1988 Dunhill Cup

1988 Dunhill Cup
Tournament information
Dates13–16 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$1,000,000[1]
Winner's shareUS$300,000[2]
Champion
 Ireland
(Eamonn Darcy, Ronan Rafferty, Des Smyth)
← 1987
1989 →

The 1988 Dunhill Cup was the fourth Dunhill Cup. It was a team tournament featuring 16 countries, each represented by three players. The Cup was played 13–16 October at the Old Course at St Andrews in Scotland. The sponsor was the Alfred Dunhill company. The Irish team of Eamonn Darcy, Ronan Rafferty, and Des Smyth beat the Australian team of Rodger Davis, David Graham, and Greg Norman in the final. (As in the World Cup, Ireland was represented by a combined Ireland and Northern Ireland team.)

Format

The Cup was played as a single-elimination, match play event played over four days. The top eight teams were seeded[1] with the remaining teams randomly placed in the bracket. In each 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.

Bracket

First round Quarter-finals Semi-finals Final
1  United States 3
 Philippines 0 1  United States 0.5
8  Ireland 2 8  Ireland 2.5
 Canada 1 8  Ireland 2
5  England 3 5  England 1
 France 0 5  England 2
4  Scotland 3 4  Scotland 1
 Thailand 0 8  Ireland 2
2  Spain 3 3  Australia 1
 Zimbabwe 0 2  Spain 3
7  Japan 3 7  Japan 0
 Denmark 0 2  Spain 1 Third place
6  Wales 3 3  Australia 2
 Sweden 0 6  Wales 1 5  England 1
3  Australia 3 3  Australia 2 2  Spain 2
 Brazil 0

Round by round scores

First round

Source:[1]

 United States – 3  Philippines – 0
Player Score Player Score
Curtis Strange 70 Eddie Bagtas 75
Chip Beck 68 Rudy Lavares 81
Mark McCumber 72 Frankie Miñoza 75
 Ireland – 2  Canada – 1
Player Score Player Score
Ronan Rafferty 69 Dave Barr 67
Eamonn Darcy 69 Dan Halldorson 72
Des Smyth 69 Richard Zokol 76
 Spain – 3  Zimbabwe – 0
Player Score Player Score
Seve Ballesteros 72 Tim Price 74
José Rivero 68 Anthony Edwards 72
José María Olazábal 74 Morgan Shumba 78
 Australia – 3  Brazil – 0
Player Score Player Score
Rodger Davis 69 Rafael Navarro 74
David Graham 68 Carlos Dluosh 72
Greg Norman 74 Priscillo Diniz 78
 England – 3  France – 0
Player Score Player Score
Mark James 66 Frédéric Regard 75
Barry Lane 70 Michel Tapia 75
Nick Faldo 65 Emmanuel Dussart 70
 Scotland – 3  Thailand – 0
Player Score Player Score
Gordon Brand Jnr 74 Boonchu Ruangkit 76
Colin Montgomerie 72 Suthep Meesawat 80
Sandy Lyle 70 Somsakdi Srisangar 73
 Japan – 3  Denmark – 0
Player Score Player Score
Naomichi Ozaki 69 Jacob Rasmussen 77
Tateo Ozaki 68 Steen Tinning 69
Hajime Meshiai 72 Anders Sørensen 75
 Wales – 3  Sweden – 0
Player Score Player Score
David Llewellyn 72 Magnus Persson 75
Mark Mouland 70 Ove Sellberg 71
Ian Woosnam 69 Anders Forsbrand 75

Quarter-finals

Source:[3]

 United States – 0.5  Ireland – 2.5
Player Score Player Score
Mark McCumber 72 Ronan Rafferty 71
Chip Beck 71 Des Smyth 71
Curtis Strange 68 Eamonn Darcy 66
 Australia – 2  Wales – 1
Player Score Player Score
David Graham 67 Mark Mouland 76
Rodger Davis 69 David Llewellyn 70
Greg Norman 73 Ian Woosnam 71
 Spain – 2  Japan – 1
Player Score Player Score
Seve Ballesteros 72 Naomichi Ozaki 74
José Rivero 65 Hajime Meshiai 68
José María Olazábal 68 Tateo Ozaki 69
 Scotland – 1  England – 2
Player Score Player Score
Gordon Brand Jnr 71 Barry Lane 73
Colin Montgomerie 72 Mark James 69
Sandy Lyle 68 Nick Faldo 67

Semi-finals

Source:[4][5]

 Spain – 1  Australia – 2
Player Score Player Score
José Rivero 72 Rodger Davis 71
José María Olazábal 69 David Graham 73
Seve Ballesteros 69 Greg Norman 67
 England – 1  Ireland – 2
Player Score Player Score
Barry Lane 65 Ronan Rafferty 68
Nick Faldo Des Smyth
Mark James Eamonn Darcy
Note the last two semi-final matches were suspended Saturday and concluded Sunday before the final match.

