International players tee off in crazy golf trophy

A man holding a golf club preparing to hit a ball on a crazy golf hole. The course features a large red and white windmill.
The World Crazy Golf Championships winner receives £1,250 in prize money [BBC]

An estimated 250 players will compete in the individual World Crazy Golf Championships on Saturday and Sunday.

The annual tournament, held at Hastings Adventure Golf in East Sussex, will see entrants from at least seven countries, including the USA and New Zealand, compete.

The winner receives £1,250 in prize money and a further £2,500 is distributed between players placed second to eighth.

Simon Tompkins, director of Hastings Adventure Golf, said it was “a great source of local pride to host the championships”.

The individual event has additional junior and novice categories. The team competition took place on Friday.

Competitors play six qualifying rounds – three on Saturday and three on Sunday – before the best-scoring 18 players compete in the final.

Seven different players have won the trophy in the event’s 22-year history, according to organisers.

A man in a black jacket and a white cap. A busy crazy golf course featuring a stripy lighthouse is behind him.
Four-time winner Marc Chapman is back to defend his 2024 title [BBC]

Canterbury fencing instructor Marc Chapman is attempting to defend his crown after winning his fourth title in 2024.

The reigning champion said he was “hooked” after he entered the event for the first time, and returns every year.

Chapman told the BBC he won his first title at his 10th attempt and “the rest, as they say, is history.”

A man dressed in matching red, white and blue zip-up jumper and cap, holding a golf club. He is stood at a crazy gold course in Hastings and is also wearing sunglesses.
Tom Loftus from Minnesota, USA, flew in to compete in the Hastings tournament [ROBIN GREY/BBC]

US competitor Tom Loftus said he was “absolutely thrilled” to take on the “classic” fifth hole, which requires players to avoid a windmill’s spinning blades to make their putt.

He added: “It was so exciting to have that moment. I just love windmills.”

Rainey Statum, who travelled to the tournament from Texas, USA, told the BBC he faced a long journey to make it to the tournament, flying to London via Chicago.

He said: “Because I don’t do trains down in Texas I kinda got lost and it took five hours for me to get here to Hastings through the train and subway system.

“They misplaced my luggage too, so I was here a day and a half without my luggage.”

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