Volvo World Match Play Championship: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 36°23′49″N 5°13′26″W / 36.397°N 5.224°W / 36.397; -5.224
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[[Category:Golf in Bulgaria]]
[[Category:Recurring sporting events established in 1964]]

Revision as of 11:32, 10 September 2013

World Match Play Championship
Tournament information
LocationKavarna, Bulgaria
Established1964
Course(s)Thracian Cliffs Golf & Beach Resort
Par72
Length7,291 yards (6,667 m)
Tour(s)European Tour (since 2004)
FormatMatch play
Prize fund3,000,000
Month playedMay
Tournament record score
Score10 & 8 Paul Casey (2006)
Current champion
Northern Ireland Graeme McDowell
2013 Volvo World Match Play Championship

The Volvo World Match Play Championship is the current name of an annual match play men's professional golf tournament. From 2009 to 2012 the event was played at the Finca Cortesín Golf Club in Casares near Málaga, Spain, having previously been played at Wentworth Club near London. In 2013, the event will be held at the Thracian Cliffs Golf & Beach Resort in Kavarna, Bulgaria. The event was traditionally played in the autumn, usually in October, but move to a May date in 2011 and is an official money event on the European Tour. Previous sponsors have included Piccadilly, Suntory, Toyota, Cisco and HSBC.

History

The tournament was founded by sports agent, Mark McCormack, as a showcase for the players he managed. The inaugural event in 1964 was won by Arnold Palmer, who was McCormack's first client. The calibre of the winners has consistently been very high, with the majority of the tournaments being won by players who have been ranked in the top two in the Official World Golf Ranking or its predecessor Mark McCormack's world golf rankings.

The event consisted of 36-hole matches played in a single day. The event had an eight man field from 1964 to 1976. It expanded to 16 players for 1977 and 1978. In 1979, the field was 12 players, with four seeded players being given a bye in the first round. It was sometimes felt that this was unfair, as an unseeded player needed to string together eight successful rounds in four days to win, twice as many as in a stroke play tournament, whereas a seeded player only needed six successful rounds to win.

For its first 40 years the tournament was an unofficial one, highly regarded by golf fans in Britain and many other countries outside the United States, popular with players, and happily coexisting with the European Tour, at whose home course it is played, but not taken into account on an official tour money list. The introduction in 1999 of the 64-man WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship, which selected its field on the basis of the World Rankings, was a blow to the prestige of the older event, whose exhibitional aspects, with a small invited field, were emphasised by contrast.

In 2003, the tournament was given a major overhaul. Greatly increased sponsorship was secured from the largest British based bank, HSBC, and the winner's prize was increased to £1 million, which was then easily the largest in world golf (although the Nedbank Golf Challenge had had a $2 million first prize from 2000-02). In 2004, the field was increased to 16 players, all of whom need to play eight rounds of golf to win, to eliminate the advantage previously given to seeds. A qualifying system based primarily on performances in the four majors, replaced the invitations of the past. World ranking points were allocated to the event (for the first time since 1999[1]), and the championship became an official money European Tour Order of Merit event - not however the actual prize money, as the first prize is far higher than for the other events on the tour, but scaled down amounts intended to be more proportionate.

In recent years, Americans have tended to decline their invitations. In 2005, no Americans took part at all, and with stalwart Ernie Els injured and Vijay Singh and Sergio García also absent, the field was one of the weakest seen at the event, with just one player from the world top ten. The 2006 event had a considerably stronger field with six of the world's top ten players headed by the world's top two ranked players Tiger Woods and Jim Furyk. But in January 2007 HSBC activated a break clause in its ten year contract and withdrew from sponsorship after the 2007 event.[2]

After HSBC withdrew its sponsorship in 2007, the tournament was given another major overhaul. After a break in 2008, the tournament returned in 2009 with Volvo as the new title sponsor.[3] The event moved from Wentworth to the Finca Cortesín Golf Club near Málaga in Spain. The format switched to an opening round robin, with 16 players divided into four groups and the winners advancing to the 36-hole semi-finals. The qualifying criteria were also changed to include certain players based on their nationality. The total prize money for 2009 was €3,250,000, with €750,000 of that going to the winner.

