2010 European Tour

The 2010 European Tour was the second edition of the Race to Dubai and the 39th season of golf tournaments since the European Tour officially began in 1972.

2010 European Tour season
Duration10 December 2009 (2009-12-10) – 28 November 2010 (2010-11-28)
Number of official events47
Most wins4:
Martin Kaymer
Race to Dubai Martin Kaymer
Golfer of the Year Martin Kaymer and
Graeme McDowell (shared)
Players' Player of the Year Martin Kaymer
Sir Henry Cotton Rookie of the Year Matteo Manassero
2009
2011

The Race to Dubai was won by Germany's Martin Kaymer.[1] Kaymer and U.S. Open champion Graeme McDowell from Northern Ireland shared the Golfer of the Year award.[2]

Changes for 2010

There were many changes from the 2009 season, including six new tournaments; they were the Africa Open in South Africa,[3] the returning Avantha Masters in India which had been cancelled in 2009,[lower-alpha 1] the Trophée Hassan II in Morocco,[3] the Iberdrola Open Cala Millor Mallorca and the Andalucía Valderrama Masters in Spain, and the Vivendi Cup in France.[4] Lost from the schedule were the European Open, the Mercedes-Benz Championship, the Johnnie Walker Classic, the Australian Masters, the Indonesia Open and the Volvo World Match Play Championship.[5] There were also three fewer tournaments due to a partial realignment of the schedule with the calendar.

Schedule

The following table lists official events during the 2010 season.[6] The season consisted of 47 tournaments, beginning with two events in December 2009 and culminating with the Dubai World Championship the following November.[7] The schedule included the four major championships, four World Golf Championships and the Ryder Cup.

Date Tournament Host country Purse Winner[lower-alpha 2] OWGR
points
Other
tours[lower-alpha 3]
Notes
13 Dec Alfred Dunhill Championship South Africa €1,000,000 Pablo Martín (2) 20 AFR
20 Dec South African Open Championship South Africa €1,000,000 Richie Ramsay (1) 32 AFR[lower-alpha 4]
10 Jan Africa Open South Africa €1,000,000 Charl Schwartzel (4) 20 AFR New to European Tour
17 Jan Joburg Open South Africa €1,300,000 Charl Schwartzel (5) 22 AFR
24 Jan Abu Dhabi Golf Championship UAE US$2,000,000 Martin Kaymer (5) 54
31 Jan Commercialbank Qatar Masters Qatar US$2,500,000 Robert Karlsson (10) 54
7 Feb Omega Dubai Desert Classic UAE US$2,500,000 Miguel Ángel Jiménez (16) 50
14 Feb Avantha Masters India €1,500,000 Andrew Dodt (1) 20 ASA Returning tournament[lower-alpha 1]
21 Feb WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship United States US$8,500,000 Ian Poulter (9) 74 World Golf Championship
7 Mar Maybank Malaysian Open Malaysia US$2,000,000 Noh Seung-yul (1) 24 ASA
14 Mar WGC-CA Championship United States US$8,500,000 Ernie Els (25) 74 World Golf Championship
21 Mar Trophée Hassan II Morocco €1,300,000 Rhys Davies (1) 24 New to European Tour
28 Mar Open de Andalucía de Golf Spain €1,000,000 Louis Oosthuizen (1) 24
11 Apr Madeira Islands Open BPI - Portugal Portugal €700,000 James Morrison (1) 24
11 Apr Masters Tournament United States US$7,500,000 Phil Mickelson (n/a) 100 Major championship
18 Apr Volvo China Open China US$2,500,000 Yang Yong-eun (3) 28 ONE
25 Apr Ballantine's Championship South Korea €2,200,000 Marcus Fraser (2) 38 ASA, KOR
2 May Open de España Spain €2,000,000 Álvaro Quirós (4) 24
9 May BMW Italian Open Italy €1,300,000 Fredrik Andersson Hed (1) 24
16 May Iberdrola Open Cala Millor Mallorca Spain €800,000 Peter Hanson (3) 24 New tournament
23 May BMW PGA Championship England €4,500,000 Simon Khan (2) 64 Flagship event
30 May Madrid Masters Spain €1,500,000 Luke Donald (3) 36
6 Jun Celtic Manor Wales Open Wales £1,800,000 Graeme McDowell (5) 38
13 Jun Estoril Open de Portugal Portugal €1,000,000 Thomas Bjørn (10) 24
20 Jun Saint-Omer Open France €600,000 Martin Wiegele (1) 18 CHA
20 Jun U.S. Open United States US$7,500,000 Graeme McDowell (6) 100 Major championship
27 Jun BMW International Open Germany €2,000,000 David Horsey (1) 38
4 Jul Alstom Open de France France €3,000,000 Miguel Ángel Jiménez (17) 50
11 Jul Barclays Scottish Open Scotland £3,000,000 Edoardo Molinari (1) 52
18 Jul The Open Championship Scotland £4,800,000 Louis Oosthuizen (2) 100 Major championship
25 Jul Nordea Scandinavian Masters Sweden €1,600,000 Richard S. Johnson (2) 26
1 Aug 3 Irish Open Ireland €3,000,000 Ross Fisher (4) 32
8 Aug WGC-Bridgestone Invitational United States US$8,500,000 Hunter Mahan (n/a) 76 World Golf Championship
15 Aug PGA Championship United States US$7,500,000 Martin Kaymer (6) 100 Major championship
22 Aug Czech Open Czech Republic €2,000,000 Peter Hanson (4) 24
29 Aug Johnnie Walker Championship at Gleneagles Scotland £1,400,000 Edoardo Molinari (2) 30
5 Sep Omega European Masters Switzerland €2,000,000 Miguel Ángel Jiménez (18) 30 ASA
12 Sep KLM Open Netherlands €1,800,000 Martin Kaymer (7) 32
19 Sep Austrian Golf Open Austria €1,000,000 José Manuel Lara (2) 24
26 Sep Vivendi Cup France €1,250,000 John Parry (1) 24 New tournament
10 Oct Alfred Dunhill Links Championship Scotland US$5,000,000 Martin Kaymer (8) 48
17 Oct Portugal Masters Portugal €3,000,000 Richard Green (3) 34
24 Oct Castelló Masters Costa Azahar Spain €2,000,000 Matteo Manassero (1) 24
31 Oct Andalucía Valderrama Masters Spain €3,000,000 Graeme McDowell (7) 38 New tournament
7 Nov WGC-HSBC Champions China US$7,000,000 Francesco Molinari (2) 68 World Golf Championship
14 Nov Barclays Singapore Open Singapore US$6,000,000 Adam Scott (7) 48 ASA
21 Nov UBS Hong Kong Open Hong Kong US$2,500,000 Ian Poulter (10) 38 ASA
28 Nov Dubai World Championship UAE US$7,500,000 Robert Karlsson (11) 58 Tour Championship

