2013 World Cup of Golf

The 2013 ISPS Handa World Cup of Golf is a golf tournament that was played 21–24 November at Royal Melbourne Golf Club in Melbourne, Australia. It was the 57th World Cup. The format changed from being a team event to being primarily an individual event with a team component.[2] Sixty players from 34 countries competed in the individual tournament and 26 teams (two-player combined score) competed for the team prize. The total purse was US$8 million, $7 million for the individual competition and $1 million for the teams.[1] The event was a 72-hole stroke play tournament.[2] Official World Golf Ranking points were award for the first time in the World Cup.[2]

2013 World Cup of Golf
Tournament information
Dates21–24 November
LocationMelbourne, Australia
Course(s)Royal Melbourne Golf Club
Format72 holes stroke play
Statistics
Par71[1]
Length7,046 yards (6,443 m)[1]
Field60 man individual
26 two-man teams
CutNone
Prize fundUS$8.0 million
$7.0 million – individual
$1.0 million – team
Winner's share$1.2 million – individual
$600,000 – team
Champion
Australia Jason Day – individual
 Australia – team
Jason Day & Adam Scott
Individual – 274 (−10)
Team – 551 (−17)
← 2011
2016 →
Royal  Melbourne Golf Club is located in Australia
Royal  Melbourne Golf Club
Royal 
Melbourne Golf Club
Royal Melbourne Golf Club is located in Victoria
Royal Melbourne Golf Club
Royal Melbourne Golf Club
Royal Melbourne Golf Club is located in Melbourne
Royal Melbourne Golf Club
Royal Melbourne Golf Club
Location in greater Melbourne

Australia's Jason Day shot a final round 70 to win the individual tournament.[3] Day teamed with Adam Scott to win the team prize.[4][5]

Qualification

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The field was based on the Official World Golf Ranking on 23 September 2013.[6] The top 15 players in the rankings were eligible with a limit of four players per country. After the top 15, players were eligible with a limit of two players per country until the field of 60 players was filled.[2] The individual portion was similar to what will be used at the 2016 Summer Olympics, except that England, Scotland, and Wales fielded teams instead of a single Great Britain team in the Olympics.[2]

Players

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The table below lists the players together with their World Ranking at the time of the tournament.[7]

PlayerCountryRanking
Felipe Aguilar  Chile157
Kiradech Aphibarnrat  Thailand68
Bae Sang-moon  South Korea131
Gaganjeet Bhullar  India193
Thomas Bjørn  Denmark44
Jonas Blixt  Sweden39
Grégory Bourdy  France112
Rafa Cabrera-Bello  Spain127
K. J. Choi  South Korea129
George Coetzee  South Africa91
Nicolas Colsaerts  Belgium63
Adilson da Silva  Brazil247
Jason Day  Australia18
Brendon de Jonge  Zimbabwe67
Robert-Jan Derksen  Netherlands269
Victor Dubuisson  France32
Óscar Fraustro  Mexico488
Brad Fritsch  Canada309
Stephen Gallacher  Scotland62
Fabián Gómez  Argentina418
Branden Grace  South Africa52
Emiliano Grillo  Argentina270
Peter Hanson  Sweden43
David Hearn  Canada142
Michael Hendry  New Zealand214
Ryo Ishikawa  Japan110
Miguel Ángel Jiménez  Spain47
Roope Kakko  Finland219
Maximilian Kieffer  Germany260
Espen Kofstad  Norway319
Mikko Korhonen  Finland334
Matt Kuchar  United States7
Anirban Lahiri  India141
Martin Laird  Scotland79
Antonio Lascuña  Philippines316
Liang Wenchong  China104
José-Filipe Lima  Portugal217
Shane Lowry  Ireland75
Matteo Manassero  Italy38
Stuart Manley  Wales346
Graeme McDowell  Ireland12
Francesco Molinari  Italy37
Thorbjørn Olesen  Denmark58
Prayad Marksaeng  Thailand168
Angelo Que  Philippines285
Alexandre Rocha  Brazil408
Ricardo Santos  Portugal216
Adam Scott  Australia2
Siddikur Rahman  Bangladesh172
Marcel Siem  Germany83
Vijay Singh  Fiji128
Tim Sluiter  Netherlands404
Kevin Streelman  United States46
Hideto Tanihara  Japan134
Mark Tullo  Chile384
Bernd Wiesberger  Austria56
Tim Wilkinson  New Zealand308
Danny Willett  England114
Chris Wood  England71
Wu Ashun  China162

Final leaderboards

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Individual competition

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PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo parMoney (US$)
1Jason Day  Australia68-70-66-70=274−101,200,000
2Thomas Bjørn  Denmark66-68-71-71=276−8760,000
3Adam Scott  Australia75-68-68-66=277−7490,000
4Matt Kuchar  United States71-68-68-71=278−6340,000
T5Kiradech Aphibarnrat  Thailand71-70-70-70=281−3270,000
Ryo Ishikawa  Japan71-71-70-69=281
7Hideto Tanihara  Japan72-67-71-72=282−2240,000
T8David Hearn  Canada70-71-71-71=283−1197,500
Stuart Manley  Wales67-72-72-72=283
Francesco Molinari  Italy75-67-66-75=283
Kevin Streelman  United States66-69-74-74=283

Team competition

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PlaceCountryScoreTo parMoney (US$)
1  Australia143-138-134-136=551−17600,000
2  United States137-137-142-145=561−7300,000
T3  Denmark137-140-147-139=563−550,000
 Japan143-138-141-141=563
5  Canada141-144-141-144=570+20
6  South Africa147-141-145-139=572+4
T7  France145-140-145-143=573+5
 Germany144-145-139-145=573
9  Thailand143-142-143-147=575+7
10  Scotland141-143-146-146=576+8

Notes and references

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  1. ^ a b c "ISPS Handa World Cup of Golf Media Guide" (PDF). PGA Tour. Retrieved 26 November 2013.
  2. ^ a b c d e "2013 ISPS Handa World Cup of Golf – Format & How players qualify". Archived from the original on 20 November 2013. Retrieved 19 November 2013.
  3. ^ "Jason Day wins as Australia triumph at home". BBC Sport. 24 November 2013. Retrieved 25 November 2013.
  4. ^ "Jason Day earns first win since 2010". ESPN. Associated Press. 24 November 2013. Retrieved 25 November 2013.
  5. ^ "Australia wins the World Cup of Golf, Jason Day holds on to win the individual title". ABC.net. 24 November 2013. Retrieved 25 November 2013.
  6. ^ "Official World Golf Ranking – Week 38, 2013" (PDF). 22 September 2013. Retrieved 19 November 2013.
  7. ^ "Official World Golf Ranking – Week 46, 2013" (PDF). 17 November 2013. Retrieved 19 November 2013.
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37°58′10″S 145°01′51″E / 37.9695°S 145.0308°E / -37.9695; 145.0308