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Thomas Detry

Thomas Detry
— Golfer —
KLM Open 2009 Thomas Detry.JPG
Detry in 2009
Personal information
Full name Thomas Detry
Born (1993-01-13) 13 January 1993 (age 24)
Nationality  Belgium
Career
College University of Illinois
Turned professional 2016
Current tour(s) European Tour
Former tour(s) Challenge Tour
Professional wins 1
Number of wins by tour
Challenge Tour 1

Thomas Detry (13 January 1993) is a Belgian professional golfer who, as of 2016, plays on the Challenge Tour. He was a top-10 ranked amateur golfer before turning professional. In his first professional win at the Bridgestone Challenge, he set Challenge Tour records for largest margin of victory and tied for lowest score under-par with Ivó Giner.

Detry was born in 1993. He started playing golf when he was 5, but also played tennis and hockey. He started competing in international golf tournaments when he was 13 years old. He studied at the Topsportschool Vlaanderen in Hasselt until 2012. In 2009, when he was 16 years old, Detry won the Dutch Junior Open, a competition for young golfers aged under 21.

Detry was selected for the Junior Ryder Cup team (a competition between American and European youth) in 2010 and the Jacques Léglise Trophy team (pitting continental European boys against a team from the British Isles) in 2010 and 2011.

Following fellow golfer and good friend Thomas Pieters, Detry studied Business Management at the University of Illinois from 2012 to 2016. He was named the Big Ten Freshman of the Year in 2013 and the Big Ten Golfer of the Year in 2015. He represented Europe in the Palmer Cup in 2014 and 2015. He was named the best Belgian amateur golfer in 2013 and 2015.

After winning the 2016 Big Ten Championship, he was ranked among the ten top amateur golfers in the world by World Amateur Golf Ranking.

Detry turned professional and started competing on the Challenge Tour in 2016. He made the cut in his first 10 professional events, culminating in his win at the 2016 Bridgestone Challenge. With this win, he equaled the record for lowest under-par finish ever on the Challenge Tour (29 under par, set in 2003 by Ivó Giner), and set a new record for the win by the widest margin ever on the Challenge Tour – 12 strokes ahead of the second-place finisher. He also broke the course record at Heythrop Park Resort with his first round of 60 (12 under par).


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