Quebec Championship

The Quebec Championship (French: Championnat de Québec)[n 1] was a professional golf tournament on the Champions Tour, a professional tour for golfers 50 and older operated by the PGA Tour. A 54-hole event, it debuted in 2010 as the Montreal Championship (French: Championnat de Montréal) at the Club de Golf Fontainebleau in the Montreal suburb of Blainville, Quebec, Canada. The course was a par-72 at 7,105 yards (6,497 m)[1]

Quebec Championship
Championnat de Québec
Tournament information
LocationLévis, Quebec, Canada
Established2010
Course(s)Golf La Tempête
(2014–2015)
La Vallée du Richelieu G.C.
(2012–2013)
Club de Golf Fontainebleau
(2010–11)
Par72
Length7,203 yards (6,586 m)
Tour(s)Champions Tour
FormatStroke play - 54 holes
Prize fundUS$1,600,000
Month playedSeptember
Final year2014
Tournament record score
Aggregate195 John Cook (2011)
To par−21 John Cook (2011)
Final champion
Wes Short, Jr.
Golf La Tempête
Location in Canada

For 2012, the tournament moved a week earlier in the schedule and relocated to the Vercheres course at La Vallee du Richelieu Golf Club in Sainte-Julie, Quebec.[2] The tournament remained at La Vallee du Richelieu in 2013, but changed its date to September and switched to the Rouville course.[3]

The 2013 edition was the last in the Montreal area. The event moved to the Quebec City area for 2014, and is now held at Golf La Tempête in Lévis. The 2014 edition is the first PGA Tour-sanctioned event held in the Quebec City area since the 1956 Labatt Open.[4]

Winners

YearDatesChampionWinning scoreTo parMargin
of victory
Runner-upPurse
(US$)
Winner's
share
2015Sep 4–6Canceled[5]
2014Sep 5–7 Wes Short, Jr.69-68-64=201−151 stroke Scott Dunlap1,600,000240,000
2013Sep 6–8 Esteban Toledo73-69-69=211−5Playoff Kenny Perry1,600,000240,000
2012Jun 22–24 Mark Calcavecchia69-67-64=200−164 strokes Brad Bryant1,800,000270,000
2011Jul 1–3 John Cook63-66-66=195−213 strokes Lu Chien-soon1,800,000270,000
2010Jul 2–4 Larry Mize67-68-64=199−171 stroke John Cook1,800,000270,000

Notes

  1. The literal translation of the French name of the tournament is "Quebec City Championship". However, the tournament organizers use "Quebec Championship" as the event's English-language name.

References

  1. "Championnat de Montréal 2010 : Guide du Spectateur" (PDF) (in French). Montreal Championship. Retrieved July 4, 2010.
  2. "Montreal Championship gets new course, dates for 2012". PGA Tour. November 17, 2011. Retrieved May 28, 2012.
  3. "2013 Champions Tour Schedule". PGA Tour. Retrieved January 31, 2012.
  4. "Champions Tour stop moving to Quebec City". Golf Canada. The Canadian Press. December 13, 2013. Retrieved September 2, 2014.
  5. "Quebec Championship removed from 2015 Champions Tour schedule". PGA Tour. April 24, 2015.

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