Asian Tour’s Mr 59 eyes another ‘low’ at Laguna Phuket

In 2017, Suttijet Kooratanapisan (left) returned an 11-under-par 59 in the Singha Phuket Open on the Asian Development Tour (ADT) to become the first player to shoot sub-60 in the history of Asian Tour and ADT. Photo: Paul Lakatos/Asian Tour
In 2017, Suttijet Kooratanapisan (left) returned an 11-under-par 59 in the Singha Phuket Open on the Asian Development Tour (ADT) to become the first player to shoot sub-60 in the history of Asian Tour and ADT. Photo: Paul Lakatos/Asian Tour

Thailand’s Suttijet Kooratanapisan has a big advantage over the rest of the field at this week’s $1million Laguna Phuket Championship. He knows what it is like to shoot 59 on the Laguna Golf Phuket layout!

In 2017, Suttijet returned an 11-under-par 59 in the Singha Phuket Open on the Asian Development Tour (ADT) to become the first player to shoot sub-60 in the history of Asian Tour and ADT.

 

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Preferred lies were played so it could not stand as a record, but a 59 is a still 59.

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“Actually, I just kept going birdie, birdie, birdie that day,” said 34 year old. “I didn’t think about my score at all until the last hole, when I knew I needed a birdie to shoot 59.”

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He drained a 30-foot birdie putt to break 60. His compatriot Naras Luangphetcharaporn is the only other player to shoot 59 ‒ achieved at the Tour’s Qualifying School in 2019 – also when lift, clean and place rules applied.

Suttijet made an eagle and nine birdies to finish in third place in the Singha Phuket Open; he also birdied the last four holes.

He added: “I remember hole number seven was a par-five last time, now it’s a par four. I loved that because when I shot 59 I made eagle there.”

The Thai golfer is looking for his first win on the Asian Tour ‒ his best is second place in the 2016 Bashundhara Bangladesh Open ‒ but he does have one ADT win to his name: the PGM Palm Resort Championship, also in 2016.

“This week is a lot harder though as the rough is very long and the fairways are very narrow. It’s not the same as last time. My goal this week is just to play under par every day. Right now my putting is so good.”

 

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Chinese-Taipei’s Chan Shih-chang, who claimed last week’s Blue Canyon Phuket Championship is again competing, along with a powerful line-up of the Tour’s best players including current Order of Merit leader Wade Ormsby from Australia and his countryman Scott Hend, a 10-time Asian Tour winner, reigning Order of Merit champion Jazz Janewattananond from Thailand, Korean teenager Joohyung Kim ‒ who was joint runner-up last week ‒ and Malaysian number one Gavin Green.

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