1980 European Tour
The 1980 European Tour was the ninth official season of golf tournaments known as the PGA European Tour and organised by the Professional Golfers' Association.
The Order of Merit was won by Scotland's Sandy Lyle.
Schedule
The table below shows the 1980 European Tour schedule which was made up of 23 tournaments counting for the Official Money List, and some non-counting tournaments later known as "Approved Special Events". There were several changes from the previous season, with the addition of the Newcastle Brown "900" Open, the Merseyside International Open and the Bob Hope British Classic; and the loss of the British PGA Matchplay Championship, the Portuguese Open and the Belgian Open.Dates | Tournament | Host country | Winner | Notes |
10–13 Apr | Masters Tournament | United States | Seve Ballesteros | Major championship; non-tour event |
17–20 Apr | Italian Open | Italy | Massimo Mannelli | |
24–27 Apr | Madrid Open | Spain | Seve Ballesteros | |
1–4 May | Benson and Hedges Spanish Open | Spain | Eddie Polland | |
8–11 May | Paco Rabanne Open de France | France | Greg Norman | |
15–18 May | Martini International | England | Seve Ballesteros | |
23–26 May | Sun Alliance PGA Championship | England | Nick Faldo | |
29 May – 1 Jun | Avis Jersey Open | Jersey | José Maria Cañizares | |
5–8 Jun | Newcastle Brown "900" Open | England | Des Smyth | New tournament |
12–15 Jun | U.S. Open | United States | Jack Nicklaus | Major championship; non-tour event |
19–22 Jun | Cold Shield Greater Manchester Open | England | Des Smyth | |
26–29 Jun | Coral Welsh Classic | Wales | Sandy Lyle | |
3–6 Jul | Scandinavian Enterprise Open | Sweden | Greg Norman | |
9–12 Jul | Mazda Cars English Classic | England | Manuel Piñero | |
17–20 Jul | The Open Championship | Scotland | Tom Watson | Major championship |
24–27 Jul | Dutch Open | Netherlands | Seve Ballesteros | |
7–10 Aug | PGA Championship | United States | Jack Nicklaus | Major championship; non-tour event |
7–10 Aug | Benson and Hedges International Open | England | Graham Marsh | |
14–17 Aug | Carroll's Irish Open | Republic of Ireland | Mark James | |
21–24 Aug | Braun German Open | West Germany | Mark McNulty | |
28–31 Aug | Swiss Open | Switzerland | Nick Price | |
4–7 Sep | European Open | England | Tom Kite | |
11–14 Sep | Hennessy Cognac Cup | England | Great Britain and Ireland | Approved special event; team event |
11–13 Sep | Merseyside International Open | England | Ian Mosey | New tournament; alternate to the Hennessy Cognac Cup |
18–21 Sep | Haig Whisky TPC | England | Bernard Gallacher | |
25–28 Sep | Bob Hope British Classic | England | José Maria Cañizares | New tournament |
1–4 Oct | Dunlop Masters | Wales | Bernhard Langer | |
9–12 Oct | Suntory World Match Play | England | Greg Norman | Approved special event |
16–19 Oct | Trophée Lancôme | France | Lee Trevino | Approved special event |
23–26 Oct | Cacharel World Under-25 Championship | France | Jack Renner | Approved special event |
Official Money List
In 1980, the PGA European Tour's money list was retitled as the "Official Money List" having previously been known as the "Order of Merit". It was based on a points system, which meant that some players could finish lower than others despite accumulating more prize money.Position | Player | Country | Prize money |
1 | Sandy Lyle | 66,060 | |
2 | Greg Norman | 74,829 | |
3 | Seve Ballesteros | 52,090 | |
4 | Nick Faldo | 46,054 | |
5 | Brian Barnes | 38,598 | |
6 | Mark James | 33,907 | |
7 | José Maria Cañizares | 35,534 | |
8 | Ken Brown | 33,220 | |
9 | Bernhard Langer | 32,395 | |
10 | Des Smyth | 31,521 |