Birgir Hafþórsson | |
Fullname: | Birgir Leifur Hafþórsson |
Birth Date: | 16 May 1976 |
Birth Place: | Akranes, Iceland |
Height: | 187 cm |
Yearpro: | 1997 |
Extour: | European Tour Challenge Tour Nordic Golf League Swedish Golf Tour |
Prowins: | 5 |
Chalwins: | 1 |
Otherwins: | 4 |
Show-Medals: | yes |
Birgir Leifur Hafþórsson (born 16 May 1976) is an Icelandic professional golfer and former European Tour player. At age 41, he became Iceland's first winner on the Challenge Tour, winning the 2017 Cordon Golf Open in France. He also won the mixed team gold and the men's silver at the 2018 European Golf Team Championships at Gleneagles, Scotland.[1]
Hafþórsson was born in Akranes, Iceland, and took up golf with a group of friends when he was 12. His uncle Sveinn Arsalsson was the first National Champion of Iceland.[1]
He first won the Icelandic National Golf Championship as an amateur in 1996, and would go on to win also in 2003, 2004 and 2010.[2]
Hafþórsson turned professional in 1997 and joined the Swedish Golf Tour.[3] He attended the European Tour Qualifying School 18 times between 1997 and 2016, and was successful in 2006 and 2007, the other years playing with limited status, mainly on the Challenge Tour.
Hafþórsson joined the European Tour in 2007 after taking the 25th card at Q-School. His best finish in his rookie season was a tie for 11th at the Telecom Italia Open, 3 strokes behind winner Gonzalo Fernández-Castaño. He finished in 12th place at Q-School to keep his card, but he sustained a debilitating injury to his lower back in 2008. He suffered from spondylolisthesis, a condition in which a defect in a part of the spine causes vertebra to slip, and played the European Tour on a medical extension in 2009.[1]
Playing mainly on the Challenge Tour from 2011, he finished 3rd at the 2011 Mugello Tuscany Open, and won the 2017 Cordon Golf Open in France by a convincing 7 strokes. At age 41, he became Iceland's first winner on the Challenge Tour.[4]
Hafþórsson represented Iceland at the 2018 European Golf Team Championships at Gleneagles, Scotland. He won the team gold together with Ólafía Þórunn Kristinsdóttir, Valdis Thora Jonsdottir and Axel Bóasson, and silver behind Spain in the men's event with Axel Bóasson.[5]
Source:[2]
Professional