Japan Golf Tour Explained

Japan Golf Tour
Current Season:2024 Japan Golf Tour
Pixels:150px
Formerly:iiyama Tour
PGA of Japan Tour
Sport:Golf
Founded:1973
Inaugural:1973
Countries:Based in Japan
Website:http://www.jgto.org/en
Director:Isao Aoki
Related Comps:Japan Challenge Tour
Founder:PGA of Japan

The Japan Golf Tour (Japanese: 日本ゴルフツアー機構) is a prominent professional golf tour. It was founded in 1973 and as of 2006 it offered the third-highest annual prize fund out of the regular (that is not for seniors) men's professional tours after the PGA Tour and the European Tour. However, since the early 1990s, the growth in prize money has not kept pace with that on the two larger tours. Official events on the Japan Golf Tour count for Official World Golf Ranking points and success on the tour can also qualify members to play in the majors.

Most of the leading players on the tour are Japanese, but players from many other countries also participate. The tour is currently run by the Japan Golf Tour Organization (JGTO), which was established in 1999 to separate the tour from the PGA of Japan.[1] The JGTO also organises a developmental tour called the Japan Challenge Tour.

Masashi Ozaki has been the dominant player on tour, leading the career wins list with 94, the career money list with over ¥2 billion and winning the money title twelve times between 1973 and 1998.[2]

Entry to The Open Championship is given to Order of Merit winner and runner-up, Japan Open Golf Championship winner, two players not already exempt from the money list up to the Japan Golf Tour Championship and the top four non-exempt players from the Mizuno Open.

In 2000, the tour signed a title sponsorship agreement with Iiyama, being renamed as the iiyama Tour. The agreement was reported to be worth over three years.[3]

In 2008, the tour ventured outside of Japan for the first time, co-sanctioning the Pine Valley Beijing Open in China, alongside the Asian Tour.[4] In 2013, the tour also co-sanctioned two events at the beginning of the year in Thailand and Indonesia with the OneAsia Tour.[5] [6]

In December 2022, a new agreement involving the JGTO, PGA Tour and European Tour was announced. As part of the deal, from 2023 onwards the top three on the Japan Golf Tour's season-ending money list earned status to play on the European Tour for the following season.[7]

Money list winners

Season Winner Prize money (¥)
184,986,179
181,598,825
2020–21127,599,803
2019 Shugo Imahira (2) 168,049,312
2018139,119,332
2017182,831,982
2016207,901,567
Kim Kyung-tae (2) 165,981,625
137,318,693
201,076,781
175,159,972
151,078,958
181,103,799
183,524,051
Shingo Katayama (5) 180,094,895
Toru Taniguchi (2) 171,744,498
Shingo Katayama (4) 178,402,190
Shingo Katayama (3) 134,075,280
2004 Shingo Katayama (2) 119,512,374
2003 Toshimitsu Izawa (2) 135,454,300
2002145,440,341
2001217,934,583
2000177,116,489
Naomichi Ozaki (2) 137,641,796
Masashi Ozaki (12) 179,627,400
Masashi Ozaki (11) 170,847,633
Masashi Ozaki (10) 209,646,746
Masashi Ozaki (9) 192,319,800
Masashi Ozaki (8) 215,468,000
148,718,200
Masashi Ozaki (7) 186,816,466
119,507,974
Masashi Ozaki (6) 129,060,500
Masashi Ozaki (5) 108,715,733
Masashi Ozaki (4) 125,162,540
86,554,421
Tsuneyuki Nakajima (4) 90,202,066
Tsuneyuki Nakajima (3) 101,609,333
57,040,357
Tsuneyuki Nakajima (2) 85,514,183
68,220,640
Isao Aoki (5) 57,262,941
Isao Aoki (4) 60,532,660
Isao Aoki (3) 45,554,211
Isao Aoki (2) 62,987,200
Masashi Ozaki (3) 35,932,608
40,985,801
38,705,551
Masashi Ozaki (2) 41,846,908
43,814,000

Multiple money list titles

The following players have won more than one money list title through 2023:

Titles Player
12 Masashi Ozaki
5 Isao Aoki
Shingo Katayama
4 Tsuneyuki Nakajima
2 Toshimitsu Izawa
Naomichi Ozaki
Toru Taniguchi
Kim Kyung-tae
Shugo Imahira

Awards

SeasonMost Valuable PlayerRookie of the Year
Keita Nakajima
Yuto Katsuragawa
Takumi Kanaya
Shugo Imahira (2) Jazz Janewattananond
Rikuya Hoshino
Chan Kim
Shaun Norris
Song Young-han
Kim Seung-hyuk
Hideki Matsuyama
Hiroyuki Fujita (2) Yoshinori Fujimoto
Park Jae-bum
Shunsuke Sonoda
Yuta Ikeda
Shingo Katayama (4) Ryo Ishikawa
Toru Taniguchi (3) Lee Seong-ho
Shingo Katayama (3) Lee Dong-hwan
Shingo Katayama (2) Jang Ik-jae
Toru Taniguchi (2) Takuya Taniguchi
Toshimitsu Izawa (2) Hideto Tanihara
Brendan Jones
Scott Laycock
Dean Wilson

Career money leaders

The table shows the top ten career money leaders on the Japan Golf Tour through the 2021 season. The figures shown include money won in the four global major championships from 1998 onwards and in the individual World Golf Championships from 1999 to 2009.

Position Player Prize money (¥)
1 Masashi Ozaki2,688,836,653
2 2,252,278,502
3 1,664,953,541
4 1,662,207,219
5 1,545,609,713
6 1,533,257,797
7 1,269,641,069
8 1,192,142,233
9 1,166,981,591
10 1,094,192,410

Japan Golf Tour's website has a full list here.

Records

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: Japan golf touring pros on own . 27 January 1999 . The Honolulu Advertiser . 27 . Honolulu, Hawaii . Newspapers.com . 10 April 2023.
  2. Web site: Before Hideki Matsuyama, There Was Jumbo Ozaki . Golf.com . Sean . Zak . 8 December 2016 . 10 April 2023.
  3. 年間スポンサーのイーヤマ撤退を正式発表 . Official announcement of the withdrawal of annual sponsor iiyama . ja . Golf Digest Japan . 11 May 2002 . 5 January 2024.
  4. Web site: Aoki tipped to play at Pine Valley Beijing Open . china.org.cn . 23 April 2008 . 19 April 2023.
  5. News: Japan Tour expands OneAsia link . The Sporting News . 13 December 2012 . 10 April 2023.
  6. News: Japanese addition for Thai Open . Bangkok Post . Kittipong . Thongsombat . 13 December 2012 . 10 April 2023.
  7. Web site: Beall . Joel . PGA Tour and DP World Tour announce alliance with Japan Golf Tour . Golf Digest . 5 December 2022 . 8 December 2022.
  8. News: 15-year-old boy captures pro tournament in Japan . Toronto Star . 21 May 2007 . 28 June 2023.