2003 WGC-World Cup

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

DatesNovember 13–16
Course(s)Kiawah Island Golf Resort
Ocean Course
2003 World Cup
Tournament information
DatesNovember 13–16
LocationKiawah Island, South Carolina, U.S.
Course(s)Kiawah Island Golf Resort
Ocean Course
Format72 holes stroke play
(best ball & alternate shot)
Statistics
Par72
Length7,296 yards (6,671 m)
Field24 two-man teams
CutNone
Prize fundUS$4.0 million
Winner's shareUS$1.4 million
Champion
 South Africa
Rory Sabbatini & Trevor Immelman
275 (−13)
Location map
Location in the United States
Location in South Carolina
 2002
2004 

The 2003 WGC-World Cup took place November 13–16 at the Kiawah Island Golf Resort, Ocean Course in Kiawah Island, South Carolina, U.S. It was the 49th World Cup and the fourth as a World Golf Championship event. 24 countries competed and each country sent two players. The prize money totaled $4,000,000 with $1,400,000 going to the winning pair.[1] The South African team of Rory Sabbatini and Trevor Immelman won. They won by four strokes over the English team of Paul Casey and Justin Rose.

18 teams qualified based on the Official World Golf Ranking and were joined by six teams via qualifiers in Singapore and Mexico.[2]

The tournament 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

Scores

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI