2005 Alps Tour
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| Duration | 23 March 2005 – 23 October 2005 |
|---|---|
| Number of official events | 18 |
| Most wins | Austria Thomas Feyrsinger (3) |
| Order of Merit | France Cédric Menut |
← 2004 2006 → | |
The 2005 Alps Tour was the fifth season of the Alps Tour, a third-tier golf tour recognised by the European Tour.
Schedule
[edit | edit source]The following table lists official events during the 2005 season.[1]
| Date | Tournament | Host country | Purse (€) |
Winner[a] |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 25 Mar | Trophée Maroc Telecom | Morocco | 35,000 | France Adrien Mörk (2) |
| 1 Apr | Open de Fès | Morocco | 35,000 | Italy Giorgio Grillo (1) |
| 8 Apr | Open de Mohammedia | Morocco | 35,000 | Morocco Mustapha El Kharraz (1) |
| 15 May | Open de Bordeaux | France | 45,000 | Belgium Nicolas Colsaerts (1) |
| 28 May | Gösser Open | Austria | 35,000 | Austria Thomas Feyrsinger (1) |
| 5 Jun | Open International Côtes d'Armor Bretagne | France | 50,000 | France Nicolas Joakimides (1) |
| 19 Jun | Memorial Olivier Barras | Switzerland | 35,000 | France Bertrand Coathalem (1) |
| 24 Jun | Open Le Fronde | Italy | 35,000 | Italy Andrea Zani (2) |
| 3 Jul | Open de Neuchâtel | Switzerland | 45,000 | Austria Thomas Feyrsinger (2) |
| 8 Jul | Open La Margherita | Italy | 35,000 | Italy Matteo Peroni (1) |
| 20 Aug | MAN NÖ Open | Austria | 55,000 | Austria Markus Brier (2) |
| 25 Aug | Waldviertel Open | Austria | 35,000 | Spain Francisco Valera (1) |
| 4 Sep | Open International de la Mirabelle d'Or | France | 45,000 | France Mike Lorenzo-Vera (a) (1) |
| 11 Sep | Uniqa FinanceLife Styrian Open | Austria | 45,000 | Austria Florian Praegant (a) (1) |
| 17 Sep | Open International Stade Français Paris | France | 45,000 | France Grégory Bourdy (3) |
| 30 Sep | Open La Pavoniere | Italy | 35,000 | Austria Thomas Feyrsinger (3) |
| 9 Oct | Open du Haut Poitou | France | 40,000 | France Renaud Guillard (1) |
| 23 Oct | Masters 13 | France | 50,000 | Portugal José-Filipe Lima (2) |
Order of Merit
[edit | edit source]The Order of Merit was based on tournament results during the season, calculated using a points-based system.[2] The top five players on the Order of Merit (not otherwise exempt) earned status to play on the 2006 Challenge Tour.[3]
| Position | Player | Points | Status earned |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | France Cédric Menut | 38,931 | Qualified for Challenge Tour (made cut in Q School) |
| 2 | Spain Francisco Valera | 31,029 | Qualified for European Tour (Top 25 in Q School) |
| 3 | Austria Thomas Feyrsinger | 29,944 | Promoted to Challenge Tour |
| 4 | France Bertrand Coathalem | 22,771 | |
| 5 | France Adrien Mörk | 18,739 | |
| 6 | France Anthony Snobeck | 16,845 | |
| 7 | France Jean-Marc de Polo | 15,958 | |
| 8 | France Renaud Guillard | 15,800 | |
| 9 | Austria Clemens Prader | 15,633 | |
| 10 | Austria Thomas Kogler | 13,410 |
Notes
[edit | edit source]- ^ The number in brackets after each winner's name is the number of Alps Tour events they had won up to and including that tournament. It is rare for someone to accumulate many wins on the Alps Tour as success at this level usually leads to promotion to the Challenge Tour.
References
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