The world’s most talented golfers with disabilities will contest the inaugural G4D Open at Woburn in May – in a new tournament launched by The R&A. (opens in new tab)
Up to 80 players over the Duchess course at Woburn from 10-12 May, with eligible amateur and professional men and women golfers playing a 54-hole stroke play gross competition with an overall winner determined at the end of three rounds.
There will also be a gross prize in several categories at the event R&A CEO Martin Slumbers says will “provide a world-class stage for the very best golfers with disabilities to compete against each other and realise their ambitions at an elite level of the sport.”.
The EDGA (opens in new tab), formerly the European Disabled Golf Association, has been involved in the development of the championship and will continue to support in an advisory role ahead of the event, which will be held in partnership with the DP World Tour.
“The World Health Organization states that 1 in 6 people has a disability and so we want to show that golf is open to everyone regardless of ability,” Slumbers added.
“We can do this by celebrating the exceptional skills of golfers who as role models will inspire more men, women and young people to take up the sport through their achievements on the course.”
World number two in the World Ranking for Golfers with Disability (opens in new tab) (WRG4D) Brendan Lawlor was the first golfer with a disability to compete in a DP World Tour event in 2020, and says the new event is “great news for golf” after earing of the announcement.
“It’s not just about competing in the event and winning, it’s also about etching your name in the history books,” Lawlor added.
“We’ve done that a few times as golfers, including when I became the first player with a disability to play on the European Challenge Tour in 2019 and the DP World Tour in 2020, which were big milestones. To win this new championship would be just as big in my eyes.”
Keith Pelley, Chief Executive of the European Tour Group, said, “The G4D Tour, launched last year, has provided a high-profile platform for the best golfers with a disability to showcase their skills on the same course, the same week, as professionals on the DP World Tour.
“When you watch these golfers play you immediately talk about their ability rather than their disability, and it is only fitting that the 2023 G4D Tour schedule is now further elevated with a new championship. Our partners at…
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