1999 Alfred Dunhill Cup

The 1999 Alfred Dunhill Cup was the 15th Alfred Dunhill Cup. It was a team tournament featuring 16 countries, each represented by three players. The Cup was played 7–10 October at the Old Course at St Andrews in Scotland. The sponsor was the Alfred Dunhill company. The Spanish team of Sergio García, Miguel Ángel Jiménez, and José María Olazábal beat the Australian team of Stephen Leaney, Peter O'Malley, and Craig Parry in the final.

1999 Alfred Dunhill Cup
Tournament information
Dates7–10 October
LocationSt Andrews, Scotland
Course(s)Old Course at St Andrews
FormatMatch play
Statistics
Par72
Length7,094 yards (6,487 m)
Field16 teams of 3 players
Prize fund£1,000,000[1]
Winner's share£300,000
Champion
 Spain
(S. García, M. Á. Jiménez, J. M. Olazábal)

Format

The Cup was a match play event played over four days. The teams were divided into four four-team groups.[2] The top eight teams were seeded with the remaining teams randomly placed in the bracket.[2] After three rounds of round-robin play, the top team in each group advanced to a single elimination playoff.

In each team match, the three players were paired with their opponents and played 18 holes at medal match play.[2] Matches tied at the end of 18 holes were extended to a sudden-death playoff, unless they could not affect the outcome of the tournament (third round).[2] The tie-breaker for ties within a group was based on match record, then head-to-head.[2]

Group play

Round one

Source:[3]

Group 1

Group 2

Group 3

Group 4

Round two

Source:[4]

Group 1

Group 2

Group 3

Group 4

Round three

Source:[5]

Group 1

Group 2

Group 3

Group 4

Standings

Group 1
CountryWLMWML
 Sweden2163
 New Zealand2154
 Italy1245
 United States1236
Group 2
CountryWLMWML
 Australia2154
 Japan2154
 Paraguay1245
 Scotland1245
Group 3
CountryWLMWML
 South Africa3081
 England2145
 India1245
 China0327
Group 4
CountryWLMWML
 Spain3063
 Ireland2163
 Zimbabwe123.55.5
 France032.56.5

Playoffs

Source:[6]

Bracket

Semi-finals Final
      
2  Spain 2
3  South Africa 1
2  Spain 2
5  Australia 1
5  Australia 2
8  Sweden 1

Semi-finals

Final

 Spain – 2 Australia – 1
PlayerScorePlayerScore
Sergio García69Craig Parry69
José María Olazábal72Stephen Leaney78
Miguel Ángel Jiménez73Peter O'Malley75
Parry won on the first playoff hole.

Team results

CountryPlaceWLMWMLSeed
 Spain1501052
 Australia232875
 South AfricaT331933
 SwedenT322758
 IrelandT521637
 JapanT52154
 New ZealandT52154
 EnglandT521456
 IndiaT91245
 ItalyT91245
 ParaguayT91245
 ScotlandT912454
 ZimbabweT9123.55.5
 United StatesT912361
 FranceT15032.56.5
 ChinaT150327

Player results

CountryPlayerWL
 SpainJosé María Olazábal41
 SpainSergio García32
 SpainMiguel Ángel Jiménez32
 AustraliaCraig Parry41
 AustraliaStephen Leaney32
 AustraliaPeter O'Malley14
 South AfricaErnie Els40
 South AfricaRetief Goosen31
 South AfricaDavid Frost22
 SwedenJarmo Sandelin31
 SwedenGabriel Hjertstedt22
 SwedenPatrik Sjöland22
 IrelandDarren Clarke21
 IrelandPádraig Harrington21
 IrelandPaul McGinley21
 JapanIsao Aoki21
 JapanKatsuyoshi Tomori21
 JapanTsuyoshi Yoneyama12
 New ZealandMichael Campbell21
 New ZealandMichael Long21
 New ZealandGreg Turner12
 EnglandMark James21
 EnglandDavid Howell12
 EnglandLee Westwood12
 IndiaJeev Milkha Singh21
 IndiaVijay Kumar12
 IndiaJyoti Randhawa12
 ItalyMassimo Scarpa21
 ItalyEmanuele Canonica12
 ItalyCostantino Rocca12
 ParaguayCarlos Franco30
 ParaguayÁngel Franco12
 ParaguayRaúl Fretes03
 ScotlandPaul Lawrie21
 ScotlandGary Orr12
 ScotlandSam Torrance12
 ZimbabweMark McNulty21
 ZimbabweNick Price12
 ZimbabweTony Johnstone0.52.5
 United StatesMark O'Meara21
 United StatesTom Lehman12
 United StatesPayne Stewart03
 FranceMarc Farry12
 FranceJean van de Velde12
 FranceJean-François Remésy0.52.5
 ChinaCheng Jun12
 ChinaWu Xiang-bing12
 ChinaZhang Lian-wei03

References

  1. "Team Complete!". PGA European Tour. Retrieved 13 January 2013.
  2. "Conditions of Play". PGA European Tour. Retrieved 13 January 2013.
  3. "Scottish fans polite as top-seeded U.S. wins; Dunhill Cup". Eugene Register-Guard. Eugene, Oregon. AP. 8 October 1999. pp. 2D, 6D. Retrieved 7 January 2013.
  4. "Italy tops U.S. in Dunhill; Dunhill Cup". Lawrence Journal-World. Lawrence, Kansas. 9 October 1999. pp. 2C, 10C. Retrieved 7 January 2013.
  5. Wade, Stephen (10 October 1999). "United States is crushed in the Dunhill Cup". The Day. New London, Connecticut. AP. pp. E8, E2. Retrieved 7 January 2013.
  6. "Dunhill Cup". Reading Eagle. Reading, Pennsylvania. 11 October 1999. pp. D8, D11. Retrieved 7 January 2013.

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