FINAL RESULTS: 2026 Australian Men’s Amateur Championship
February 6, 2026 | by AmateurGolf.com Staff
see also: Billy Dowling, View results for Australian Mens Amateur, Western Australian Golf Club

Billy Dowling pulled away with a closing 7-under 63 to win the 2026 adidas Australian Men’s Amateur Championship at 18-under.
Final Recap — Friday, Feb. 6
What began as a final-round coin flip at The Western Australian Golf Club ended in a statement.
Billy Dowling turned a share of the 54-hole lead into a runaway finish, closing with a brilliant 7-under 63 to win the 2026 adidas Australian Men’s Amateur Championship at 18-under-par.
Dowling set the tone early, steadying himself with a key save at the opening hole before piling on momentum with a string of birdies that separated him from a packed board. As the pressure rose, his scoring only accelerated — the kind of finish that forces the field to chase from behind rather than trade punches.
The turning point came as those closest to him stalled. Overnight co-leader Harry Whitelock never found traction, slipping back with early mistakes while Dowling kept producing stress-free looks and converting. By mid-back nine, the fight for the trophy had shifted into a scramble for second place.
Dowling’s four-round card — 66-70-65-63 — capped a week that grew sharper each day, culminating in the lowest round among the contenders when it mattered most.
Behind him, Joshua Fuller and Kayun Mudadana finished in a tie for second at 13-under, while the next wave at 12-under underscored the depth of a championship that was tight through three rounds before Dowling simply outran it.
For Dowling, the win lands as a defining amateur title — and a fitting headline as he prepares to move into the professional ranks.
Round 3 Recap — Thursday, Feb. 5
Moving day lived up to its billing at the 2026 adidas Australian Amateur Championship, with fireworks on both leaderboards as Jazy Roberts surged into control of the women’s title race and the men’s championship tightened into a final-round duel.
Roberts delivered the round of the championship at The Western Australian Golf Club, catching fire late with an extraordinary 6-under stretch over her final six holes. The closing charge — highlighted by an eagle and four birdies — produced an 8-under 65 and vaulted the Yarra Yarra standout to 17-under, opening a four-shot cushion heading into Friday.
In the men’s championship, the leaderboard compressed at the top as Billy Dowling and Harry Whitelock emerged tied at 11-under-par. Dowling erased a four-shot deficit early with a blistering front nine, briefly stalled on the back, then rallied again to stay atop the board. Whitelock countered with a composed round, holding steady under pressure to keep pace entering the final day.
Behind the leaders, the chase remains crowded. Kayun Mudadana and Jackson Leonard sit one shot back at 10-under, while Abel Eduard leads a trio at 9-under, keeping the door open as the championship heads to its final 18 holes.
With six players within three shots of the lead, Friday’s finale at WAGC sets up as a true shootout — a fitting finish to one of the strongest Australian Amateur fields in recent memory.
Round 2 Recap — Wednesday, Feb. 4 (Cut Day)
Cut day delivered exactly what this championship was built to produce: pressure, movement, and a fresh leaderboard heading into the final 36 holes at The Western Australian Golf Club. Ethan Harvey and Harry Whitelock emerged as the new co-leaders at 10-under-par after two steady, 5-under performances across the opening rotation.
Harvey, out of The Lakes (NSW), followed his opening 67 with a sharp 65, pairing clean iron play with stress-free putting to put himself in position for the biggest week of his amateur career. Whitelock, representing Royal Canberra (ACT), matched the overall number with rounds of 65-67, making the cut for the first time in his third appearance — and now holding a share of the lead heading into the championship rounds.
Overnight co-leader Malachy Marshall remains very much in the hunt, one shot back at 9-under after rounds of 66-67. Behind him, the chase pack is forming quickly at 6-under, where Jonty Lunson (71-65) surged with one of the best rounds of the day and Jackson Leonard (70-66) stayed steady to sit within four of the lead.
The cut has now been made, with the top 68 and ties advancing on the men’s side. From here, it’s a two-round shootout at WAGC — and with plenty of quality still within striking distance, the final two days should feel more like a pro event than an amateur championship.
Round 1 Recap — Tuesday, Feb. 3
A tightly packed leaderboard took shape on Day 1 of the 2026 adidas Australian Amateur Championship, with Malachy Marshall and Ryan Richards sharing the early lead at 6-under-par after ideal scoring conditions replaced the extreme heat players faced during practice rounds in Perth.
Marshall, the 16-year-old from Kooyonga Golf Club, went low at Wanneroo Golf Club, turning a relaxed mindset into a round built on seven birdies and just one bogey. Already with multiple top-10 finishes in WAGR events this year, Marshall leaned into a simple approach and was rewarded with a fast start that put him in the final group conversation after just 18 holes.
Richards matched the pace at The Western Australian Golf Club, posting a bogey-free card highlighted by an eagle and four birdies. The Pennant Hills member credited a complete performance—17 greens hit and no three-putts—setting a clean benchmark as the field tries to separate ahead of Wednesday’s cut line.
