1992 Dunhill Cup

The 1992 Dunhill Cup was the eighth Dunhill Cup. It was a team tournament featuring 16 countries, each represented by three players. The Cup was played 15–18 October at the Old Course at St Andrews in Scotland. The sponsor was the Alfred Dunhill company. The English team of David Gilford, Steven Richardson, and Jamie Spence beat the Scottish team of Gordon Brand, Jnr, Sandy Lyle, and Colin Montgomerie in the final. It was the second win for England.

1992 Dunhill Cup
Tournament information
Dates15–18 October
LocationSt Andrews, Scotland
Course(s)Old Course at St Andrews
FormatMatch play
Statistics
Par72
Length6,933 yards (6,340 m)
Field16 teams of 3 players
Prize fundUS$1,700,000[1]
Winner's shareUS$510,000[2]
Champion
 England
(David Gilford, Steven Richardson, Jamie Spence)

Format

The Cup was a match play event played over four days. The teams were divided into four four-team groups. The top eight teams were seeded with the remaining teams randomly placed in the groups. After three rounds of round-robin play, the top team in each group advanced to a single elimination playoff.

In each team match, the three players were paired with their opponents and played 18 holes at medal match play. Tied matches were extended to a sudden-death playoff only if they affected the outcome between the two teams. The tie-breaker for ties within a group was based on the total team score.

Group play

Round one

Source:[1]

Group 1

Group 2

Group 3

Group 4

Round two

Source:[3]

Group 1

Group 2

Group 3

Group 4

Round three

Source:[4]

Group 1

Group 2

Group 3

Group 4

Standings

Group 1
CountryWLScoreMWML
 United States2164072
 Ireland2164854
 New Zealand2165245
 South Korea0368127
Group 2
CountryWLScoreMWML
 England2165354
 Spain2166345
 Japan126524.54.5
 Italy126654.54.5
Group 3
CountryWLScoreMWML
 Scotland2165272
 Canada2166554
 Sweden2166545
 France0367627
Group 4
CountryWLScoreMWML
 Australia3065781
 Germany216804.54.5
 South Africa126744.54.5
 Thailand0370918

Playoffs

Source:[2][5]

Bracket

Semi-finals Final
      
1  United States 1
5  England 2
5  England 2.5
3  Scotland 0.5
2  Australia 1
3  Scotland 2

Semi-finals

Final

 England – 2.5 Scotland – 0.5
PlayerScorePlayerScore
Steven Richardson71Gordon Brand, Jnr73
Jamie Spence69Colin Montgomerie69
David Gilford71Sandy Lyle74

Team results

CountryPlaceWLMWMLSeed
 England1419.55.55
 Scotland2329.55.53
 AustraliaT331932
 United StatesT322841
 CanadaT52154
 GermanyT5214.54.5
 IrelandT521548
 New ZealandT52145
 SpainT521454
 SwedenT521456
 ItalyT11124.54.5
 JapanT11124.54.5
 South AfricaT11124.54.57
 FranceT140327
 South KoreaT140327
 ThailandT140318

Player results

CountryPlayerWL
 EnglandDavid Gilford50
 EnglandSteven Richardson41
 EnglandJamie Spence0.54.5
 ScotlandColin Montgomerie4.50.5
 ScotlandSandy Lyle32
 ScotlandGordon Brand, Jnr23
 AustraliaGreg Norman3.50.5
 AustraliaIan Baker-Finch31
 AustraliaRodger Davis2.51.5
 United StatesTom Kite40
 United StatesFred Couples22
 United StatesDavis Love III22
 CanadaBrent Franklin21
 CanadaDanny Mijovic21
 CanadaRichard Zokol12
 GermanyBernhard Langer2.50.5
 GermanyHeinz-Peter Thül21
 GermanyTorsten Giedeon03
 IrelandChristy O'Connor Jnr30
 IrelandPhilip Walton21
 IrelandRonan Rafferty03
 New ZealandGrant Waite21
 New ZealandFrank Nobilo12
 New ZealandGreg Turner12
 SpainMiguel Ángel Jiménez21
 SpainJosé María Olazábal21
 SpainJosé Rivero03
 SwedenAnders Forsbrand21
 SwedenPer-Ulrik Johansson12
 SwedenRobert Karlsson12
 ItalyCostantino Rocca30
 ItalySilvio Grappasonni12
 ItalyGiuseppe Calì0.52.5
 JapanHiroshi Makino21
 JapanMasahiro Kuramoto1.51.5
 JapanNobumitsu Yuhara12
 South AfricaDavid Frost21
 South AfricaJohn Bland1.51.5
 South AfricaErnie Els12
 FranceThomas Levet12
 FranceJean van de Velde12
 FranceMarc Farry03
 South KoreaChoi Sang-Ho21
 South KoreaCho Chui-Sang03
 South KoreaPark Nam-Sin03
 ThailandBoonchu Ruangkit03
 ThailandThaworn Wiratchant12
 ThailandSanil Sophon03
gollark: Vaguely relatedly, gaining 1 megadollar would probably cause less than twice as much as a QoL improvement as 0.5 megadollars.
gollark: I mean, you'd have a thousand boxes.
gollark: Except the shipping for #2 would be more annoying.
gollark: I mean, on the extreme end, you probably want 10 gigadollars less than 10 times as much as you want 1 gigadollar, inasmuch as your life would be basically the same.
gollark: I'd say a few hundred times x.

References

  1. "Golfers fight wind, cold in Scotland; Dunhill Cup". Wilmington Morning Star. Wilmington, North Carolina. 16 October 1992. pp. 4C, 2C. Retrieved 13 December 2012.
  2. "Fifth-seed England takes Dunhill Cup from U.S., Scotland". The Albany Herald. Albany, Georgia. AP. 19 October 1992. p. 4B. Retrieved 2 January 2013.
  3. "Dunhill Cup". Wilmington Morning Star. Wilmington, North Carolina. 17 October 1992. p. 2C. Retrieved 13 December 2012.
  4. "British media irks U.S. team; Pro Golf: Dunhill Cup". The Albany Sunday Herald. Albany, Georgia. 18 October 1992. p. 2C. Retrieved 18 December 2012.
  5. "England claims Dunhill Cup; Dunhill Cup". The Victoria Advocate. Victoria, Texas. AP. 19 October 1992. pp. 2B, 4B. Retrieved 18 December 2012.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.