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Chris Wood (golfer)

English professional golfer (born 1987)


Summary

English professional golfer (born 1987)

FieldValue
nameChris Wood
imageChris Wood golfprofessional.JPG
imagesize200px
fullnameChristopher James Wood
birth_date
birth_placeBristol, England
death_date
height
weight198 lb
nationality
residenceBristol, England
yearpro2008
tourMENA Golf Tour
extourEuropean Tour
Challenge Tour
prowins6
pgawins
eurowins3
japwins
asiawins
sunwins
auswins
nwidewins
chalwins
champwins
seneurowins
otherwins3
majorwins
mastersT42: 2016
usopenT23: 2016
openT3: 2009
pgaT33: 2017
wghofid
wghofyear
award1Sir Henry Cotton
Rookie of the Year
year12009
awardssection

Challenge Tour Rookie of the Year](sir-henry-cotton-rookie-of-the-year) Christopher James Wood (born 26 November 1987) is an English professional golfer who currently plays on the European Tour. He was the low amateur in the 2008 Open Championship at Royal Birkdale and tied for third in the following year's tournament held at Turnberry.

Amateur career

Wood was born in Bristol, England. He went to school at Golden Valley Primary School in Nailsea between the ages of 4 and 11, before leaving to join Backwell School. He began playing golf at a young age. He was a keen footballer with aspirations to play for Bristol City Football Club but following a serious knee injury he devoted himself to golf. He became a member at the Long Ashton Golf Club near Bristol at the age of 9 and obtained a single-figure handicap by age 12. Wood was the English Amateur Order of Merit winner in 2007 and 2008.

In May 2008, Wood won the Welsh Open Amateur Stroke Play Championship at Conwy. He finished with a score of 289 (74–75–69–71) to take the title by six strokes over teammate Sam Hutsby and by eight over Jamie Abbott from Suffolk. After his victory Wood said "I putted much better today. I stayed pretty patient all the way around. My swing felt good and playing with Gary Wolstenholme kept me relaxed. This is the biggest event I've won so I may take a few days off now."

On 17 July 2008, Wood teed off at Royal Birkdale for the 2008 Open Championship with his father as his caddie. He raised speculation in the press that he could have become the first amateur to win the tournament since Bobby Jones, who won it in 1926, 1927 and 1930. He spoke about his qualification into the weekend of The Open and play at the tournament; "I love playing in front of a crowd," he said after a three over par third round 73. "I've been getting standing ovations on every green. It's been awesome. But I must admit it is now getting daunting for me and I got nervous when they announced my name on the first tee in the third round." He finished joint fifth overall alongside Jim Furyk and was awarded the silver medal as the top amateur.

Professional career

After his success at the Open championship, Wood decided to turn professional. In November he gained his European Tour card for 2009 by finishing in a tie for 5th at qualifying school held at PGA Golf de Catalunya near Girona, Spain; "I've worked really hard for this so I feel like I deserve everything I've achieved, but this does cap a pretty amazing year for me," he said.

Through July of his rookie season, Wood has made 13 of 17 cuts while recording four top-10 finishes. A superb final round at Turnberry in the 2009 Open Championship put Wood in contention for his first major win. A birdie at the final hole would have sufficed but Wood's approach took a hard bounce and ran through the green. A par would have seen him contest the playoff but his par putt finished on the edge of the hole so he had to settle for a joint 3rd-place finish with Lee Westwood. "I've never hit a nine iron 210 yards in my life," he told BBC Sport. "There's nothing I could have done about it. It went miles."

Thanks to his performance at the Open, Wood qualified for the Dubai World Championship and was named the European Tour's rookie of the year. Finishing in the top four at the Open also gave Wood a spot in the 2010 Masters Tournament. He missed the cut by seven strokes.

Wood made a good start to 2011 by tying for the Africa Open but lost to Open champion Louis Oosthuizen on the first playoff hole.

Wood claimed his maiden championship in August 2012 when he took the Thailand Open on the OneAsia Tour. He followed this by winning the Commercial Bank Qatar Masters in January 2013, his first European Tour victory, making an eagle on the last hole to win by one stroke. "It's a dream come true," he said after his three-under-par 69 took him to 18 under. "There's an enormous weight lifted off my shoulders. I feel like I can go on and win more. I knew it was going to be hard no matter how I played – winning on the European Tour is not easy."

In June 2015, Wood won his second European tour title at the Lyoness Open with a two-stroke victory over Rafa Cabrera-Bello. He started the day five shots behind leader Grégory Bourdy, but shot a bogey-free final round of 67 to take the victory.

