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China Tour invites Hong Kong and Taiwan pros
Hong
Kong and Taiwan professionals have been invited to compete in the
Shanghai Leg of the Omega China Tour next week as the first step
towards expanding the reach of the fast-growing circuit which is
currently restricted to players from the mainland.
One of Hong Kongs most famous golfing sons Yau Sui Ming and
Alexander Cheng, along with Taiwans Wang Ter-chang and Tsai
Chi-huang will take part in the US$100,000 event to be played at
Grand Shanghai International Golf and Holiday Resort from August
9 to 12.
The aim of the Omega China Tour is to promote the development
of players in our country and this latest move to invite players
from Hong Kong and Taiwan will help us to make our tournaments more
challenging and effective, said Wong Li Wei, Deputy Director
General of the Multi-Ball Games Administrative Centre of General
Administration of Sport, the body which oversees golf in China.
In particular, Yau and Wang will bring a great deal of experience
to the circuit. Yau has played for Hong Kong many times in the World
Cup and Dunhill Cup and won the Hong Kong PGA Championship seven
times. He is now based on the mainland focusing on coaching.
Impressively, Wang has triumphed on four occasions on the Asian
Tour mostly recently in last years Brunei Open and in the
2005 Macau Open. Tsai has also won once on the Asian Tour.
In addition to Shanghai, two players from Hong Kong and Taiwan
each will also be invited to compete in the season-ending Omega
Championship in October in Beijing, which was won last year by Liang
Wenchong.
Raymond Roessel of World Sport Group, the promoters of the Tour,
added that it was a logical step to invite professionals from Hong
Kong and Taiwan to play certain events.
As the Tour grows, from four events in the first year to
eight events in 2007, we are seeing the Chinese players enjoy more
success in the bigger events they play in, said Roessel.
We saw seven players make the cut in the China Open, I think
that is the most ever, and those were new names which have not made
an impact before, so we know the players are getting better.
We are working closely with the China Golf Association and
it is their goal to slowly increase the competition and bring new
competition in. The easy step was to have some special invitees
from Hong Kong and Taiwan, he added.
Wong said that if the experiment was a success the net would be
widened to include up-and-coming players from across Asia.
Next weeks event in Shanghai marks the fifth leg of this
years Omega China Tour.
August 2, 2007
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