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2011 World Cup (men's golf)


FieldValue
name2011 World Cup
dates24–27 November
locationHaikou, Hainan Island, China
courseMission Hills Haikou, Blackstone course
format72 holes stroke play
best ball & alternate shot
par72
yardage7441 yd
field28 two-man teams
cutNone
purseUS$7.5 million
winners_shareUS$2.4 million
champion
Matt Kuchar & Gary Woodland
score264 (−24)
mapChina#Hainan
map_labelMission Hills
map_captionLocation in East Asia##Location in Hainan
map_reliefyes
map_size220
previous2009
next2013

best ball & alternate shot Matt Kuchar & Gary Woodland The 2011 Omega Mission Hills World Cup was a golf tournament that took place 24–27 November on the Blackstone course at Mission Hills Haikou in Hainan, China. It was the 56th World Cup, and the first since 2009, when the tournament switched to being staged biennially. 28 countries competed as two player teams. The purse was increased from $5.5 million in 2009 to $7.5 million in 2011. The event was won by the United States, represented by Matt Kuchar and Gary Woodland with a score of 264, 24 under par.

Qualification and format

The leading 18 available players from different countries in the Official World Golf Ranking qualified automatically on 18 July. These 18 players then selected a player from their country to compete with them. The person they picked had to be ranked within the top 100 on the Official World Golf Ranking as of 1 September. If there was no other player from that country within the top 100 then the next highest ranked player would be their partner. If there was no other available player from that country within the top 500, then the exempt player could choose whoever he wanted as long as they are a professional from the same country. A further nine countries qualified via three qualifying stages, held in Malaysia, Estonia and Venezuela. The final team was the host nation, China.

The 18 qualifying players (together with their country and World Ranking on 18 July) were Martin Kaymer (Germany, ranked 3), Rory McIlroy (Ireland, 4), Matt Kuchar (USA, 8), Charl Schwartzel (South Africa, 12), Ian Poulter (England, 16), Robert Karlsson (Sweden, 19), Francesco Molinari (Italy, 23), Álvaro Quirós (Spain, 24), Martin Laird (Scotland, 26), Anders Hansen (Denmark, 41), Raphaël Jacquelin (France, 69), Yuta Ikeda (Japan, 70), Brendan Jones (Australia, 73), Nicolas Colsaerts (Belgium, 75), Camilo Villegas (Colombia, 78), Jamie Donaldson (Wales, 98), Thongchai Jaidee (Thailand, 101) and Brendon de Jonge (Zimbabwe, 106). South Korea, Fiji and Argentina would have qualified automatically had their leading players chosen to play.

The event was a 72-hole stroke play team event with each team consisting of two players. The first and third days were fourball play and the second and final days were foursomes play.

Teams

The table below lists the teams together with their World Ranking (if any) at the time of the tournament.

CountryPlayersQualified
Brendan Jones (81) and Richard Green (88)OWGR
Florian Praegant (378) and Roland Steiner (616)European Qualifier
Nicolas Colsaerts (75) and Jérôme Theunis (–)OWGR
Adilson da Silva (376) and Lucas Lee (1037)South American Qualifier
Liang Wenchong (252) and Zhang Xinjun (647)Host nation
Camilo Villegas(79) and Manuel Villegas (1308)OWGR
Anders Hansen (31) and Thorbjørn Olesen (174)OWGR
Ian Poulter (25) and Justin Rose (16)OWGR
Raphaël Jacquelin (100) and Grégory Bourdy (131)OWGR
Martin Kaymer (4) and Alex Čejka (314)OWGR
Pablo Acuña (–) and José Toledo (–)South American Qualifier
Rory McIlroy (2) and Graeme McDowell (14)OWGR
Francesco Molinari (39) and Edoardo Molinari (61)OWGR
Yuta Ikeda (73) and Tetsuji Hiratsuka (89)OWGR
José de Jesús Rodríguez (399) and Óscar Serna (934)South American Qualifier
Joost Luiten (66) and Robert-Jan Derksen (218)European Qualifier
Gareth Paddison (753) and Michael Hendry (559)Asian Qualifier
Ricardo Santos (266) and Hugo Santos (–)European Qualifier
Martin Laird (42) and Stephen Gallacher (127)OWGR
Mardan Mamat (269) and Lam Chih Bing (793)Asian Qualifier
Charl Schwartzel (13) and Louis Oosthuizen (37)OWGR
Kim Hyung-sung (315) and Park Sung-joon (437)Asian Qualifier
Álvaro Quirós (47) and Miguel Ángel Jiménez (40)OWGR
Robert Karlsson (28) and Alex Norén (63)OWGR
Thongchai Jaidee (150) and Kiradech Aphibarnrat (184)OWGR
Matt Kuchar (10) and Gary Woodland (48)OWGR
Jamie Donaldson (83) and Rhys Davies (140)OWGR
Brendon de Jonge (126) and Bruce McDonald (–)OWGR

