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    Henrik Bjørnstad

    Henrik Bjørnstad (born 7 May 1979 in Lørenskog, Norway) became the first Norwegian on the PGA Tour when he qualified with a tied 13th place at the 2005 PGA Qualifying Tournament. Bjørnstad has previously played on the European Tour, 1999 and 2001 to 2004. In the summer of 2004, Bjørnstad left the tour after losing his motivation. He took a break from the golf circus and started working as a carpenter. After staying away for almost 10 months, Bjørnstad got his motivation back and started appearing on the Norwegian P4 Tour. Over a year after he last played a tournament on the European Tour, Bjørnstad got a sponsor exemption at the Scandinavian Masters tournament in Sweden and finished at a tied 18th place.

    Amateur wins (1)
    1996 Norwegian Amateur Championship

    Team appearances

    Amateur
    Eisenhower Trophy (representing Norway): 1996

    Professional
    World Cup (representing Norway): 2001


    Suzann Pettersen

    Suzann Pettersen, born in Oslo on April 7, 1981 is a Norwegian professional golfer who plays mainly on the U.S. based LPGA Tour and is also a member of the Ladies European Tour. Her career best world ranking is second.

    Amateur career
    Suzann Pettersen was a successful amateur golfer. She is a five-time Norwegian Amateur Champion (1996-2000) and won the British Girls Championship in 1999. She represented Norway in the Espirito Santo Trophy World Amateur Team Championship in 1998 and 2000, becomng World Amateur Champion in her second appearance. She also represented Europe in the 1997 and 1999 Junior Ryder Cup Matches.

    Professional career
    Pettersen turned professional in September 2000 and gained her LET Tour card with an 11th place finish at the 2001 LET Qualifying School. In her 2001 Ladies European Tour rookie season she played in ten events without missing a cut and won the French Open in only her second start as a professional after beating Becky Morgan in a playoff. She finished second on the Order of Merit and was named LET Rookie of the Year.

    Pettersen started 2002 with a playoff loss to Karrie Webb in the AAMI Australian Women’s Open and two more top ten finishes led to her winning a place on the European team for the 2002 Solheim Cup. In the singles, Suzann was five down with five to play and rescued a half point for Europe against Michelle Redman, who performed one of the most dramatic collapses in Matchplay history. On the 18th green on live TV after her comeback, she accidentally offered a four-letter swear word while being interviewed by NBC’s Roger Maltbie. She tied for 10th at the LPGA Final Qualifying Tournament to earn exempt status for the 2003 LPGA season.

    In 2003 Pettersen played in 5 events on the LET missing no cuts and finished runner-up to Sophie Gustafson at the HP Open. She played a full rookie season on the LPGA, her best finish being a third at the Chick-fil-A Charity Championship. She was a captain’s pick for the 2003 Solheim Cup and recorded an impressive 4-1-0 record as a member of the victorious European Team.

    In 2004 Pettersen played in just four events on the LET with a best finish of T9 at the Evian Masters. On the LPGA, Suzann began her season late after recuperating from elbow surgery. She recorded four top-10 finishes including a season-best tie for fifth at the State Farm Classic.

    In 2005 Suzann played in only three events on the LET and nine events on the LPGA due to a debilitating back injury. When she came back her best LPGA finish was a sixth at the John Q. Hammons Hotel Classic and she finished tied for second at the Ladies Finnish Masters. She registered a 2-0-2 record as a captain’s pick on the European Solheim Cup Team and played for the International team at the inaugural Lexus Cup.

    In 2006 Pettersen played 5 times on the LET recording two top ten finishes including a third place at the Scandanavian TPC. On the LPGA tour she had 3 top ten finishes with a season’s best of fifth at the Florida’s Natural Charity Championship.