The day’s highlight came early when Max Maclean-Russell made a hole-in-one on the par-3 fifth—an opening-round spark that added to the sense this championship could produce plenty of momentum swings as the week unfolds.
With 11 players within three shots of the men’s lead, Round 2 looms as a pivotal “positioning” day. The field swaps courses Wednesday in the final push to make the 36-hole cut and earn a spot in the last two rounds at The Western Australian Golf Club.
One of the most historic amateur championships in the game shifts to Western Australia this week, as the adidas Australian Men’s Amateur Championship returns Feb. 3–6 with a national title, World Amateur Golf Ranking points, and a deep international field all on the line.
Played annually since 1894, the Australian Amateur has long served as a proving ground for the next generation of elite players. Past champions include major winner Cameron Smith, international standouts like Keita Nakajima, and a growing list of Australians who have used this event as a springboard onto the professional stage.
Now, the championship heads west, contested across two venues — The Western Australian Golf Club and Wanneroo Golf Club — in a four-day test that figures to reward complete golf: controlling ball flight in the wind, capitalizing on scoring chances early, and surviving the pressure of a midweek cut.
Fast Facts
- Event: adidas Australian Men’s Amateur Championship
- Dates: February 3–6, 2026
- Venues: The Western Australian Golf Club & Wanneroo Golf Club
- Format: 72-hole stroke play (cut after 36 holes)
- Defending champion: Jye Halls
A Championship With Major History
Few national amateur championships can match the Australian Amateur’s lineage. The tournament began as the Victorian Golf Cup in the late 19th century before becoming Australia’s official amateur championship. For more than a century, it was best known as a match play battleground, producing dramatic finals and international champions.
In 2021, Golf Australia modernized the event into a 72-hole stroke play championship, aligning it with the global amateur calendar and placing even greater emphasis on sustained scoring across four rounds.
The result is a tournament that now feels closer to a professional championship — two courses, a cut after 36 holes, and a premium placed on consistency.
Defending Champion: Jye Halls Set the Standard
The bar was raised a year ago when Jye Halls delivered one of the most dominant closing performances in recent championship history.
Halls began the final round just one shot behind, then separated quickly in difficult conditions, posting a closing 6-under 67 and winning by seven strokes. It was the type of runaway finish that doesn’t happen often in a championship that typically produces tight leaderboards.
His victory added another name to a champion’s list that already includes some of the most accomplished players Australia has produced.
Two Courses, One Champion
This week’s championship is staged across The Western Australian and Wanneroo, a setup designed to challenge every part of a player’s game.
With players alternating venues during the opening rounds, adaptability becomes essential. Subtle differences in green complexes, sightlines off the tee, and wind exposure can swing momentum quickly — and with a 36-hole cut, slow starts are difficult to recover from.
Expect the winning formula to look familiar: disciplined driving, sharp iron play into firm targets, and enough birdies on the right holes to stay ahead of the pack.
Field Storylines: Experience, Depth, and International Presence
The entry list once again reflects the Australian Amateur’s place on the global schedule. Along with top club players from every Australian state, the field includes competitors representing Ireland, England, Scotland, Japan, Korea, Singapore, Canada, India, Fiji, Hong Kong, and New Zealand.
That blend of national depth and international ambition has become a defining feature of the modern Australian Amateur — and it’s why this championship continues to produce world-class champions.
Names to Know (Early Watch List)
- Hamish Farquharson (Metropolitan) — runner-up in 2025 and one of the most proven contenders in the field.
- Abel Eduard (Kingston Heath) — Sandbelt pedigree and championship experience.
- Josiah Edwards (Gosnells) — capable of going low in a four-round test.
- Lukas Michel (Metropolitan) — a familiar name in elite Australian amateur golf.
- Sean Barry (Ireland) — one of several overseas entrants bringing strong competitive resumes.
As always, the Australian Amateur tends to reveal contenders quickly — and by Thursday, the leaderboard is usually populated by players with both elite skill and patience under pressure.
Recent Champions
- 2025: Jye Halls (-15)
- 2024: Quinnton Croker (-14)
- 2023: Kazuma Kobori (-15)
- 2022: Connor McKinney (-10, playoff)
- 2021: Louis Dobbelaar (-10)
Results: Australian Mens Amateur
| Place | Player | Location | Pts | Scores |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | , Australia | 1000 | 66-70-65-63=264 | |
| T2 | , Australia | 700 | 66-72-65-66=269 | |
| T2 | , Australia | 700 | 67-70-65-67=269 | |
| T4 | , Australia | 500 | 71-65-70-64=270 | |
| T4 | , Australia | 500 | 66-71-68-65=270 |
About the Australian Mens Amateur

The Australian Men's and Women's Amateur Championships are Australia's oldest Amateur Golf Championships, with both having been played since 1894. Long held as a match play event, in 2021 the format changed to 72 holes of stroke play.
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