Kristianstad Golf Club Explained

Golf Facility Name:Kristianstad Golf Club
Location:Åhus, Kristianstad Municipality, Skåne County, Sweden
Establishment:1924 (SGF Member)
Type:Public
Holes:36
Tournaments:Kristianstad Ladies Open
Creekhouse Ladies Open
Website:kristianstadsgk.com
Course1:Åhus East
Designer1:Rafael Sundblom
Douglas Braiser
Par1:72
Record1:Men:
64 – Per Nyman
Women:
67 – Sarah Nilsson
Course2:Åhus West
Designer2:Rolf Collijn
Tommy Nordström
Par2:72
Record2:Men:
63 – Ludwig Nordeklint
Women:
64 – Emma Nilsson
Pushpin Map:Sweden
Pushpin Relief:1
Pushpin Mapsize:150

Kristianstad Golf Club is a golf club located in Åhus 18 km southeast of Kristianstad in Skåne County, Sweden. It has hosted the European Ladies Amateur Championship and Kristianstad Ladies Open on the Ladies European Tour.

History

The club was admitted to the Swedish Golf Federation in 1924 as only the 6th club in the country. The first 9-hole course was located at Rinkaby military training ground. It was moved to its current location in Åhus in 1940 and the first 18-hole course, Åhus East, was completed by 1969. The first 9 holes of Åhus West was built in 1980 and its extension to 18 holes was completed in 2006. The Åhus East course saw a major overhaul in 2016 by Pierre Fulke and Adam Mednickson, and Åhus West re-opened with a new layout in 2021.[1] The East course was ranked third best in the country in 2020.[2]

The club has had a vibrant youth section and was a dominant force in ladies golf in Sweden in the 1990s by winning the Swedish Team Championship for women ten years in a row 1992–2001. Amongst the successful players to come out of the club's youth system were LET-players Anna Berg, Mia Löjdahl, Sara Eklund, Sarah Nilsson and Emma Nilsson, 1990 Eisenhower Trophy winner Per Nyman, and 1996 European Amateur champion Daniel Olsson.[3]

The club hosted the Kristianstad Ladies Open on the Ladies European Tour in 1986, where Corinne Dibnah of Australia won by one stroke over Liselotte Neumann. It hosted the Creekhouse Ladies Open on the same tour in 2021, where local players Maja Stark and Linn Grant secured the top two spots. It also hosted the 1999 Swedish Matchplay Championship on the Challenge Tour, the 2017 Tour Final for the Swedish Golf Tour (men and women), and many amateur tournaments such as the 2002 European Ladies Amateur Championship, won by Becky Brewerton.[4]

Tournaments hosted

Amateur tournaments

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: History . Kristianstad Golf Club . 7 February 2021.
  2. Web site: Sveriges bästa golfbanor . Svensk Golf . 12 September 2021.
  3. Book: Jansson, Anders . Golf - Den Stora Sporten' . Swedish . Golf - the Great Sport . Swedish Golf Federation . 2004 . 91-86818007 . 114 . 7 February 2021.
  4. Web site: European Ladies Amateur Championship . European Golf Association . 7 February 2021.