WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship

WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship
Tournament information
Location Marana, Arizona
Established 1999
Course(s) Ritz-Carlton Golf Club
Par 72
Length 7,833 yards
Tour(s) PGA Tour
PGA European Tour
Japan Golf Tour
Format Match play
Prize fund $8,500,000
6,240,960
Month played February
Tournament record score
Score 8 & 7 Tiger Woods (2008)
Current champion
Luke Donald
2011 WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship

The WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship is one of the annual World Golf Championships. It is a knockout event and is staged in January or February each year. It is sponsored by Accenture, the world-largest consulting firm.

From its inauguration in 1999 through 2006 it was hosted every year by La Costa Resort and Spa in Carlsbad, California, except in 2001, when it was hosted by the Metropolitan Golf Club in Victoria, Australia.

In 2007 the event moved to The Gallery Golf Club in Marana, Arizona, a suburb northwest of Tucson, for two years. All three of the individual World Golf Championships events will be played in the United States from 2007, which has attracted criticism from some golfers, including Tiger Woods and Ernie Els, and in the media outside the United States. PGA Tour Commissioner Tim Finchem has responded by insisting that playing in the U.S. is best for golf as more money can be made there than elsewhere.[1]

In 2009, the tournament moved to the Ritz-Carlton Golf Club, a Jack Nicklaus-designed course at Dove Mountain in Marana.

The Championship is a single-elimination match play event. The field consists of the top 64 players available from the Official World Golf Rankings, seeded according to the rankings. The prize money for 2011 was $8.5 million, with the winner taking $1.4 million (both figures U.S. dollars) and the Walter Hagen Cup. Prize money is official on the PGA Tour, the European Tour and the Japan Golf Tour. All matches leading up to the final match are 18 holes, while the final match was played over 36 holes from 1999 to 2010 and over 18 holes since 2011. In addition, the losers of the semi-final matches play an 18-hole consolation match for third place. The five-day, six-match tournament begins on Wednesday, with a match per day through Friday. The quarterfinals and semifinals are played on Saturday; the finals and third-place match conclude the tournament on Sunday.

It is the successor event of the Andersen Consulting World Championship of Golf, a 32-man, unofficial money, match play event played from 1995 to 1998.

Contents

Tournament hosts

Years Venue City
2009-11 Ritz-Carlton Golf Club Marana, Arizona
2007-08 The Gallery Golf Club Marana, Arizona
2002-06 La Costa Resort and Spa Carlsbad, California
2001 Metropolitan Golf Club Victoria, Australia
1999-2000 La Costa Resort and Spa Carlsbad, California

Winners

Year Player Country Runner-up Score 1st Prize ($) Purse ($)
WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship
2011 Luke Donald  England Martin Kaymer 3 & 2 1,400,000 8,500,000
2010 Ian Poulter  England Paul Casey 4 & 2 1,400,000 8,500,000
2009 Geoff Ogilvy (2)  Australia Paul Casey 4 & 3 1,400,000 8,500,000
2008 Tiger Woods (3)  United States Stewart Cink 8 & 7 1,350,000 8,000,000
2007 Henrik Stenson  Sweden Geoff Ogilvy 2 & 1 1,350,000 8,000,000
2006 Geoff Ogilvy  Australia Davis Love III 3 & 2 1,300,000 7,500,000
2005 David Toms  United States Chris DiMarco 6 & 5 1,300,000 7,500,000
2004 Tiger Woods (2)  United States Davis Love III 3 & 2 1,200,000 7,000,000
2003 Tiger Woods  United States David Toms 2 & 1 1,050,000 6,000,000
2002 Kevin Sutherland  United States Scott McCarron 1 up 1,000,000 5,500,000
2001 Steve Stricker  United States Pierre Fulke 2 & 1 1,000,000 5,000,000
WGC-Andersen Consulting Match Play Championship
2000 Darren Clarke  Northern Ireland Tiger Woods 4 & 3 1,000,000 5,000,000
1999 Jeff Maggert  United States Andrew Magee 38 holes 1,000,000 5,000,000

Note: Green highlight indicates scoring record.

Records

Prize money and FedEx Cup points breakdown

Place US ($) Euro (€) Points
Champion 1,400,000 1,027,922.79 550.00
Runner-up 850,000 624,095.98 315.00
Third place 600,000 440,538.34 200.00
Fourth place 490,000 359,772.98 140.00
Losing quarter-finalists x 4 270,000 198,242.25 101.00
Losing third round x 8 140,000 102,792.28 68.25
Losing second round x 16 95,000 69,751.90 46.56
Losing first round x 32 45,000 33,040.38 22.50
Total $8,500,000 €6,240,960 3,620

($1.36197 = 1 Euro)

References

  1. ^ PGA Tour chief defends US dates
  2. ^ Fed Ex Cup Points Page at pgatour.com - points for first four rounds determined from places 9th through 64th on WGC Chart

External links