Final

Source:[2][6]

 Australia – 1  Ireland – 2
Player Score Player Score
Rodger Davis 73 Des Smyth 71
David Graham 74 Ronan Rafferty 69
Greg Norman 63 Eamonn Darcy 71

Third place

Source:[6]

 Spain – 2  England – 1
Player Score Player Score
Seve Ballesteros 71 Barry Lane 72
José María Olazábal 67 Nick Faldo 66
José Rivero 69 Mark James 70

Team results

Country Place W L Seed
 Ireland 1 8.5 3.5 8
 Australia 2 8 4 3
 Spain 3 9 3 2
 England 4 7 5 5
 Scotland T5 4 2 4
 Wales T5 4 2 6
 United States T5 3.5 2.5 1
 Japan T5 3 3 7
 Canada T9 1 2
 Brazil T9 0 3
 Denmark T9 0 3
 France T9 0 3
 Philippines T9 0 3
 Sweden T9 0 3
 Thailand T9 0 3
 Zimbabwe T9 0 3

Player results

Country Player W L
 Ireland Des Smyth 3.5 0.5
 Ireland Eamonn Darcy 3 1
 Ireland Ronan Rafferty 2 2
 Australia Rodger Davis 3 1
 Australia Greg Norman 3 1
 Australia David Graham 2 2
 Spain Seve Ballesteros 3 1
 Spain José María Olazábal 3 1
 Spain José Rivero 3 1
 England Nick Faldo 3 1
 England Mark James 2 2
 England Barry Lane 2 2
 Scotland Gordon Brand Jnr 2 0
 Scotland Sandy Lyle 1 1
 Scotland Colin Montgomerie 1 1
 Wales Ian Woosnam 2 0
 Wales David Llewellyn 1 1
 Wales Mark Mouland 1 1
 United States Chip Beck 1.5 0.5
 United States Mark McCumber 1 1
 United States Curtis Strange 1 1
 Japan Hajime Meshiai 1 1
 Japan Naomichi Ozaki 1 1
 Japan Tateo Ozaki 1 1
 Canada Dave Barr 1 0
 Canada Dan Halldorson 0 1
 Canada Richard Zokol 0 1
 Brazil Priscillo Diniz 0 1
 Brazil Carlos Dluosh 0 1
 Brazil Rafael Navarro 0 1
 Denmark Jacob Rasmussen 0 1
 Denmark Anders Sørensen 0 1
 Denmark Steen Tinning 0 1
 France Emmanuel Dussart 0 1
 France Frédéric Regard 0 1
 France Michel Tapia 0 1
 Philippines Eddie Bagtas 0 1
 Philippines Rudy Lavares 0 1
 Philippines Frankie Miñoza 0 1
 Sweden Anders Forsbrand 0 1
 Sweden Magnus Persson 0 1
 Sweden Ove Sellberg 0 1
 Thailand Suthep Meesawat 0 1
 Thailand Boonchu Ruangkit 0 1
 Thailand Somsakdi Srisangar 0 1
 Zimbabwe Anthony Edwards 0 1
 Zimbabwe Tim Price 0 1
 Zimbabwe Morgan Shumba 0 1

References

  1. ^ a b c "Faldo helps English beat France; Dunhill Cup". Tri-City Herald. Richland, Washington. 14 October 1988. pp. C3, C4. Retrieved 11 December 2012.
  2. ^ a b "Ireland wins Dunhill Cup". Lawrence Journal-World. Lawrence, Kansas. 17 October 1988. p. 2B. Retrieved 2 January 2013.
  3. ^ "Dunhill Cup results". Wilmington Morning Star. Wilmington, North Carolina. 15 October 1988. p. 2B. Retrieved 11 December 2012.
  4. ^ "Australia leads at Dunhill team cup". Rome News-Tribune. Rome, Georgia. AP. 16 October 1988. p. 10B. Retrieved 11 December 2012.
  5. ^ "Ireland triumphs". The Vindicator. Youngstown, Ohio. AP. 17 October 1988. p. 15. Retrieved 12 December 2012.
  6. ^ a b "Ireland take Dunhill Cup". The Age. Melbourne, Australia. 17 October 1988. p. 39. Retrieved 11 December 2012.

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