The 2003 Seve Trophy took place 6–9 November at Campo de Golf Parador El Saler, Valencia, Spain. The team captain for Continental Europe was Seve Ballesteros, with the team captain for Great Britain and Ireland being Colin Montgomerie. The competition was won by Great Britain and Ireland.

2003 Seve Trophy
Dates6–9 November
VenueCampo de Golf Parador El Saler
LocationValencia, Spain
Captains
Europe 13 15 United Kingdom
Republic of Ireland
Great Britain and Ireland wins the Seve Trophy
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Format

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For the first time the event was staged over four days. There were five fourball matches on both Thursday and Friday, four greensomes matches on Saturday morning, four foursomes matches on Saturday afternoon and ten singles matches on Sunday. If the score finished at 14–14, then two players from each team (but not either captain) would play a two-hole play-off using the greensomes format to find the winner.[1]

Each member of the winner team received 150,000, the losing team €70,000 each, giving a total prize fund of €2,200,000.[2]

Teams

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Both captains played and had one wild card selection each. The remaining 8 players were the leading four players from the Official World Golf Ranking after the 2003 Telefónica Open de Madrid and the leading four players (not qualified from the World Rankings) from the Volvo Order of Merit after the 2003 Telefónica Open de Madrid.[3]

  Team Continental Europe
Name Country Qualification
Seve Ballesteros Spain Playing captain
Thomas Bjørn Denmark World ranking
Alex Čejka Germany World ranking
Sergio García Spain World ranking
Freddie Jacobson Sweden World ranking
Niclas Fasth Sweden Order of Merit
Ignacio Garrido Spain Order of Merit
Raphaël Jacquelin France Order of Merit
Miguel Ángel Jiménez Spain Order of Merit
José María Olazábal Spain Captain's pick
    Team GB&I
Name Country Qualification
Colin Montgomerie Scotland Playing captain
Paul Casey England World ranking
Pádraig Harrington Ireland World ranking
Ian Poulter England World ranking
Justin Rose England World ranking
Brian Davis England Order of Merit
David Howell England Order of Merit
Phillip Price Wales Order of Merit
Lee Westwood England Order of Merit
Paul Lawrie Scotland Captain's pick

David Howell replaced Darren Clarke who was playing in the 2003 Tour Championship which was being playing in the same week.

Source:[4][5][6]

Day one

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Thursday, 6 November 2003

Fourball

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    Results  
Westwood/Howell    2 up Olazábal/Ballesteros
Davis/Casey    2 & 1 Garrido/Jiménez
Rose/Poulter   4 & 3 Čejka/Jacquelin
Lawrie/Montgomerie halved Jacobson/Fasth
Price/Harrington    2 up Bjørn/García
Session
Overall

Source:[7][8]

Day two

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Friday, 7 November 2003

Fourball

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    Results  
Westwood/Howell    5 & 3 Bjørn/García
Lawrie/Montgomerie   2 & 1 Čejka/Jacquelin
Davis/Casey    2 up Garrido/Jiménez
Price/Harrington   1 up Jacobson/Fasth
Rose/Poulter    3 & 1 Olazábal/Ballesteros
3 Session 2
Overall

Source:[9]

Day three

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Saturday, 8 November 2003

Morning greensomes

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    Results  
Harrington/Lawrie   5 & 4 Jacobson/Fasth
Rose/Montgomerie halved Bjørn/Olazábal
Davis/Casey   3 & 2 Čejka/Jacquelin
Westwood/Poulter    3 & 1 García/Ballesteros
Session
8 Overall 6

Source:[10]

Afternoon foursomes

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    Results  
Harrington/Montgomerie    2 & 1 Jiménez/Garrido
Lawrie/Casey   3 & 2 Jacobson/Fasth
Howell/Westwood   5 & 3 Čejka/Jacquelin
Rose/Poulter    2 & 1 García/Bjørn
2 Session 2
10 Overall 8

Source:[11]

Day four

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Sunday, 9 November 2003

Singles

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    Results  
Colin Montgomerie    5 & 4 Seve Ballesteros
David Howell    1 up Alex Čejka
Paul Lawrie   3 & 2 Ignacio Garrido
Lee Westwood   2 & 1 Freddie Jacobson
Pádraig Harrington halved José María Olazábal
Ian Poulter halved Niclas Fasth
Paul Casey    Ret Thomas Bjørn
Justin Rose    3 & 2 Raphaël Jacquelin
Brian Davis   2 & 1 Miguel Ángel Jiménez
Phillip Price   4 & 3 Sergio García
5 Session 5
15 Overall 13

Thomas Bjørn was injured and retired from his match. Because he withdrew less than 30 minutes before games started Paul Casey was awarded the match. If Bjørn had retired earlier the match would have been declared as halved.

Source:[12]

References

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  1. ^ "Format". PGA European Tour. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
  2. ^ "Prize Money". PGA European Tour. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
  3. ^ "Eligibility & Team Rankings". PGA European Tour. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
  4. ^ "Monty hands Lawrie wild card". BBC. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
  5. ^ "Clarke opts for US event". BBC. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
  6. ^ "Telefonica Open de Madrid - Questions and Answers". PGA European Tour. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
  7. ^ "Full Match Results". PGA European Tour. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
  8. ^ "Great Britain and Ireland take early lead". PGA European Tour. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
  9. ^ "GB & Ireland extend lead at Seve Trophy". PGA European Tour. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
  10. ^ "Continental Europe fight back in the Seve Trophy". PGA European Tour. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
  11. ^ "Great Britain and Ireland two points ahead in the Seve Trophy". PGA European Tour. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
  12. ^ "Great Britain and Ireland triumph in the Seve Trophy". PGA European Tour. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
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