ANZAUS Greg Norman (4)273−199 strokesAUS Peter SeniorHuntingdale
1986ANZUSA Mark O'Meara284−81 strokeAUS David GrahamHuntingdale
1985ANZFRG Bernhard Langer281−113 strokesENG Nick Faldo
AUS Greg NormanHuntingdale
1984ANZAUS Greg Norman (3)285−73 strokesAUS David Graham
FRG Bernhard LangerHuntingdale
1983ANZAUS Greg Norman (2)285−74 strokesFRG Bernhard LangerHuntingdale
1982ANZAUS Graham Marsh289−31 strokeAUS Stewart GinnHuntingdale
1981ANZAUS Greg Norman289−37 strokesAUS Terry Gale
JPN Norio SuzukiHuntingdale
1980ANZUSA Gene Littler288−4PlayoffAUS Rodger DavisHuntingdale
1979ANZNZL Barry Vivian289−31 strokeAUS Bob ShearerHuntingdale

Sources:

Notes

References

References

  1. (2008-11-22). "Foresight: How the Masters was born". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  2. (1992-01-17). "Two Australians lead low-scoring field". Canberra Times.
  3. Linden, Julian. (19 March 2009). "Woods to play in Australia for first time in over a decade". [[Reuters]].
  4. (19 March 2009). "Tiger Woods comes to Melbourne, costing taxpayers $1.5m". [[Herald Sun]].
  5. Connolly, Eoin. (6 April 2010). "IMG ties JBWere to Australian Masters extension". SportsPro.
  6. Gould, Russell. (30 March 2016). "Australian Masters 2016 called off and the future of the event remains unclear". Herald Sun.
  7. (22 November 2015). "Peter Senior wins third Australian Masters title, Adam Scott falls short at Huntingdale".
  8. (23 October 2008). "Huntingdale's hold on Australian Masters at an end". [[The Australian]].
  9. (1989-02-20). "Sports results and details". The Canberra Times.
  10. (1988-02-22). "Baker-Finch wins". The Canberra Times.
  11. (1986-02-24). "O'Meara soars with eagles to clinch Masters victory". The Canberra Times.
  12. (1984-02-20). "Second title in row Masters to Norman by three". The Canberra Times.
  13. (1983-02-21). "Norman wins a second Masters". The Canberra Times.
  14. (1982-02-22). "Masters Golf: Marsh—by a stroke". The Canberra Times.
  15. (1981-03-02). "Australian Masters: Norman beats 'hoodoo'". The Canberra Times.
  16. (1980-03-03). "Masters to Littler after sudden-death play-off". The Canberra Times.
  17. (1979-03-05). "Vivian wins Masters title despite poor final round". The Canberra Times.
  18. "The Australian Masters".
  19. "Tournament Results: Australian Masters".
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