Myanmar Open
| Tournament information | |
|---|---|
| Location | Yangon, Myanmar | 
| Established | 1996 | 
| Course(s) | Royal Mingalardon G&CC | 
| Par | 72 | 
| Length | 7,218 yards (6,600 m) | 
| Tour(s) | Asian Tour Japan Golf Tour | 
| Format | Stroke play | 
| Prize fund | US$750,000 (2016) | 
| Month played | February | 
| Tournament record score | |
| Aggregate | 264 Tetsuji Hiratsuka (2010) 264 Shaun Norris (2016) | 
| To par | −24 as above | 
| Current champion | |
|  Shaun Norris | |
The Myanmar Open is a professional golf tournament on the Asian Tour. It was founded in 1996, and was played every year until 2005. After a four-year hiatus, the event returned to the Asian Tour schedule in 2010.[1] It was not played in 2011 but returned again in 2012.
After a two-year absence, the tournament is scheduled to return in February 2016. The event will be sponsored by Leopalace21 and will be cosanctioned by the Asian Tour and Japan Golf Tour.[2]
Winners
| Year | Winner | Country | Winning score | Margin of victory | Runner(s)-up | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Leopalace21 Myanmar Open | |||||
| 2016 | Shaun Norris |  South Africa | 264 (−24) | 4 strokes | Park Jun-won, Azuma Yano | 
| Myanmar Open | |||||
| 2014–15 | No tournament | ||||
| 2013 | Chawalit Plaphol |  Thailand | 270 (−18) | 1 stroke | Mithun Perera | 
| 2012 | Kieran Pratt |  Australia | 273 (−15) | Playoff (2nd hole) | Kiradech Aphibarnrat, Adam Blyth | 
| 2011 | No tournament | ||||
| 2010 | Tetsuji Hiratsuka |  Japan | 264 (−24) | 10 strokes | Prayad Marksaeng | 
| 2006–09 | No tournament | ||||
| 2005 | Scott Strange |  Australia | 277 (−11) | 2 strokes | Rick Gibson | 
| 2004 | Thongchai Jaidee (2) |  Thailand | 276 (−12) | 3 strokes | Andrew Pitts | 
| 2003 | Lin Keng-chi |  Taiwan | 275 (−13) | 3 strokes | Thongchai Jaidee | 
| 2002 | Thongchai Jaidee |  Thailand | 277 | Playoff (1st hole) | Edward Loar | 
| 2001 | Anthony Kang |  United States | 282 | 2 strokes | Charlie Wi | 
| 2000 | James Kingston |  South Africa | 269 (−19) | 10 strokes | Craig Kamps | 
| 1999 | Wang Ter-chang |  Taiwan | 271 | 3 strokes | Koichi Nogami, Frankie Miñoza | 
| 1998 | Taimur Hussain |  Pakistan | 280 | 1 stroke | Zhang Lian-wei | 
| 1997 | Boonchu Ruangkit (2) |  Thailand | 273 | Playoff (1st hole) | John Senden | 
| 1996 | Boonchu Ruangkit |  Thailand | 293 (+5) | Playoff (1st hole) | Jeff Senior | 
References
- ↑ "Myanmar Open set for return". ESPN Star Sports. 2 February 2010. Retrieved 22 February 2010.
- ↑ "Myanmar Open to return in February". Asian Tour. 6 November 2015.
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/12/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.