Anders Haglund (born 4 November 1964) is a Swedish former professional golfer.

Anders Haglund
Personal information
Born (1964-11-04) 4 November 1964 (age 59)
Borås, Sweden
Sporting nationality Sweden
Career
CollegeUniversity of South Florida
Turned professional1989
Former tour(s)European Tour
Professional wins2
Number of wins by tour
Challenge Tour1
Other1

Haglund was born in Borås, Sweden and played college golf at the University of South Florida in the United States. As an amateur golfer, he won the inaugural European Amateur in 1986 at the Eindhoven Golf Club, which also won him the SR P4 Sjuhäradssporten Prize for sporting achievement of the year.[1]

Playing mainly on the Challenge Tour, Haglund won the Open de Bordeaux in 1989[2] and was tied for first in the rain-abandoned 1997 Interlaken Open.[3] He won the Husqvarna Open on the Swedish Golf Tour in 1994 and was runner-up at the 1989 Wermland Open and 1987 Volvo Albatross on the same tour. He played on the European Tour in 1996 where his best finish was a 9th place at 15-under-par in the Hohe Brücke Open.

A shoulder injury ended Haglunds golfing career in 1997 and he became an NLP coach, advising clients including the Swedish National Golf Team, the first division football team Elfsborg and the Swedish Olympic Committee.[4]

Amateur wins edit

Professional wins (2) edit

Challenge Tour wins (1) edit

No. Date Tournament Winning score Margin of
victory
Runner-up
1 15 Oct 1989 Volkswagen Open de Bordeaux −11 (67-69-69-72=277) 1 stroke   Peter Smith

Swedish Golf Tour wins (1) edit

No. Date Tournament Winning score Margin of
victory
Runner-up
1 19 Jun 1994 Husqvarna Open −7 (65-66-72=203) Playoff   Úlfar Jónsson

Team appearances edit

Amateur

References edit

  1. ^ Sjuhäradssportens pris Årets sportprestation i Sjuhäradsbygden, Sveriges Radio, 14 December 2014 (in Swedish)
  2. ^ Challenge Tour All-Time Winners, European Tour, 1 February 2013
  3. ^ "1997 Interlaken Open". European Tour. Retrieved 20 May 2020.
  4. ^ Life Vision: About Anders Haglund

External links edit