Marco Penge

Marco Penge (born 15 May 1998) is an English professional golfer who currently plays on the European Tour. In 2023, he won the Open de Portugal and Rolex Challenge Tour Grand Final.

Amateur career
Penge was educated at The Forest School, Horsham. He started playing golf at five, and enjoyed success already at junior level. In 2013, he won the McGregor Trophy, the Fairhaven Trophy, and lost a playoff for the Irish Boys Amateur Open. He represented England in the European Young Masters, the European Boys' Team Championship and the Boys Home Internationals, which he won twice. He also secure victory at the Jacques Léglise Trophy three times with the Great Britain & Ireland team.

Penge won the 2015 Scottish Amateur Stroke Play Championship at Moray Golf Club, and lost a playoff at the 2016 Internationaux de France - Coupe Murat. In 2017, he lost the final of the Spanish Amateur, 4 and 3, and the NSW Amateur to Scott Gregory, 1 up.

Professional career
Penge turned professional in 2017 and joined the PGA EuroPro Tour. In 2019 he won his first title, the Prem Group Irish Masters, and finished third on the Order of Merit to earn promotion to the 2020 Challenge Tour.

He was runner-up at the 2022 Kaskáda Golf Challenge before securing two titles in 2023 including the Rolex Challenge Tour Grand Final, to top the Order of Merit and earn promotion to the 2024 European Tour.

In his third European Tour start, he tied for 4th at the Alfred Dunhill Championship in South Africa.

Amateur wins

 * 2013 Fairhaven Trophy, McGregor Trophy, Sussex Amateur Championship
 * 2014 Fairhaven Trophy
 * 2015 Faldo Series Wales, Peter McEvoy Trophy, Scottish Amateur Stroke Play Championship, Sir Henry Cooper Junior Masters

Source:

Results in major championships
{{legend|#eeeeee|Did not play}}

"T" = tied

Team appearances
Amateur Sources:
 * European Young Masters (representing England): 2013
 * Boys Home Internationals (representing England): 2013, 2014 (winners), 2015, 2016 (winners)
 * Jacques Léglise Trophy (representing Great Britain & Ireland): 2013 (winners), 2014 (winners), 2015 (winners), 2016
 * European Boys' Team Championship (representing England): 2013, 2014, 2015
 * European Amateur Team Championship (representing England): 2016