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.
Dates | 6–9 November | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Venue | Campo de Golf Parador El Saler | ||||
Location | Valencia, Spain | ||||
Captains |
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Great Britain and Ireland wins the Seve Trophy | |||||
Format
editFor 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
editBoth 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.
Day one
editThursday, 6 November 2003
Fourball
editResults | ||
---|---|---|
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 |
3½ | Session | 1½ |
3½ | Overall | 1½ |
Day two
editFriday, 7 November 2003
Fourball
editResults | ||
---|---|---|
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 |
6½ | Overall | 3½ |
Source:[9]
Day three
editSaturday, 8 November 2003
Morning greensomes
editResults | ||
---|---|---|
Harrington/Lawrie | 5 & 4 | Jacobson/Fasth |
Rose/Montgomerie | halved | Bjørn/Olazábal |
Davis/Casey | 3 & 2 | Čejka/Jacquelin |
Westwood/Poulter | 3 & 1 | García/Ballesteros |
1½ | Session | 2½ |
8 | Overall | 6 |
Source:[10]
Afternoon foursomes
editResults | ||
---|---|---|
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
editSunday, 9 November 2003
Singles
editResults | ||
---|---|---|
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
edit- ^ "Format". PGA European Tour. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
- ^ "Prize Money". PGA European Tour. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
- ^ "Eligibility & Team Rankings". PGA European Tour. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
- ^ "Monty hands Lawrie wild card". BBC. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
- ^ "Clarke opts for US event". BBC. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
- ^ "Telefonica Open de Madrid - Questions and Answers". PGA European Tour. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
- ^ "Full Match Results". PGA European Tour. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
- ^ "Great Britain and Ireland take early lead". PGA European Tour. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
- ^ "GB & Ireland extend lead at Seve Trophy". PGA European Tour. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
- ^ "Continental Europe fight back in the Seve Trophy". PGA European Tour. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
- ^ "Great Britain and Ireland two points ahead in the Seve Trophy". PGA European Tour. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
- ^ "Great Britain and Ireland triumph in the Seve Trophy". PGA European Tour. Retrieved 30 August 2013.