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Tuesday, March 25, 2025

DP World Tour : TEE TIMES Hero Indian Open in New Delhi

 DP World Tour : Hero Indian Open...Tee TimesTee Times

First of all this week Hero is not a burger joint it is the leading manufacturer of motorcycles based in India.

Aaron Cockerill

Here are the Thursday TEE TIMES Tee Times with Canadian Aaron Cockerill in the field.

Here are 5 things you may enjoy if you like me are a DP World Tour follower..

Keita Nakajima won his first DP World Tour title in emphatic style 12 months ago as a closing 73 handed him a four-shot wire-to-wire win.

The Japanese entered the final round with a four-shot advantage and that was extended to nine as he turned in 33 and threatened to blow the rest of the field away. He could not quite maintain that incredible pace on the back nine but his 17 under par total gave him a comfortable victory over home favourite Veer Ahlawat, Swede Sebastian Söderberg and American Johannes Veerman.

"It feels amazing," he said. "I feel like this is the first win of a new professional career. This is my first year playing on the DP World Tour and I'm very proud to have won on the DP World Tour and very honoured to be playing here. The win definitely gives me a lot of confidence in myself and I'm hoping now to take what I did this week and turn it into even more wins in the future."

Inside the field

This season sees the Hero Indian Open welcome the strongest field in its history, with a host of recent DP World Tour winners on display.

There are a dozen winners from 2024, including Nakajima and Germany’s Marcel Siem, who won this event in 2023, while there are five champions from the current campaign.

This season's Opening Swing champion John Parry is in action alongside countryman Mansell, with fellow 2025 winners Ryggs Johnston, Johannes Veerman and Calum Hill.

Shubhankar Sharma will lead the home charge alongside last year's runner-up Veer Ahlawat and DP World Tour winner from the 2018 Fiji International presented by Fiji Airways Gaganjeet Bhullar.

A rich history

The Indian Open was first held in 1964 when it was won by the great five-time Open Champion Peter Thomson, who would go on to lift the trophy three times - a feat matched only by Jyoti Randhawa.

Thomson developed an affinity for India as he used to stop off in the country on his way from his native Australia to The Open each year and he played a role in getting the Indian Open on its feet.

The late Payne Stewart would also win it in 1981 before it joined the DP World Tour schedule in 2015.

Anirban Lahiri won that edition and has since been followed into the winner's circle by SSP Chawrasia back-to-back in 2016 and 2017, Matt Wallace, Stephen Gallacher, Siem and Nakajima.

Final results to follow...

Bryan Angus




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