| Tournament information | |
|---|---|
| Location | Calne, Wiltshire, England | 
| Established | 1992 | 
| Course(s) | Bowood Golf and Country Club | 
| Par | 72 | 
| Length | 7,318 yards (6,692 m) | 
| Tour(s) | Challenge Tour | 
| Format | Stroke play | 
| Prize fund | €250,000 | 
| Month played | July | 
| Final year | 2002 | 
| Tournament record score | |
| Aggregate | 272 Carl Suneson (1999) | 
| To par | −16 as above | 
| Final champion | |
|  John E. Morgan | |
| Location Map | |
The Challenge Tour Championship was a golf tournament on the Challenge Tour that was first played in 1992 as the East Sussex National Challenge. After a break of two years, it returned as the Coca-Cola Open, before being retitled as the Challenge Tour Championship in 1996.
Winners
| Year | Winner | Score | To par | Margin of victory | Runner(s)-up | Venue | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Charles Church European Challenge Tour Championship | ||||||
| 2002 |  John E. Morgan | 278 | −10 | Playoff |  David Geall | Bowood | 
| 2001 |  Mark Foster | 277 | −11 | 2 strokes |  Sébastien Delagrange  Philip Golding | Bowood | 
| Beazer Homes Challenge Tour Championship | ||||||
| 2000 |  Shaun P. Webster | 282 | −6 | 2 strokes |  Graham Rankin | Bowood | 
| 1999 |  Carl Suneson | 272 | −16 | 8 strokes |  Bradley Dredge  Maarten Lafeber  Benoît Teilleria | Bowood | 
| Challenge Tour Championship | ||||||
| 1998 |  Warren Bennett | 276 | −12 | 2 strokes |  John Bickerton | East Sussex National | 
| 1997 | .svg.png.webp) Greg Chalmers | 274 | −14 | Playoff |  Heinz-Peter Thül | East Sussex National | 
| English Challenge Tour Championship | ||||||
| 1996 |  Dennis Edlund | 282 | −6 | 1 stroke |  Rob Edwards | East Sussex National | 
| Coca-Cola Open | ||||||
| 1995 |  Thomas Bjørn | 280 | −8 | 1 stroke |  Freddie Jacobson | East Sussex National | 
| East Sussex National Challenge | ||||||
| 1993–94: No tournament | ||||||
| 1992 |  Simon D. Hurley | 285 | −3 | Playoff | .svg.png.webp) Retief Goosen | East Sussex National | 
References
External links
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.


