Winners
Year | Venue | Winner | Score | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Zambia Sugar Open | ||||
2013 | Lusaka | Adilson da Silva | 281 | |
Indo Zambia Bank Zambia Open | ||||
2012 | Lusaka | Justin Harding | 280 | |
Zambia Open | ||||
2011 | Nchanga | Doug McGuigan | 272 | |
2010 | Ndola | Adilson da Silva | 202 | |
2009 | Ndola | Jbe' Kruger | 204 | |
Chainama Hills Zambia Open | ||||
2008 | Chainama Hills | Tyrone Ferreira | 208 | |
Finance Bank Zambia Open | ||||
2007 | Ndola | Steve Basson | 206 | |
Stanbic Zambia Open | ||||
2006 | Nchanga | Steve Basson | 207 | |
2005 | No tournament | |||
2004 | Lusaka | Michael Kirk | 274 | |
2003 | Lusaka | Johan Edfors | 206 | |
2002 | Lusaka | Marc Cayeux | 270 | |
2001 | Lusaka | Mark Foster | 278 | |
2000 | Lusaka | James Loughnane | 274 | |
Zambia Open | ||||
1999 | No tournament | |||
1998 | Lusaka | Marc Cayeux | 273 | |
1997 | Lusaka | James Loughnane | 273 | |
1996 | Ndola | Desvonde Botes | 208 | |
1995 | ||||
1994 | ||||
1993 | Lusaka | Peter Harrison | 283 | |
1992 | Lusaka | Jeremy Robinson | 284 | |
1991 | Lusaka | David R. Jones | 285 | |
1990 | Gordon J Brand | |||
1989 | Lusaka | Craig Maltman | 215 | |
1988 | Lusaka | David Llewellyn | 280 | |
1987 | Lusaka | Paul Carrigill | 285 | |
1986 | Lusaka | Gary Cullen | 282 | |
1985 | Lusaka | Ian Woosnam | 282 | |
1984 | Lusaka | Carl Mason | 280 | |
1983 | Lusaka | Bill Calfee | 280 | |
1982 | Lusaka | Brian Waites | 276 | |
1981 | Lusaka | Brian Barnes | 276 | |
1980 | Lusaka | Ewen Murray | 282 | |
1979 | Ndola | Brian Barnes | 280 | |
1978 | Lusaka | Peter Townsend | 274 | |
1977 | Ndola | Tommy Horton | 284 | |
1976 | Lusaka | Peter Cowen | 286 | |
1975 | Ndola | Sam Torrance | 280 | |
1974 | Mufulira | Christy O'Connor Jnr | 282 | |
1973 | Lusaka | Craig Defoy | 281 | |
1972 | Ndola | Craig Defoy | 272 |
Read more about this topic: Zambia Open
Famous quotes containing the word winners:
“The two real political parties in America are the Winners and the Losers. The people dont acknowledge this. They claim membership in two imaginary parties, the Republicans and the Democrats, instead.”
—Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. (b. 1922)