1995 Volvo PGA Championship

The 1995 Volvo PGA Championship was the 41st edition of the Volvo PGA Championship, an annual professional golf tournament on the European Tour. It was held 26–29 May at the West Course of Wentworth Club in Virginia Water, Surrey, England, a suburb southwest of London.

1995 Volvo PGA Championship
Tournament information
Dates26–29 May 1995
LocationVirginia Water, Surrey, England
Course(s)Wentworth Club
West Course
Tour(s)European Tour
Statistics
Par72
Field150 players, 67 after cut
Cut145 (+1)
Prize fund902,698
Winner's share€210,000
Champion
Bernhard Langer
279 (−9)
Wentworth Club
Location in England

Bernhard Langer won his third Volvo PGA Championship with a two stroke victory over Nick Faldo and Paul Lawrie.[1]

Past champions in the field

Twelve former champions entered the tournament.[2]

Made the cut

PlayerCountryYear(s) wonR1R2R3R4TotalTo parFinish
Bernhard Langer Germany1987, 199367736871279−91
Nick Faldo England1978, 1980, 1981, 198967727174284−4T12
José María Olazábal Spain199469727273286−2T25
Mike Harwood Australia199075707567287−1T32
Seve Ballesteros Spain1983, 199172736964288ET37
Rodger Davis Australia198670737175289+1T44
Vicente Fernández Argentina198672727273289+1T44

Missed the cut

PlayerCountryYear wonR1R2TotalTo par
Manuel Piñero Spain19777670146+2
Tony Johnstone Zimbabwe19927672148+4
Paul Way England19857575150+6
Howard Clark England19847774151+7
Ian Woosnam Wales19887875153+9

Nationalities in the field

North America (3)South America (4)Europe (122)Oceania (14)Asia (1)Africa (6)
 Trinidad and Tobago (1) Argentina (4) England (51) Australia (10) China (1) South Africa (5)
 United States (2) Northern Ireland (6) Fiji (1) Zimbabwe (1)
 Scotland (16) New Zealand (3)
 Wales (5)
 Ireland (7)
 Denmark (1)
 France (4)
 Germany (3)
 Italy (3)
 Spain (12)
 Sweden (13)
  Switzerland (1)

Round summaries

First round

Thursday, 26 May 1995

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
1Peter Senior Australia66−6
T2Nick Faldo England67−5
Bernhard Langer Germany
T4Frank Nobilo New Zealand68−4
Jesper Parnevik Sweden
Andrew Sherborne England
T7Michael Campbell New Zealand69−3
José María Cañizares Spain
Peter Mitchell England
José María Olazábal Spain
Wayne Riley Australia
Sven Strüver Germany

Second round

Friday, 27 May 1995

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
1Frank Nobilo New Zealand68-68=136−8
T2Gary Orr Scotland70-67=137−7
Andrew Sherborne England68-69=137
T4Sven Strüver Germany69-69=138−6
Philip Walton Ireland70-68=138
T6José María Cañizares Spain69-70=139−5
Nick Faldo England67-72=139
Retief Goosen South Africa72-67=139
Peter Senior Australia66-73=139
T10Per-Ulrik Johansson Sweden71-69=150−4
Bernhard Langer Germany67-73=140
Thomas Levet France72-68=140
José Rivero Spain74-66=140

Third round

Saturday, 28 May 1995

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
T1Bernhard Langer Germany67-73-68=208−8
Mark Mouland Wales72-71-65=208
T3Per-Ulrik Johansson Sweden71-69-69=209−7
Andrew Sherborne England68-69-72=209
T5José María Cañizares Spain69-70-71=210−6
Nick Faldo England67-72-71=210
T7Thomas Levet France72-68-71=211−5
Colin Montgomerie Scotland70-72-69=211
Jesper Parnevik Sweden68-73-70=211
T10Michel Besanceney France70-71-71=212−4
Silvio Grappasonni Italy72-69-71=212
Mark James England73-72-67=212
Gary Orr Scotland70-67-75=212
Peter Senior Australia66-73-73=212
Sven Strüver Germany69-69-74=212
Philip Walton Ireland70-68-74=212

Final round

Sunday, 29 May 1995

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo parMoney ()
1Bernhard Langer Germany67-73-68-71=279−9210,000
T2Michael Campbell New Zealand69-73-71-67=280−8109,431
Per-Ulrik Johansson Sweden71-69-69-71=280
T4Thomas Levet France72-68-71-71=282−645,959
Peter O'Malley Australia74-71-70-67=282
Jesper Parnevik Sweden68-73-70-71=282
Peter Senior Australia66-73-73-70=282
Andrew Sherborne England68-69-72-73=282
T9Silvio Grappasonni Italy72-69-71-71=283−525,485
Colin Montgomerie Scotland70-72-69-72=283
Mark Mouland Wales72-71-65-75=283

References

  1. "Langer triumphs for third time". European Tour. 29 May 1995. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
  2. "1995 Volvo PGA Championship leaderboard". European Tour. 29 May 1995. Retrieved 18 January 2021.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.