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  2. Asian Tour - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asian_Tour

    The Asian PGA was formed in July 1994 at a meeting in Hong Kong attended by PGA representatives from eight countries. The first season of the APGA Omega Tour, as it was known for sponsorship reasons, was played in 1995 and within a few years it had supplanted the existing tour in the region, the Asia Golf Circuit that was run by the Asia Pacific Golf Confederation, as the leading golf tour in ...

  3. Qualifying school - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qualifying_school

    Qualifying school. In professional golf, the term qualifying school is used for the annual qualifying tournaments for leading golf tours such as the U.S.-based PGA and LPGA Tours and the European Tour. A fixed number of players in the event win membership of the tour for the following season, otherwise known as a "tour card", meaning that they ...

  4. PGA Tour Qualifying Tournament - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PGA_Tour_Qualifying_Tournament

    The annual PGA Tour Qualifying Tournament, also known as Qualifying School or Q-School, was historically the main method by which golfers earned PGA Tour playing privileges, commonly known as a Tour card. From 2013 to 2022, Q-School granted privileges only for the Korn Ferry Tour, the PGA Tour's official developmental circuit, but in 2023 it ...

  5. Asian Development Tour - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asian_Development_Tour

    The Asian Development Tour, founded in 2010, is a professional golf tour. It is the development tour for the Asian Tour. Players who fail to earn Asian Tour cards through qualifying school may play on the tour. Currently, the top ten players on the Order of Merit (money list) at the end of the year earn an Asian Tour card for the following season.

  6. PGA Tour of Australasia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PGA_Tour_of_Australasia

    To earn a PGA Tour of Australasia card, one must place in the top 40 of the tour's qualifying school. To retain a Tour card, a golfer must finish in the top 60 of the Order of Merit. Golfers ranked 61st–75th are given conditional status and those ranked 61st to 100th are given entry to the final stage of Q School.

  7. Arjun Atwal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arjun_Atwal

    1995. Asian PGA Tour. Order of Merit winner. 2003. Asian PGA Tour. Players' Player of the Year. 2003. Arjun Singh Atwal (born 20 March 1973) is an Indian professional golfer who has played on the Asian Tour and the European Tour and is the first player born in India to participate in and win the U.S.-based PGA Tour .

  8. 2011 PGA Tour Qualifying School graduates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011_PGA_Tour_Qualifying...

    2011 PGA Tour Qualifying School graduates. This is a list of the 29 players who earned their 2012 PGA Tour card through Q School in 2011. Note: Roberto Castro and Mark Anderson had already qualified for the PGA Tour by placing in the Top 25 during the 2011 Nationwide Tour season; they did not count among the Top 25 Q school graduates. Players ...

  9. 1985 PGA Tour Qualifying School graduates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1985_PGA_Tour_Qualifying...

    History. Fifty players earned their 1986 PGA Tour card through Q-School in 1985. The tournament was played over 108 holes at the Grenelefe Golf and Tennis Resort, West and South courses, in Haines City, Florida. The top 50 players split the $100,000 purse, with the winner earning $15,000. Peter McWhinney lost a six-for-five playoff for the last ...