The 2016 season started with a third place at the Nedbank Golf Challenge in Sun City, South Africa. In May, Wood won the 2016 BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth Club; the win lifted him at the 22nd place of the Official World Golf Ranking and guaranteed him an automatic selection for the 2016 Ryder Cup.

Wood paired up with Justin Rose in his career debut at the Ryder Cup for a 1 up victory against Jimmy Walker and Zach Johnson in Saturday's foursomes; in the singles, he lost (1 up) to Dustin Johnson.

After a period of decline, including a brief retirement in 2023 and failure to qualify for the European Tour in 2025, Wood qualified for the revived MENA Golf Tour after winning the tour's Q-School by six shots. He secured his first professional win in nine years at the tour's second event, the Rolear Algarve Classic.

Amateur wins

  • 2007 Russian Amateur Championship
  • 2008 Welsh Amateur Open Stroke Play Championship

Professional wins (6)

European Tour wins (3)

Legend
Flagship events (1)
Other European Tour (2)
No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victoryRunner(s)-up
126 Jan 2013Commercial Bank Qatar Masters−18 (67-70-64-69=270)1 strokeZAF George Coetzee, ESP Sergio García
214 Jun 2015Lyoness Open−15 (67-69-70-67=273)2 strokesESP Rafa Cabrera-Bello
329 May 2016BMW PGA Championship−9 (72-70-68-69=279)1 strokeSWE Rikard Karlberg

European Tour playoff record (0–1)

No.YearTournamentOpponentsResult
12011Africa OpenZAF Louis Oosthuizen, ESP Manuel QuirósOosthuizen won with birdie on first extra hole

MENA Golf Tour wins (2)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victoryRunner-up
14 Dec 2025Rolear Algarve Classic−16 (65-68-67=200)1 strokeSCO Aidan O'Hagan
226 Jan 2026Egypt Golf Series Marassi 1−13 (66-66-71=203)PlayoffENG Charlie Crockett

OneAsia Tour wins (1)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victoryRunner-up
112 Aug 2012Thailand Open−23 (67-64-67-67=265)2 strokesKOR Jang Dong-kyu

Results in major championships

Tournament20082009201020112012201320142015201620172018
Masters TournamentCUTT42CUT
U.S. OpenT23CUT
The Open ChampionshipT5LAT3CUTT64T23WDT14T28
PGA ChampionshipT76CUTCUTT46CUTCUTT33CUT
Tournament2019
Masters Tournament
PGA Championship
U.S. Open
The Open ChampionshipCUT

LA = Low amateur

CUT = missed the half-way cut

WD = withdrew

"T" = tied

Summary

TournamentWins2nd3rdTop-5Top-10Top-25EventsCuts madeTotals0012252211
Masters Tournament00000031
PGA Championship00000083
U.S. Open00000121
The Open Championship00122496
  • Most consecutive cuts made – 3 (twice)
  • Longest streak of top-10s – 2 (2008 Open Championship – 2009 Open Championship)

Results in World Golf Championships

Results not in chronological order before 2015.

Tournament20102011201220132014201520162017
ChampionshipT43T42T28
Match PlayR64R64T61T39
InvitationalT773
ChampionsT39T51T23

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

WD = withdrew

"T" = tied

Team appearances

Amateur

  • European Amateur Team Championship (representing England): 2008
  • Bonallack Trophy (representing Europe): 2008 (winners)

Professional

  • Seve Trophy (representing Great Britain & Ireland): 2009 (winners), 2013
  • World Cup (representing England): 2013, 2016
  • EurAsia Cup (representing Europe): 2016 (winners)
  • Ryder Cup (representing Europe) : 2016

Ryder Cup points record

2016Total
11

References

References

  1. Kroichick, Ron. (19 July 2008). "British Open: That's Wood, not Woods". [[San Francisco Chronicle]].
  2. (August 2017). "Wood wins Welsh Title by six stokes".
  3. (19 July 2008). "Amateur Wood eyes shock open win". [[BBC]].
  4. Mahoney, Paul. (20 July 2008). "Wood aims to turn silver into gold". Golf Magic.com.
  5. "International Sports Management news release".
  6. (18 November 2008). "Open star Wood secures Tour card". [[BBC]].
  7. (19 July 2009). "Wood misses out by a shot at Open". [[BBC]].
  8. (26 January 2013). "Chris Wood wins first European Tour title with eagle". [[BBC]].
  9. (29 May 2016). "Wood holds on to win BMW PGA Championship". PGA Tour.
  10. (23 November 2025). "Chris Wood Wins MENA Golf Tour Q School in Portugal". Worldwide Golf.
  11. (5 December 2025). "MENA Golf Tour Triumph: Chris Wood Secures First Title With Algarve One-Shot Victory". MENA FN.
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