Coordinates: 49°12′22″N 2°28′46″E / 49.2061°N 2.4794°E / 49.2061; 2.4794

Golf de Chantilly

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Golf de Chantilly
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Club information
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LocationVineuil-Saint-Firmin, Oise, France
Established1909, 117 years ago
TypePrivate
Total holes36
Events hostedOpen de France
Websitegolfdechantilly.com
Vineuil
Designed byTom Simpson (1920)
Par71
Length6,399 metres (6,998 yd)
Longères
Designed byDonald Steel (1980s)
Par73
Length6,391 metres (6,989 yd)

Golf de Chantilly is a 36-hole golf complex situated 45 km north of Paris in the town of Vineuil-Saint-Firmin, department of Oise, France.

History

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The club, opened in 1909, sits just over a kilometer from the Château de Chantilly in the middle of a green forest, Forêt De Chantilly. It features two 18-hole courses, the Vineuil course and the Longères course.[1] Tom Simpson extended the original 9-hole Vineuil course to 18 in 1920 when he also built a second course, the Longères. It suffered badly in WWII and was abandoned after the war, until Donald Steel used 5 of the old holes combined with 13 new ones he designed to re-open it in the 1980s.[2]

Tournaments

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Chantilly has hosted a wide array of national and international championships since it opened in 1909.[3]

It has hosted the Open de France, the oldest national open in continental Europe, eleven times between 1913 and 1990.[4]

Professional

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Year Tour Tournament Winner
1913 8th Open de France Scotland George Duncan
1925 15th Open de France France Arnaud Massy
1933 23rd Open de France England Bert Gadd
1937 27th Open de France France Marcel Dallemagne
1947 31st Open de France England Henry Cotton
1950 34th Open de France Argentina Roberto De Vicenzo
1964 48th Open de France Argentina Roberto De Vicenzo
1974 EUR 58th Open de France England Peter Oosterhuis
1986 LET Hennessy Cognac Ladies Cup United States Kelly Leadbetter
1988 EUR 72nd Open de France England Nick Faldo
1989 EUR 73rd Open de France England Nick Faldo
1990 EUR 74th Open de France Republic of Ireland Philip Walton

Amateur

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References

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