After another break in 2010, the tournament returned in May 2011, several months earlier than the traditional date in autumn. The field was expanded to 24 players, split into eight groups, playing in a round robin format. The top two players from each group would progress to the knockout stage. Unlike previous years, all matches would be played over 18 holes. The total prize money for 2011 was €3,400,000, with €800,000 of that going to the winner.

In 2013, the event will be held in Bulgaria becoming the first European Tour event in Bulgaria. Volvo has requested that the championship be moved to geographical areas of interest for the company and therefore the event will be rotated around Europe.[4]

Winners

Year Winner Country Runner-up Country Score
Volvo World Match Play Championship
2013 Graeme McDowell  Northern Ireland Thongchai Jaidee  Thailand 2 & 1
2012 Nicolas Colsaerts  Belgium Graeme McDowell  Northern Ireland 1 up
2011 Ian Poulter  England Luke Donald  England 2 & 1
2010 No tournament
2009 Ross Fisher  England Anthony Kim  United States 4 & 3
2008 No tournament
HSBC World Match Play Championship
2007 Ernie Els (7)  South Africa Ángel Cabrera  Argentina 6 & 4
2006 Paul Casey  England Shaun Micheel  United States 10 & 8
2005 Michael Campbell  New Zealand Paul McGinley  Ireland 2 & 1
2004 Ernie Els (6)  South Africa Lee Westwood  England 2 & 1
2003 Ernie Els (5)  South Africa Thomas Bjørn  Denmark 4 & 3
Cisco World Match Play Championship
2002 Ernie Els (4)  South Africa Sergio García  Spain 2 & 1
2001 Ian Woosnam (3)  Wales Pádraig Harrington  Ireland 2 & 1
2000 Lee Westwood  England Colin Montgomerie  Scotland 38 holes
1999 Colin Montgomerie  Scotland Mark O'Meara  United States 3 & 2
1998 Mark O'Meara  United States Tiger Woods  United States 1 up
Toyota World Match Play Championship
1997 Vijay Singh  Fiji Ernie Els  South Africa 1 up
1996 Ernie Els (3)  South Africa Vijay Singh  Fiji 3 & 2
1995 Ernie Els (2)  South Africa Steve Elkington  Australia 3 & 1
1994 Ernie Els (1)  South Africa Colin Montgomerie  Scotland 4 & 2
1993 Corey Pavin  United States Nick Faldo  England 1 up
1992 Nick Faldo (2)  England Jeff Sluman  United States 8 & 7
1991 Seve Ballesteros (5)  Spain Nick Price  Zimbabwe 3 & 2
Suntory World Match Play Championship
1990 Ian Woosnam (2)  Wales Mark McNulty  Zimbabwe 4 & 2
1989 Nick Faldo (1)  England Ian Woosnam  Wales 1 up
1988 Sandy Lyle  Scotland Nick Faldo  England 2 & 1
1987 Ian Woosnam (1)  Wales Sandy Lyle  Scotland 1 up
1986 Greg Norman (3)  Australia Sandy Lyle  Scotland 2 & 1
1985 Seve Ballesteros (4)  Spain Bernhard Langer  Germany 6 & 5
1984 Seve Ballesteros (3)  Spain Bernhard Langer  Germany 2 & 1
1983 Greg Norman (2)  Australia Nick Faldo  England 3 & 2
1982 Seve Ballesteros (2)  Spain Sandy Lyle  Scotland 37 holes
1981 Seve Ballesteros (1)  Spain Ben Crenshaw  United States 1 up
1980 Greg Norman (1)  Australia Sandy Lyle  Scotland 1 up
1979 Bill Rogers  United States Isao Aoki  Japan 1 up
Colgate World Match Play Championship
1978 Isao Aoki  Japan Simon Owen  New Zealand 3 & 2
1977 Graham Marsh  Australia Raymond Floyd  United States 5 & 3
Piccadilly World Match Play Championship
1976 David Graham  Australia Hale Irwin  United States 38 holes
1975 Hale Irwin (2)  United States Al Geiberger  United States 4 & 2
1974 Hale Irwin (1)  United States Gary Player  South Africa 3 & 1
1973 Gary Player (5)  South Africa Graham Marsh  Australia 40 holes
1972 Tom Weiskopf  United States Lee Trevino  United States 4 & 3
1971 Gary Player (4)  South Africa Jack Nicklaus  United States 5 & 4
1970 Jack Nicklaus  United States Lee Trevino  United States 2 & 1
1969 Bob Charles  New Zealand Gene Littler  United States 37 holes
1968 Gary Player (3)  South Africa Bob Charles  New Zealand 1 up
1967 Arnold Palmer (2)  United States Peter Thomson  Australia 1 up
1966 Gary Player (2)  South Africa Jack Nicklaus  United States 6 & 4
1965 Gary Player (1)  South Africa Peter Thomson  Australia 3 & 2
1964 Arnold Palmer (1)  United States Neil Coles  England 2 & 1

