More Information About World Cup (men's golf)
The World Cup is an annual men's golf tournament. It is contested by teams of two representing their country. Only one team is allowed from each country. The players are selected on the basis of the Official World Golf Rankings, although not all of the first choice players choose to compete. From 2007 to 2018 it will be held at Mission Hills Golf Club in China and will be known as the Mission Hills World Cup. It will also have a title sponsor, the first of which is Omega, so the full name of the 2007 event is the Omega Mission Hills World Cup.[1]
The tournament was founded by Canadian industrialist John Jay Hopkins, who hoped it would promote international goodwill through golf. It began in 1953 as the Canada Cup and changed its named to the World Cup in 1967. With Fred Corcoran as the Tournament Director and the International Golf Association behind it (1955-1977), the World Cup traveled the globe and grew to be one of golf's most prestigious tournaments throughout the 1960s and '70s, before it became the World Cup of Golf in 1993. It was incorporated into the World Golf Championships series from 2000 to 2006. In 2007 it ceased to be a World Golf Championships event, but continued to be sanctioned by the International Federation of PGA Tours. The United States has a clear lead in wins, with 23 as of 2007.
In 1953, the format was 36 holes of stroke play with the combined score of the two-man team determining the winner. From 1954 to 1999, the format was 72 holes of stroke play. Beginning in 2000, the format is alternating stroke play rounds of bestball (fourball) and alternate shot (foursomes). From 1955 to 1999, there was also a separate award, the International Trophy, for the individual with the best 72 hole score.
The equivalent event for women is the Women's World Cup of Golf.
Winners
Omega Mission Hills World Cup
WGC-World Cup
World Cup of Golf
World Cup
| Year |
Country |
Team |
Individual |
Location |
Runners-up |
| 1992 |
United States |
Fred Couples & Davis Love III |
Brett Ogle |
Madrid, Spain |
Anders Forsbrand & Per-Ulrik Johansson |
| 1991 |
Sweden |
Anders Forsbrand & Per-Ulrik Johansson |
Ian Woosnam |
Rome, Italy |
David Llewellyn & Ian Woosnam |
| 1990 |
Germany |
Torsten Giedeon & Bernhard Langer |
Payne Stewart |
Orlando, Florida, USA |
Richard Boxall & Mark James
David Feherty & Ronan Rafferty |
| 1989 |
Australia |
Peter Fowler & Wayne Grady |
Peter Fowler |
Marbella, Spain |
José Maria Cañizares & José María Olazábal |
| 1988 |
United States |
Ben Crenshaw & Mark McCumber |
Ben Crenshaw |
Melbourne, Australia |
Masashi Ozaki & Tateo Ozaki |
| 1987 |
Wales |
David Llewellyn & Ian Woosnam |
Ian Woosnam |
Maui, Hawaii, USA |
Sandy Lyle & Sam Torrance |
| 1986 |
No tournament |
| 1985 |
Canada |
Dave Barr & Dan Halldorson |
Howard Clark |
La Quinta, California, USA |
Howard Clark & Paul Way |
| 1984 |
Spain |
José Maria Cañizares & José Rivero |
José Maria Cañizares |
Rome, Italy |
Gordon Brand, Jnr & Sam Torrance
Hsieh Min-Nan & ? |
| 1983 |
United States |
Rex Caldwell & John Cook |
Dave Barr |
Jakarta, Indonesia |
Terry Gale & Wayne Grady
Jerry Anderson & Dave Barr |
| 1982 |
Spain |
José Maria Cañizares & Manuel Piñero |
Manuel Piñero |
Acapulco, Mexico |
Bobby Clampett & Bob Gilder |
| 1981 |
No tournament |
| 1980 |
Canada |
Dan Halldorson & Jim Nelford |
Sandy Lyle |
Bogotá, Colombia |
Sandy Lyle & Sam Torrance |
| 1979 |
United States |
Hale Irwin & John Mahaffey |
Hale Irwin |
Athens, Greece |
Sandy Lyle & Sam Torrance |
| 1978 |
United States |
John Mahaffey & Andy North |
John Mahaffey |
Hanalei, Hawaii, USA |
Wayne Grady & Greg Norman |
| 1977 |
Spain |
