Acom International

The Acom International was a professional golf tournament that was held in Japan from 1990 to 2006. Sposored by Acom, it was an event on the Japan Golf Tour, and used a modified Stableford scoring system until 1999, when it became a standard stroke play event. The purse for the final event in 2006 was ¥120,000,000, with ¥24,000,000 going to the winner.

Acom International
Tournament information
LocationJapan
Established1990
Tour(s)Japan Golf Tour
FormatStableford (1990)
Modified Stableford (1991–1998)
Stroke play (1999–2006)
Final year2006
Tournament record score
Aggregate266 Toru Taniguchi (2000)
To par−19 Hidemichi Tanaka (1999)
Final champion
Mamo Osanai

From 1983 to 1989, Acom sponsored a pairs better ball tournament, the Acom Doubles.

Tournament hosts

Year(s)Host courseLocation
1999–2006Ishioka Golf ClubOmitama, Ibaraki
1993–1998Seve Ballesteros Golf ClubIwaki, Fukushima
1991Narita Springs Country ClubNarita, Chiba
1990, 1992Japan Classic Country ClubIga, Mie

Winners

YearWinnerScoreTo parMargin of
victory
Runner(s)-upRef
Acom International
2006 Mamo Osanai270−14Playoff Taichi Teshima
2005 David Smail271−132 strokes Taichi Teshima
2004 Toru Suzuki200−133 strokes Paul Sheehan
2003 Masahiro Kuramoto271−13Playoff Katsumasa Miyamoto
Masashi Ozaki
2002 Toru Taniguchi197−161 stroke Zhang Lianwei
2001 Kazuhiko Hosokawa267−172 strokes Katsumune Imai
Scott Laycock
Nobuhito Sato
Toru Taniguchi
Shinichi Yokota
2000 Toru Taniguchi266−186 strokes Yasuharu Imano
1999 Hidemichi Tanaka269−195 strokes Keiichiro Fukabori
1998 Kaname Yokoo46 points3 points Katsumasa Miyamoto
1997 Kazuo Kanayama41 pointsPlayoff Eduardo Herrera
1996 Kazuhiko Hosokawa51 points4 points Frankie Miñoza
1995 Katsunori Kuwabara46 points5 points Tsukasa Watanabe
1994 Naomichi Ozaki41 points6 points Masayuki Kawamura
1993 Todd Hamilton40 points3 points Craig Warren
1992 Hisao Inoue41 points4 points Shigenori Mori
1991 Masahiro Kuramoto32 points10 points Brent Franklin
Yoshi Mizumaki
Tōru Nakamura
[1]
Acom Points Tournament
1990 Bob Gilder115 points[lower-alpha 1]1 point Bob Tway[2]
  1. Tournament reduced to 54 holes after the final round was cancelled due to heavy rain.

References

  1. McCormack, Mark H. (1992). The World of Professional Golf 1992. Chapmans. pp. 331–332, 593. ISBN 1855926288.
  2. McCormack, Mark H. (1991). The World of Professional Golf 1991. Chapmans. pp. 297–298, 548. ISBN 1855925583.


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