The KSB Open was a professional golf tournament that was held in Japan. Founded as the KSB Kagawa Open in 1981,[1] it was an event on the Japan Golf Tour in 1983 and again from 1989. It was played until 1999, after which it was merged with the Descente Classic to create the Munsingwear Open KSB Cup.

Quick Facts Tournament information, Location ...
Georgia KSB Open
Tournament information
LocationTamano, Okayama, Japan
Established1981
Course(s)Tojigaoka Marinehills Golf Club
Par72
Length6,947 yards (6,352 m)
Tour(s)Japan Golf Tour
FormatStroke play
Prize fund¥70,000,000
Month playedMarch
Final year1999
Tournament record score
Aggregate267 Carlos Franco (1998)
To par−17 Rick Gibson (1995)
−17 Carlos Franco (1998)
Final champion
Japan Yoshinori Kaneko
Location map
Thumb
Tojigaoka Marinehills GC
Tojigaoka Marinehills GC
Location in Japan
Thumb
Tojigaoka Marinehills GC
Tojigaoka Marinehills GC
Location in the Okayama Prefecture
Close

Tournament hosts

More information Year(s), Host course ...
Year(s)Host courseLocation
1999Tojigaoka Marine Hills Golf ClubTamano, Okayama
1998Ayutaki Country ClubTakamatsu, Kagawa
1994–1997Kinojo Golf ClubSōja, Okayama
1990, 1992–1993Sanyoh Golf Club YoshiiAkaiwa, Okayama
1981, 1983–1984, 1987–1989, 1991Shido Country ClubSanuki, Kagawa
Close

Winners

More information Year, Winner ...
YearWinnerScoreTo parMargin of
victory
Runner-upRef.
Georgia KSB Open
1999Japan Yoshinori Kaneko275−131 strokePhilippines Frankie Miñoza
Just System KSB Open
1998Paraguay Carlos Franco267−174 strokesPhilippines Frankie Miñoza
1997Japan Keiichiro Fukabori276−122 strokesJapan Katsunori Kuwabara
Japan Toshiaki Odate
Novell KSB Open
1996Japan Toru Suzuki275−131 strokeColombia Eduardo Herrera
United States Brian Watts
1995Canada Rick Gibson271−171 strokeJapan Toshimitsu Izawa
Japan Tsukasa Watanabe
United KSB Open
1994Japan Kazuhiro Takami281−76 strokesJapan Yoshinori Kaneko
TaylorMade KSB Open
1993Japan Tateo Ozaki276−121 strokeAustralia Roger Mackay
1992Japan Seiki Okuda210[lower-alpha 1]−64 strokesJapan Seiji Ebihara
Japan Satoshi Higashi
1991Japan Masanobu Kimura273−153 strokesJapan Nobuo Serizawa
Japan Teruo Sugihara
Seto Uthumi Open
1990Japan Masahiro Kuramoto (2)295+71 strokeJapan Ryoken Kawagishi
Japan Noboru Sugai
Setonaikai Open
1989Japan Naomichi Ozaki282−62 strokesJapan Kinpachi Yoshimura
TaylorMade Setonaikai Open
1988Australia Wayne Smith213[lower-alpha 1]−31 strokeJapan Norio Mikami
Japan Kenji Mori
[2]
KSB Setonaikai Open
1987Japan Katsunari Takahashi140−42 strokesJapan Yurio Akitomi
Australia Mike Harwood
Japan Minoru Nakamura
[3]
1986Japan Minoru Nakamura[4]
1985Japan Masahiro Kuramoto[5]
1984Japan Shuichi Sano136−82 strokesJapan Shichiro Enomoto[6]
1983Japan Kenji Sogame140−4Playoff[lower-alpha 2]Japan Haruo Yasuda[7][1]
KSB Kagawa Open
1982Japan Shigeru Uchida[8]
1981Japan Toshimitsu Kai1411 strokeJapan Tsuneyuki Nakajima
Japan Kosaku Shimada
[9]
Close

Notes

  1. Shortened to 54 holes due to weather.
  2. Sogame was awarded the title when Yasuda was unable to take part in the playoff having left the course and travelled to the airport believing he was out of contention.

References

Wikiwand in your browser!

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.

Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.