Unofficial events

The following events were sanctioned by the European Tour, but did not carry official money, nor were wins official.

Date Tournament Host country Purse Winners OWGR
points
Notes
4 Oct Ryder Cup Wales n/a Team Europe n/a Two 12-man teams

Location of tournaments

Race to Dubai

Since 2009, the European Tour's money list has been known as the Race to Dubai. It is based on money earned during the season and is calculated in Euro, with earnings from tournaments that award prize money in other currencies being converted at the exchange rate available the week of the event. The following table shows the top 15 in the 2010 standings following the Dubai World Championship and distribution of the bonus pool.[8]

RankPlayerEventsPrize money
()
1 Martin Kaymer224,461,011
2 Graeme McDowell243,896,996
3 Lee Westwood143,222,423
4 Ian Poulter153,027,008
5 Francesco Molinari272,799,692
6 Robert Karlsson212,296,486
7 Ernie Els152,261,607
8 Charl Schwartzel242,207,965
9 Miguel Ángel Jiménez292,179,418
10 Louis Oosthuizen232,070,763
11 Edoardo Molinari282,009,337
12 Paul Casey141,888,850
13 Rory McIlroy161,821,050
14 Álvaro Quirós251,750,255
15 Luke Donald131,678,072

Awards

AwardWinnerNotes
European Tour Golfer of the Year Martin Kaymer
Graeme McDowell
Shared
European Tour Players' Player of the Year Martin Kaymer
Sir Henry Cotton Rookie of the Year Matteo Manassero

Golfer of the Month

The winners of the European Tour Golfer of the Month Award were as follows:[9]

MonthPlayer
January Charl Schwartzel
February Ian Poulter
March Ernie Els
April Rory McIlroy
May Luke Donald
June Graeme McDowell
July Louis Oosthuizen
August Martin Kaymer
September John Parry
October Matteo Manassero
November Ian Poulter

See also

Notes

  1. The Avantha Masters is considered a continuation of the Indian Masters by the European Tour but not by the Asian Tour.
  2. The numbers in parentheses after the winners' names show the number of official career wins they had on the European Tour up to and including that event. Totals are only shown for members of the European Tour and are inclusive of the three United States-based major championships which were included on the schedule for the first time in 1998, with earlier editions having retrospectively been recognised as official tour wins. Victories in "Approved Special Events" are not recognised as official tour wins.
  3. AFR − Sunshine Tour; ASA − Asian Tour; CHA − Challenge Tour; KOR − Korean Tour; ONE − OneAsia Tour.
  4. Sunshine Tour flagship event

References

  1. "Germany's Martin Kaymer wins European Tour money title". BBC Sport. 28 November 2010. Archived from the original on 29 November 2010. Retrieved 28 November 2010.
  2. "Graeme McDowell & Martin Kaymer share European award". BBC Sport. 7 December 2010. Retrieved 7 December 2010.
  3. "European Tour reveal early schedule". RTÉ Sport. 19 October 2009. Retrieved 28 December 2009.
  4. "The 2010 Race to Dubai announced". PGA European Tour. 7 December 2009. Retrieved 7 December 2009.
  5. "World Match Play shelved for 2010". BBC Sport. 23 May 2010. Retrieved 6 May 2020.
  6. "European Tour schedule". PGA European Tour. Archived from the original on 3 September 2010. Retrieved 9 August 2010.
  7. "The 2010 Race to Dubai to start in South Africa". PGA European Tour. 19 October 2009. Archived from the original on 24 October 2009. Retrieved 12 November 2009.
  8. "European Tour Race To Dubai". PGA European Tour. 28 November 2010. Archived from the original on 5 December 2010. Retrieved 28 November 2010.
  9. "Golfer of the Month". PGA European Tour. Archived from the original on 5 June 2010. Retrieved 22 June 2010.
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