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English Open

Professional golf tournament


Summary

Professional golf tournament

FieldValue
nameCazoo Classic
imageCazoo Classic.png
image_size200px
locationSouthport, Merseyside, England
establishment1988
courseHillside Golf Club
par72
yardage7109 yd
tourEuropean Tour
formatStroke play
purse
month_playedJuly
final_year2022
aggregate268 Darren Clarke (1999)
to-par−20 as above
final_championSCO Richie Ramsay
mapEngland#United Kingdom Merseyside
map_labelHillside GC
map_captionLocation in England##Location in Merseyside
map_reliefyes
map_size200
coordinates

the golf tournament

| to-par = −20 as above The English Open was a professional golf tournament held in England. First played in 1988, it was an annual event on the European Tour until 2002. After several aborted attempts at reviving the tournament, it returned to the tour schedule in 2021, when it was titled as the Cazoo Classic.

Winners of the tournament include some of the most successful players in European Tour history including Mark James, Ian Woosnam, Colin Montgomerie, Lee Westwood and Darren Clarke. James and Clarke are the only two players to have won the title more than once.

History

The English Open was founded in 1988, replacing the Lawrence Batley International on the tour schedule, and despite initial sponsorship issues, there were hopes that the new English Open would develop into another major national open on the circuit.

After the first event, which was held at Royal Birkdale, the Brabazon course at The Belfry was home to the tournament until 1993, when it moved to the Forest of Arden. It was then played at Hanbury Manor between 1997 and 1999, before returning to the Forest of Arden until the tournament was cancelled following the 2002 season as part of long-term plans for the European Tour to expand globally, by reducing the number of tournaments held in Europe, especially the United Kingdom. In the tour's first official season in 1972 12 out of 20 events were staged in the UK; by 1988 the ratio was 11 to 15, but by 2005 this was down to 8 out of 47.

After a six-year hiatus the English Open was due to return to the European Tour schedule in 2009. A five-year deal with the tour had been agreed, with the tournament being played over the Jack Nicklaus designed Signature Course at the St. Mellion International Resort in Cornwall, initially an alternate event to the PGA Championship, one of professional golf's majors. However early in 2009, due to the impact of the Great Recession, the revival was postponed until 2011 at the earliest. In March 2011 it was announced that the event had been cancelled due to insufficient sponsorship revenue having been raised by the organisers.

The tournament was due to return in 2020 as part of a revamp of the European Tour's schedule in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. The event was played at Forest of Arden Hotel and Country Club as part of a 6-week "UK Swing". When Hero MotoCorp agreed to sponsor of the scheduled event in July 2020, it was renamed as the Hero Open, and later separated historically from the English Open.

The English Open did return in 2021, however a sponsorship agreement with Cazoo saw the tournament renamed as the Cazoo Classic. Cazoo's multi-year partnership with the tour also included title sponsorship of the Wales Open.

Winners

YearWinnerScoreTo parMargin of
victoryRunner(s)-upVenueCazoo ClassicEnglish OpenCompass Group English OpenNational Car Rental English OpenAlamo English OpenMurphy's English OpenNM English OpenEnglish Open
2022SCO Richie Ramsay274−141 strokeENG Paul WaringHillside
2021SCO Calum Hill272−161 strokeFRA Alexander LévyLondon
2010–2020: No tournament
2009Cancelled due to lack of funding
2003–2008: No tournament
2002NIR Darren Clarke (3)271−173 strokesDNK Søren HansenForest of Arden
2001AUS Peter O'Malley275−131 strokeFRA Raphaël JacquelinForest of Arden
2000NIR Darren Clarke (2)275−131 strokeNZL Michael Campbell
ENG Mark JamesForest of Arden
1999NIR Darren Clarke268−202 strokesENG John BickertonHanbury Manor
1998ENG Lee Westwood271−172 strokesAUS Greg Chalmers
SWE Olle KarlssonHanbury Manor
1997SWE Per-Ulrik Johansson269−192 strokesSWE Dennis EdlundHanbury Manor
1996AUS Robert Allenby278−101 strokeENG Ross McFarlane
SCO Colin MontgomerieForest of Arden
1995IRL Philip Walton274−14PlayoffSCO Colin MontgomerieForest of Arden
1994SCO Colin Montgomerie274−141 strokeENG Barry LaneForest of Arden
1993WAL Ian Woosnam269−192 strokesITA Costantino RoccaThe Belfry
1992ARG Vicente Fernández283−51 strokeSWE Per-Ulrik Johansson
SWE Fredrik LindgrenThe Belfry
1991ENG David Gilford278−102 strokesENG Roger ChapmanThe Belfry
1990ENG Mark James (2)284−4PlayoffSCO Sam TorranceThe Belfry
1989ENG Mark James279−91 strokeIRL Eamonn Darcy
AUS Craig Parry
SCO Sam TorranceThe Belfry
1988ENG Howard Clark279−93 strokesENG Peter BakerRoyal Birkdale

References

References

  1. (26 January 1988). "At last! English get their own Open". Irish Independent.
  2. (28 July 1988). "Promoters to the rescue of English Open". The Times.
  3. "English Open History". PGA European Tour.
  4. Platts, Mitchell. (29 September 1988). "English Open gets under way without Europe's leading six". The Times.
  5. (19 March 2008). "The English Open to be Played at St Mellion from 2009". [[PGA European Tour]].
  6. (21 January 2009). "Crunch delays golf championships". BBC News.
  7. (24 March 2011). "English Open at St Mellion cancelled over lack of funds". BBC Sport.
  8. (28 May 2020). "European Tour announces resumption of 2020 season". PGA European Tour.
  9. (14 July 2020). "Hero MotoCorp announced as the Title Partner of Hero Open". PGA European Tour.
  10. Plummer, Barry. (9 August 2021). "NCG form expert Barry Plummer picks out three players to challenge for the Cazoo Classic...".
  11. Jackson, Keith. (8 June 2021). "European Tour announces multi-year sponsorship deal with Cazoo". Sky Sports.
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