Greater Vancouver Classic

The Greater Vancouver Classic was a golf tournament that was held in the Greater Vancouver area, in British Columbia, Canada. Founded as the BC TEL Pacific Open in 1994, it was a direct replacement for the cancelled British Columbia Open on the Canadian Tour. In 2000 it was re-titled as the Telus Vancouver Open.

Greater Vancouver Classic
Tournament information
LocationBritish Columbia, Canada
Established1994
Tour(s)Canadian Tour
FormatStroke play
Final year2009
Tournament record score
Aggregate264 Guy Hill (1996)
To par−20 Guy Hill (1996)
Final champion
Eric Woods

For 2002, the tournament had agreed a new multi-year sponsorship deal with a lawn car company and was to have been titled the Perfectly Natural Classic, but they backed out resulting in a great deal of discussion over a new unsponsored name. Having considered Greater Vancouver Open and Vancouver Open, which risked confusion with the PGA Tour event,[1] eventually it was changed to Greater Vancouver Classic, and from 2006 the Greater Vancouver Charity Classic. In 2009, the name changed again, this time to the City of Surrey Invitational; it was to be the final time the tournament was held.

Winners

YearVenueWinnerScoreRef
City of Surrey Invitational
2009Hazelmere Mike Grob272 (−16)
Greater Vancouver Charity Classic
2008Hazelmere Adam Speirs275 (−13)
2007Hazelmere James Lepp274 (−14)
2006Hazelmere Lee Williamson280 (−8)
Greater Vancouver Classic
2005HazelmereTournament cancelled[2]
2004Mayfair Ryan Miller270 (−14)
2003Swan-e-set Bay James Lepp (a)269 (−19)
2002Swan-e-set Bay Iain Steel272 (−16)[lower-alpha 1]
Telus Vancouver Open
2001Point Grey Stuart Scott276 (−12)[lower-alpha 2]
2000Mayfair Lakes Rob McMillan271 (−13)
BC TEL Pacific Open
1999Mayfair Lakes Ken Staton269 (−15)
1998Mayfair Lakes Ian Hutchings271 (−13)
1997Mayfair Lakes Mike Weir271 (−13)
1996Mayfair Lakes Guy Hill264 (−20)[3]
1995Mayfair Lakes Nicky Goetze270 (−14)[lower-alpha 3]
1994Mayfair Lakes Craig Jones268 (−16)
  1. Steel won after a playoff.
  2. Scott won after a playoff.
  3. Goetze won after a playoff.

References

  1. "Tour event gets name change". The Vancouver Sun. Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. June 18, 2002. p. 45. Retrieved March 11, 2020 via Newspapers.com.
  2. "Vancouver Classic". The Vancouver Sun. Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. April 22, 2005. p. 77. Retrieved March 11, 2020 via Newspapers.com.
  3. McCormack, Mark H. (1997). The World of Professional Golf 1997. IMG Publishing. p. 416. ISBN 1878843176.
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