European Young Masters

The European Young Masters is a European amateur mixed team golf championship for boys and girls under 16 organised by the European Golf Association. The inaugural event was held in 1995, and it has been played annually since, with the exception of 1996.[1]

Format

The championship is contested by under-16 teams of two girls and two boys per EGA member federation, except in 1997 when an under-18 competition also took place.

Results

YearLocationGirls' championBoys' championWinner
1995 England Barbara Paruscio Sergio Garcia  Spain
1997 Italy Giulia Sergas (U18) Omar Halldórsson (U18)  Italy
Suzann Pettersen Roberto Paolillo
1998 Italy Diana Luna Barry Hume  Italy
1999 Italy Lucia Mar Rafa Cabrera-Bello  Spain
2001 Germany Emma Cabrera-Bello Tony Raillard  France
2002 Germany María Hernández Pablo Martín  Spain
2003 Germany Azahara Muñoz Ben Parker  Spain
2005 Austria Carlota Ciganda Floris De Vries  Spain
2006 Austria Saskia Hausladen Maximilian Kieffer  Germany
2007 France Carly Booth Matteo Manassero  Italy
2008 France Lisa Maguire Stanislas Gautier  France
2009 France Klára Spilková Jeroen Krietemeijer  Czech Republic
2010 Hungary Isabella Deilert Albert Eckhardt  Finland
2011 Hungary Harang Lee Kenny Subregis  Spain
2012 Hungary Covadonga Sanjuan Renato Paratore  Italy
2013 Germany Covadonga Sanjuan Bradley Moore  Germany
2014 Germany Alexandra Fösterling Max Schmitt  Germany
2015 Switzerland Pauline Roussin-Bouchard Markus Braadlie  France
2016 Switzerland Elina Saksa Adrien Dumont De Chassart  Czech Republic
2017 Norway Lily-May Humphreys Bård Bjørnevik Skogen  Germany
2018 Norway Caitlin Whitehead Sebastian Friedrichsen  Sweden
2019 Czech Republic Paula Schulz-Hanssen Michael Alexander Mjaaseth  Germany

Results summary

CountryWinner
 Spain8
 Germany5
 Italy4
 France3
 Czech Republic2
 Finland1
 Sweden1
Total24

Source:[2]

gollark: Apparently in a few billion years various feedback loops and an increasingly warm sun will cause the oceans to boil, and a few billion after that the Sun will swell into a red giant and destroy anything remaining.
gollark: At worst it would probably severely damage it.
gollark: A giant space rock would be very hard-pressed to destroy the Earth.
gollark: Depends on what you consider "die", but it will probably involve the sun doing things.
gollark: I mean, outside-view-ishly, life on Earth has existed for several billion years, so the probability (without knowing anything else) of it randomly stopping over the course of some arbitrary thousand or so is... not high.

See also

References

  1. "European Young Masters". European Golf Rankings. Retrieved 23 February 2020.
  2. "European Young Masters – European Golf Association" (PDF). Retrieved 23 February 2020.
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