Seve Ballesteros & Antonio Garrido |
Gary Player |
Manila, Philippines |
Ben Arda & Rudy Lavares |
| 1976 |
Spain |
Seve Ballesteros & Manuel Piñero |
Ernesto Perez Acosta |
Palm Springs, California, USA |
Jerry Pate & Dave Stockton |
| 1975 |
United States |
Lou Graham & Johnny Miller |
Johnny Miller |
Bangkok, Thailand |
Hsieh Min-Nan & Kuo Chie-Hsiung |
| 1974 |
South Africa |
Bobby Cole & Dale Hayes |
Bobby Cole |
Caracas, Venezuela |
Isao Aoki & Masashi Ozaki |
| 1973 |
United States |
Johnny Miller & Jack Nicklaus |
Johnny Miller |
Marbella, Spain |
Bobby Cole & Dale Hayes |
| 1972 |
Taiwan |
Hsieh Min-Nan & Lu Liang-Huan |
Hsieh Min-Nan |
Melbourne, Australia |
Takaaki Kono & Takashi Murakami |
| 1971 |
United States |
Jack Nicklaus & Lee Trevino |
Jack Nicklaus |
Palm Beach, Florida, USA |
Harold Henning & Gary Player |
| 1970 |
Australia |
Bruce Devlin & David Graham |
Roberto De Vicenzo |
Buenos Aires, Argentina |
Roberto De Vicenzo & Vicente Fernández |
| 1969 |
United States |
Orville Moody & Lee Trevino |
Lee Trevino |
Singapore |
Takaaki Kono & Haruo Yasuda |
| 1968 |
Canada |
Al Balding & George Knudson |
Al Balding |
Rome, Italy |
Julius Boros & Lee Trevino |
| 1967 |
United States |
Jack Nicklaus & Arnold Palmer |
Arnold Palmer |
Mexico City, Mexico |
Bob Charles & Will Godfrey |
Canada Cup
| Year |
Country |
Team |
Individual |
Location |
Runners-up |
| 1966 |
United States |
Jack Nicklaus & Arnold Palmer |
George Knudson |
Tokyo, Japan |
Harold Henning & Gary Player |
| 1965 |
South Africa |
Harold Henning & Gary Player |
Gary Player |
Madrid, Spain |
Ángel Miguel & Ramón Sota |
| 1964 |
United States |
Jack Nicklaus & Arnold Palmer |
Jack Nicklaus |
Maui, Hawaii, USA |
Roberto De Vicenzo & Leopoldo Ruiz |
| 1963 |
United States |
Jack Nicklaus & Arnold Palmer |
Jack Nicklaus |
Paris, France |
Sebastian Miguel & Ramón Sota |
| 1962 |
United States |
Arnold Palmer & Sam Snead |
Roberto De Vicenzo |
Buenos Aires, Argentina |
Fidel de Luca & Roberto De Vicenzo |
| 1961 |
United States |
Jimmy Demaret & Sam Snead |
Sam Snead |
Dorado, Puerto Rico |
Kel Nagle & Peter Thomson |
| 1960 |
United States |
Arnold Palmer & Sam Snead |
Flory Van Donck |
Portmarnock, Dublin, Ireland |
Bernard Hunt & Harry Weetman |
| 1959 |
Australia |
Kel Nagle & Peter Thomson |
Stan Leonard |
Melbourne, Australia |
Cary Middlecoff & Sam Snead |
| 1958 |
Ireland |
Harry Bradshaw & Christy O'Connor |
Ángel Miguel |
Mexico City, Mexico |
Ángel Miguel & Sebastian Miguel |
| 1957 |
Japan |
Torakichi Nakamura & Koichi Ono |
Torakichi Nakamura |
Tokyo, Japan |
Jimmy Demaret & Sam Snead |
| 1956 |
United States |
Ben Hogan & Sam Snead |
Ben Hogan |
Wentworth, Surrey, England |
Bobby Locke & Gary Player |
| 1955 |
United States |
Ed Furgol & Chick Harbert |
Ed Furgol |
Washington, DC, USA |
Kel Nagle & Peter Thomson |
| 1954 |
Australia |
Kel Nagle & Peter Thomson |
no award |
Montreal, Canada |
Antonio Cerdá & Roberto de Vicenzo |
| 1953 |
Argentina |
Antonio Cerdá & Roberto De Vicenzo |
no award |
Montreal, Canada |
Bill Kerr & Stan Leonard |
Multiple Winners
Countries
- 23 wins: United States
- 5 wins: South Africa
- 4 wins: Australia, Spain
- 3 wins: Canada
- 2 wins: England, Germany, Ireland, Japan, Sweden, Wales
Teammates
As part of team
- 6 times: Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer
- 4 times: Fred Couples, Davis Love III, Sam Snead
- 2 times: Seve Ballesteros, José Maria Cañizares, Ernie Els, Dan Halldorson, Bernhard Langer, John Mahaffey, Johnny Miller, Kel Nagle, Manuel Piñero, Peter Thomson, Lee Trevino, Tiger Woods, Ian Woosnam
As individual (International Trophy)
References
External links
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