Multiple winners

Through the 2012 event, the following players have won the World Match Play Championship more than once:

Wins Player Country Years won
7 Ernie Els  South Africa 1994, 1995, 1996, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2007
5 Gary Player  South Africa 1965, 1966, 1968, 1971, 1973
5 Seve Ballesteros  Spain 1981, 1982, 1984, 1985, 1991
3 Greg Norman  Australia 1980, 1983, 1986
3 Ian Woosnam*  Wales 1987, 1990, 2001
2 Arnold Palmer  United States 1964, 1967
2 Hale Irwin  United States 1974, 1975
2 Nick Faldo  England 1989, 1992

* Woosnam is the only person to have won in three different decades

Qualification criteria

For the 2013 championship, the qualification criteria are as follows:[5]

  • Defending champion
  • The leading player (not otherwise exempt above) from the 2012 Portugal Masters
  • The top four players (not otherwise exempt above) from the final 2012 European Tour Race to Dubai Rankings
  • The leading player (not otherwise exempt above) from the 2013 Volvo Golf Champions
  • The leading player (not otherwise exempt above) from the 2013 Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship
  • The leading player (not otherwise exempt above) from the 2013 Commercialbank Qatar Masters
  • The leading player (not otherwise exempt above), based upon his nationality, listed on the Official World Golf Ranking, from each of the following regions following the 2013 Masters Tournament:
    • Europe
    • Africa/Middle East
    • North America
    • South America
    • Asia (comprising China, South East Asia, India, Japan and Korea)
    • Australasia (comprising Australia, Fiji and New Zealand)
  • The leading two players (not otherwise exempt above) from the Official World Golf Ranking following the 2013 Masters Tournament
  • The current holders of the four major championships (if players are exempt, additional places are allocated to the following category)
  • The leading player (and, in accordance with the previous category, up to 4 further players taken in ranking order) (not otherwise exempt above) from the 2013 European Tour Race to Dubai Rankings following the 2013 Masters Tournament
  • The leading player (not otherwise exempt above) from the 2013 Volvo China Open
  • One sponsor invite from the top 50 from the Official World Golf Ranking following the 2013 Masters

Media coverage

The World Match Play currently gets shown live by Sky Sports and it also gets broadcast in Ireland by Setanta Ireland.

References

  1. ^ World Rankings are refined, but still confusing
  2. ^ Don't Bank on HSBC, sportbusiness.com, 31 January 2007.
  3. ^ "Volvo Named Sponsors of World Match Play Championship]". European Tour. 23 June 2008.
  4. ^ . ESPN. Associated Press. 22 October 2012 Bulgaria to host European Tour http://espn.go.com/golf/story/_/id/8537086/bulgaria-host-1st-ever-european-tour-event Bulgaria to host European Tour. Retrieved 22 October 2012. {{cite news}}: Check |url= value (help); Missing or empty |title= (help)
  5. ^ Volvo World Match Play - Qualification Criteria

External links

36°23′49″N 5°13′26″W / 36.397°N 5.224°W / 36.397; -5.224