    At the start of 2007, Pettersen was selected to represent Norway at the Women’s World Cup of Golf but withdrew due to illness before the event started. At the Safeway International she recorded her then best finish on the LPGA Tour, a 2nd place, two strokes behind Lorena Ochoa and a late meltdown at the Kraft Nabisco saw her equal that finish, her second best at a major. Pettersen became the first Norwegian LPGA winner at the 2007 Michelob ULTRA Open at Kingsmill, beating Jee Young Lee in a playoff. Pettersen followed up this win by capturing the second major championship of 2007, the LPGA Championship, by one stroke over Karrie Webb which moved her up to fourth in the Women’s World Golf Rankings. On the Ladies European Tour she won the SAS Masters in her native Norway.[22] October 2007 was a very successful month for Pettersen. At the Longs Drugs Challenge she won her third LPGA victory, beating Lorena Ochoa in a playoff, whilst her Asian trip saw her collect wins number four and five in Korea and Thailand. On December 31, 2007, Pettersen reached the number two position in the Women’s World Golf Rankings, surpassing Karrie Webb and Annika Sörenstam.

    In January 2008 Pettersen signed a multi-year agreement with Nike Golf, and will represent Nike in clubs, balls, footwear, glove and bag.

    Professional wins (7)

    Ladies European Tour (2)
    2001 (1) French Ladies Open
    2007 (1) SAS Masters

    LPGA Tour (5)
    2007 (5) Michelob ULTRA Open at Kingsmill, LPGA Championship, Longs Drugs Challenge, Hana Bank-KOLON Championship, Honda LPGA Thailand
    LPGA Majors are shown in bold


    Vestfold Golf Club

    Designer:  Fred
    Smith/Jeremy Turner
    Established:
    Location: Golfsenteret Vestfold AS
    P.B. 13, 3108 Vear,
    Norway
    Type: Parkland
    Length: 72 6414 m (back tee), 5979 m (yellow), 5877 (red)
    Green Fees: Weekday/Weekend NOK 400/450

    Website:

    www.vestfoldgolfklubb.no
     
     
    Phone: 333 62505
    Fax:
    Facilities:  18-hole championship course, 9-hole course (slope rated), 3 practice greens, Short game training area, 6-hole pitch and putt, Driving range, Club house, restaurant and proshop

    Sponsored by Golf Norway



     

    Vestfold Golf Club was founded in 1958 and is one of the oldest 18-hole clubs in Norway. The present day championship course was fully modernised to US PGA standards in 2002 based on a design by the wily Jeremy Turner. This compact forest/parkland course is often reminiscent of a bit of England (probably due to the scattered mighty oaks, charming biotopes and George Beal, club pro for the past 25 years!). After the upgrade the course took on a whole new character with a fine combination of forest holes and mature parkland in a rhythmically undulating landscape, and as with most forest courses, vertical hazards abound. In 2003, Norsk Golf ranked Vestfold among the top three courses in Norway. The club hosted the Challenge Tour in 2004.


    Borre Golf Club

    Designer:  Tommy Nordstrm
    Established:
    Location: Borre Golfklubb
    3186 Horten
    Horten
    Norway
    Type: Parkland
    Length: 72/73 6925 m (back tee), 6498 m (yellow), 5325 (red))
    Green Fees: Weekday/Weekend NOK 400/450

    Website:
    www.borregb.no/
     
    Phone: +47 - 41 62 70 00
    Fax:
    Facilities:  Old 9-hole course (stroke rated), driving range,
    full practice area, club house with changing rooms/shower, cafe, restaurant,
    hire of trolleys, buggies and clubs, proshop, and tennis courts for the
    really sporty types!

    Sponsored by Golf Norway



     

    This 18-hole international standard course designed by Swedish architect Tommy Nordstrm is highly challenging and satisfies all expectations of a top class parkland/forest layout. The championship course is located on the venerable Semb estate (Semb was the main Viking seat in Vestfold though archaeological finds go back 5000 years), close to the attractive Borre lake and Horten, Norways very own silicon valley.

    Borre has recently undergone a full upgrade, adding a new back nine to the best of the old course leaving a worthy par 36 9-hole facility as added value. The new ninth ends at a refreshment hut (self-service weekdays, grilled sausages at weekends) where there is a highly civilised compulsory 10-minute break! Hole 10 strikes off into an undulating forestscape with natural water obstacles, serious bunkers and deep ravines. Sloppy fairway drives are seldom rewarded at Borre.


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