Matteo Manassero Facts: 20 Things You Didn’t Know About The DP World Tour Pro

The Italian made a sensational start to his career before a long slump in form, but now he's back, and here are 20 things you may not know about him

Matteo Manassero during the BMW International Open
Matteo Manassero has had a career of ups and downs so far
(Image credit: Getty Images)

Matteo Manassero's emergence was one of the most spectacular of any player this century, but he was unable to sustain some record-breaking form and eventually found himself in the golfing wilderness. 

Since then, the talented Italian has proved that you simply can't keep this potentially great player down, and he burst back into the spotlight in 2024 while still aged just 31. 

Here are 20 facts you may not be aware of about the DP World Tour professional.

1. Matteo Manassero was born in Negrar, Italy on 16 April 1993.

2. Manassero began playing golf at the age of three, and was later nurtured by former DP World Tour professional Alberto Binaghi.

3. His progress was rapid and, in 2008, he played for Team Europe at the Junior Ryder Cup.

4. In 2009, he became the youngest winner of The Amateur.

5. That handed him an exemption to that year’s Open, where he was grouped with Tom Watson and Sergio Garcia in the opening two rounds. He made the cut, and eventually won the Silver Medal as leading amateur with a finish of T13.

Tom Watson and Matteo Manassero during the 2009 Open

Manassero played alongside Tom Watson at the 2009 Open

(Image credit: Getty Images)

6. Manassero ended a stellar year at the top of the World Amateur Golf Rankings.

7. The records continued to fall in 2010. In April, he became the youngest player to make the cut at The Masters at the age of 16 years, 11 months and 22 days. Manassero finished T36 at Augusta National (although Guan Tianlang surpassed that achievement in 2013).

8. Two weeks before turning 17, Manassero announced he was turning professional.

9. He joined the European Tour (now the DP World Tour) and became the second-youngest player in the circuit’s history behind Seve Ballesteros.

10. Manassero’s first start as a professional came in his homeland at the Italian Open, where he finished T29.

11. That October, he broke yet another record when he became the youngest winner in the Tour’s history following victory in the Castelló Masters Costa Azahar, aged 17 years, 188 days.

Matteo Manassero takes a shot at the Castello Masters Costa Azahar

Manassero won the Castello Masters Costa Azahar when he was 17

(Image credit: Getty Images)

12. Also in 2010, he was named the Sir Henry Cotton Rookie of the Year.

13. He added the Maybank Malaysian Open title in 2011, two days before turning 18, then in November 2012, he beat Louis Oosthuizen to the Barclays Singapore Open title while still a teenager.

14. In May 2013, Manassero claimed victory at the Tour’s flagship event, the BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth. Naturally, that broke another record as he became its youngest winner at the age of 20.

15. That win secured him playing privileges on the circuit for the next five years and, soon after, he reached a career-high world ranking of 25th.

16. Manassero’s game then entered a long period of decline, with his next professional win not coming until September 2020, when he won the Toscana Alps Open on the developmental Alps Tour.

17. Three years later, he won twice on the Challenge Tour to return to the DP World Tour for 2024.

18. Manassero’s wife, Francesca, caddied for him on both occasions.

19. After a gap of 3,942 days, Manassero won on the circuit once again at the Jonsson Workwear Open, helped by a career-low 61 in the second round.

Matteo Manessero with the Jonsson Workwear Open trophy

Matteo Manessero won his first DP World Tour title since 2013 in the Jonsson Workwear Open

(Image credit: Getty Images)

20. In June that year, Manassero’s qualification for the Olympics men’s tournament in Paris was confirmed.

Mike Hall
News Writer

Mike has over 25 years of experience in journalism, including writing on a range of sports throughout that time, such as golf, football and cricket. Now a freelance staff writer for Golf Monthly, he is dedicated to covering the game's most newsworthy stories. 

He has written hundreds of articles on the game, from features offering insights into how members of the public can play some of the world's most revered courses, to breaking news stories affecting everything from the PGA Tour and LIV Golf to developmental Tours and the amateur game. 

Mike grew up in East Yorkshire and began his career in journalism in 1997. He then moved to London in 2003 as his career flourished, and nowadays resides in New Brunswick, Canada, where he and his wife raise their young family less than a mile from his local course. 

Kevin Cook’s acclaimed 2007 biography, Tommy’s Honour, about golf’s founding father and son, remains one of his all-time favourite sports books.