The tournament included three pairs of brothers: the Villegas brothers representing Colombia, the Molinari brothers representing Italy and the Santos brothers representing Portugal.

Result

Australia led after the first round with a better-ball score of 61. Ireland and Scotland were in joint second place with 63, followed by The Netherlands and United States with 64.

After the second round foursomes, Australia and Ireland were joint leaders at 131. Scotland were third at 132, followed by Spain, New Zealand and United States at 134.

Ireland led by two shots at the end of the third day with a total of 195 after a better-ball score of 64. Germany, South Africa and United States were tied for second at 197 with Australia fifth at 198. Germany and South Africa had the best scores of the day with 61.

The United States had a last round foursome score of 67 to win by two shots over England and Germany. Ireland had a last round 72 to drop to a tie for fourth place.

PlaceCountryScoreTo parMoney (US$)
164-70-63-67=264−242,400,000
T266-69-68-63=266−221,025,000
65-71-61-69=266
T461-70-67-69=267−21332,500
64-71-64-68=267
63-68-64-72=267
63-69-69-66=267
867-69-65-67=268−20200,000
T965-69-68-67=269−19135,000
66-71-64-68=269
1166-70-67-67=270−18105,000
1268-68-61-74=271−1796,000
T1365-72-68-67=272−1681,000
66-70-68-68=272
66-69-65-72=272
1666-68-68-71=273−1574,000
1767-69-64-74=274−1472,000
T1868-68-68-71=275−1369,000
66-70-68-71=275
T2069-72-65-70=276−1264,000
66-70-66-74=276
70-68-66-72=276
T2368-71-67-72=278−1059,000
65-76-64-73=278
2566-74-66-73=279−956,000
2668-75-65-74=282−654,000
2775-74-66-70=285−352,000
2867-77-68-84=296+850,000
  • Source

Notes

References

References

  1. "The 56th World Cup of Golf – About the course".
  2. "World Cup Becomes Biennial".
  3. "The 56th World Cup of Golf – Kuchar, Woodland complete U.S. rally at OMEGA World Cup".
  4. (27 November 2011). "U.S. team wins golf's World Cup". ESPN.
  5. (27 November 2011). "US team of Matt Kuchar and Gary Woodland win Golf World Cup". Daily Telegraph.
  6. (27 November 2011). "Matt Kuchar and Gary Woodland win World Cup for USA at Mission Hills". Guardian.
  7. (27 November 2011). "United States duo Matt Kuchar and Gary Woodland win World Cup". BBC Sport.
  8. "The 56th World Cup of Golf – Qualification Process".
  9. "The 56th World Cup of Golf – Singapore Make the Grade at the Omega Mission Hills World Cup Asian Qualifying".
  10. "The 56th World Cup of Golf – Austria, The Netherlands and Portugal Qualify for the Omega Mission Hills World Cup".
  11. "Tour de las Americas – Brazil, Mexico & Guatemala qualify to the World Cup".
  12. (17 July 2011). "Official World Golf Ranking 2011 Week 29".
  13. (20 November 2011). "Official World Golf Ranking 2011 Week 47".
  14. "The 56th World Cup of Golf – Brothers in arms at OMEGA Mission Hills World Cup".
  15. "World Cup 2011". Asian Tour.
  16. (27 November 2011). "US team of Matt Kuchar and Gary Woodland win Golf World Cup". The Telegraph.
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