1990 World Cup (men's golf)

The 1990 World Cup took place at the Grand Cypress Resort Golf Club in Orlando, Florida, United States. It was the 36th World Cup event. The tournament was a 72-hole stroke play team event with 32 teams. Each team consisted of two players from a country. The combined score of each team determined the team results. The German team of Bernhard Langer and Torsten Giedeon won by three strokes over the England team of Mark James and Richard Boxall and the Ireland team of David Feherty and Ronan Rafferty in a share of second place. The victory was the first international sports victory for the united country of Germany, since the reunification of East and West Germany a month earlier. The individual competition was won by Payne Stewart, United States.[1]

1990 World Cup
Tournament information
DatesNovember 21–24
LocationOrlando, Florida, U.S.
Course(s)Grand Cypress Resort Golf
Format72 holes stroke play
combined score
Statistics
Par72
Length6,751 yards (6,173 m)
Field32 two-man teams
CutNone
Prize fundUS$1.1 million
Winner's share$240,000 team
$75,000 individual
Champion
 Germany
Torsten Giedeon & Bernhard Langer
556 (−20)

Teams

Country Players
 Argentina Luis Carbonetti and Miguel Guzmán
 Australia Brian Jones and Peter Senior
 Bermuda Dwayne Pearman and Keith Smith
 Brazil Jorge Pedro Acacio and Rafael Navarro
 Canada Dave Barr and Rick Gibson
 Chinese Taipei Chen Liang-hsi and Yuan Ching-Chi
 Czechoslovakia Miroslav Nemec and Jiri Zavazal
 Colombia Juan Pinzon and Ivan Rengifo
 Denmark Anders Sørensen and Steen Tinning
 England Richard Boxall and Mark James
 Fiji Vilikesa Kalou asnd Manoa Rosigatale
 France Emmanuel Dussart and Jean van de Velde
 Germany Torsten Giedeon and Bernhard Langer
 Iceland Sigurjon Arnarsson (am) and Ulfar Jonsson (am)
 Ireland David Feherty and Ronan Rafferty
 Italy Alberto Binaghi and Costantino Rocca
 Jamaica Christian Bernard and Seymour Rose
 Japan Katsuyoshi Tomori and Tadami Ueno
 Mexico Carlos Pelaez and Carlos Espinoza
 Netherlands Ruud Bos and Chris van de Velde
 New Zealand Frank Nobilo and Greg Turner
 Philippines Frankie Miñoza and Robert Pactolerin
 Puerto Rico Julio Martinez (am) and Jesus Rodriguez
 Scotland Gordon Brand Jnr and Sam Torrance
 Singapore Samson Gimson and Bill Fung Hee Kwan
 South Korea Choi Sang-ho and Park Nam-sin
 Spain Miguel Ángel Jiménez and José Rivero
 Sweden Mats Lanner and Magnus Persson
  Switzerland André Bossert and Paulo Quirici
 Thailand Sangh Sangsui and Thaworn Wiratchant
 United States Jodie Mudd and Payne Stewart
 Wales Mark Mouland and Ian Woosnam
(am) = Amateur

Scores

Team

# Country Score To par Money (US$)
(per team)
1 Germany141-142-132-141=556−20240,000
T2 England136-140-138-145=559−17104,000
 Ireland142-142-140-135=559
4 Wales140-145-133-143=561−1564,000
5 United States138-140-141-143=562−1450,000
T6 Argentina138-143-141-144=566−1031,333
 Australia143-145-138-140=566
 Spain137-140-145-144=566
9 Canada142-139-144-145=570−618,000
T10 Chinese Taipei145-147-140-139=571−514,000
 Mexico145-147-141-138=571
 Scotland138-146-140-147=571
13 Denmark144-137-145-146=572−410,000
T14 New Zealand142-146-147-140=575−17,500
 South Korea141-150-139-145=575
16  Switzerland145-143-144-146=578+27,000
17 Sweden141-147-146-145=579+3
18 France145-148-143-145=581+5
19 Netherlands150-149-145-138=582+6
20 Italy148-143-151-145=587+11
21 Thailand139-150-144-156=588+12
22 Japan153-145-142-150=590+14
23 Colombia151-150-147-146=594+18
24 Philippines153-154-145-145=597+21
T25 Brazil150-155-147-151=603+27
 Iceland[lower-alpha 1]156-151-146-150=603
27 Bermuda150-159-157-154=620+44
28 Singapore154-163-152-153=622+46
29 Jamaica148-154-167-154=623+47
30 Puerto Rico[lower-alpha 2]161-151-158-160=630+54
31 Fiji160-158-166-151=635+59
32 Czechoslovakia164-171-162-170=667+91
  1. No prize money received as both team members were amateurs.
  2. Half the listed prize money received as one team member was an amateur.

International Trophy

# Player Country Score To par Money (US$)
1Payne Stewart United States69-68-68-66=271−1775,000
2Anders Sørensen Denmark67-67-70-69=273−1550,000
T3David Feherty Ireland70-73-70-63=276−1235,000
Ian Woosnam Wales72-69-65-70=276
T5Torsten Giedeon Germany70-71-65-72=278−1017,500
Bernhard Langer Germany71-71-67-69=278
7Mark James England68-71-68-72=279−9
T8Richard Boxall England68-69-70-73=280−8
Miguel Guzmán Argentina69-72-67-72=280
Peter Senior Australia68-71-70-71=280

Sources:[2][3][4][5][6]

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gollark: So I wanted to do it in a convoluted way, so I looked at a bunch of prime factorization algorithms.
gollark: So I thought it would be funny if potatOS shipped with a program to factor primes for you.
gollark: And it asks you to factorize a prime number, for purposes. This is extremely easy, but some people don't think to look it up.
gollark: * uninstall

References

  1. McCormack, Mark H. (1991). The World of Professional Golf 1991. Chapmans. p. 407, 408. ISBN 1855925583.
  2. "World Cup". Svensk Golf. December 1990. p. 57.
  3. "World Cup". Santa Cruz Sentinel. November 25, 1990. p. B6.
  4. "This day in golf history". The Irish Times. November 24, 2001.
  5. Povtak, Tim (November 25, 1990). "German friends take World Cup". The Orlando Sentinel. p. C-1 via newspapers.com.
  6. Povtak, Tim (November 25, 1990). "Irish team ties English for 2nd". The Orlando Sentinel. p. C-18 via newspapers.com.
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