1966 Eisenhower Trophy

The 1966 Eisenhower Trophy took place October 27 to 30 at the Club de Golf Mexico in Mexico City, Mexico. It was the fifth World Amateur Team Championship for the Eisenhower Trophy. The tournament was a 72-hole stroke play team event with 32 four-man teams. The best three scores for each round counted towards the team total.

1966 Eisenhower Trophy
Tournament information
DatesOctober 27–30
LocationMexico City, Mexico
Course(s)Club de Golf Mexico
Format72 holes stroke play
Statistics
Par72
Length7,125 yards (6,515 m)
Field32 teams
128 players
Champion
 Australia
Harry Berwick, Phil Billings,
Kevin Donohoe & Kevin Hartley
877 (+13)
Location Map
Club de Golf Mexico is located in Mexico
Club de Golf Mexico
Club de Golf Mexico
Location in Mexico
Club de Golf Mexico is located in Greater Mexico City
Club de Golf Mexico
Club de Golf Mexico

Australia won the Eisenhower Trophy for the second time, finishing two strokes ahead of the silver medalists, United States. Great Britain and Ireland finished four strokes behind the United States and took the bronze medal while South Africa finished fourth. Ronnie Shade, representing Great Britain and Ireland, was the leading individual with a score of 283, 5 under par, seven strokes better than Patrick Cros from France.

Teams

32 four-man teams contested the event.[1]

CountryPlayers
 AustraliaHarry Berwick, Phil Billings, Kevin Donohoe, Kevin Hartley
 Belgium Jaques Moerman, Paul Rolin, Fredric Rodesch, Philippe Toussaint
 Bermuda Ford Hutchings, Brendam Ingham, Lois Moniz, Richard S.L. Pearman
 Brazil Humberto C. de Ameida, Robert Falkenburg, Mario Gonzalez Jr, Carlos A. Sozio
 CanadaKeith Alexander, Gary Cowan, Douglas Silverberg, Nick Weslock
 Chile Guy Barroilhet, Mauricio Galeno, Eric van der Valk, Jaime R. Vergara
 Republic of ChinaChen Chien-chin, Ho Ming-chung, Hsu Sheng-san, Shay Yee-shone
 Denmark Klaus Hove, John Jacobsen, Nils Elsøe Jensen, Niels Thygesen, Ole Pfeiffer
 Dominican Republic Ramon Baez, Dionisio Bernal, Jack Corrie, Bernardo Pichardo
 France Patrick Cros, Herve Frayssineau, Alex Godillot, Gaëtan Mourgue D'Algue
 Great Britain
&  Ireland
Michael Bonallack, Gordon Cosh, Ronnie Shade, Peter Townsend
 Guatemala Angel Arturo Casellas, Juan José Hermosilla, Mario Perez, Adolfo Rios
 Iceland Magnus Gudmundsson, Th Kjerbo, O.B. Ragnarsson, Ottar Yngvasson
 India Ashok S. Malik, S.S. Malik, Ashok Mehra, P. G. Sethi
 ItalyFranco Bevione, Angelo Croce, Alberto Schiaffino, Lorenzo Silva
 Jamaica Lindy Delapenha, M.S. Elder, H.E.T. McDonald Jr, I. Sturdy
 JapanYoshikane Hirose, Ginjiro Nakabe, Shohei Nishida, Akihiro Teramoto
 MexicoJuan Antonio Estrada, Roberto Halpern, Tomás Lehmann, Agustin Silveyra
 New ZealandJohn Durry, Stuart Jones, Ross Murray, Bruce Stevens
 Peru Maxwell Cooper, Miguel Grau, Ricardo Hernandez, Fernando de Osma
 Philippines Emil G. Gaston, Manuel J. Gonzalez, Alejandro Montelibano, Luis F. Silverio
 Puerto Rico Richard Bernhard, John Keith Clark, Fred W. Thon, Juan N. Torruella
 Rhodesia Douglas Black, Peter J. Matkovich, Michael J. Reinders, Robert W. White
 South AfricaBobby Cole, Comrie du Toit, John Fourie, Dave Symons
 Spain Duke of Fernán-Núñez, Alvaro Rezola, José Gancedo, Alvaro Muro
 Sweden Hans Hedjerson, Thure Holmström, Claes Jöhncke, Magnus Lindberg
  Switzerland Otto F. Dillier, Peter Gutermann, Rudolf Müller, Michael Rey
 United StatesDeane Beman, Ron Cerrudo, Downing Gray, Bob Murphy
 Uruguay Orlin Jacobson, Victor Paullier, Pablo Paullier, Peter Stanham
 Venezuela Jacques Alexander Jr, Fernan Frias Jack Strange, Alirio Yanes
 West GermanyWalter Brühne, Friedrich-Carl Janssen, Peter Jochums, Christian Strenger
 Zambia Malcolm Cordukes, John F. Drysdale, Simon Hobday, Ken Treloar

Scores

PlaceCountryScoreTo par
1st place, gold medalist(s) Australia214-221-223-219=877+13
2nd place, silver medalist(s) United States226-217-220-216=879+15
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Great Britain
&  Ireland
228-215-223-217=883+19
4 South Africa220-222-215-227=884+20
5 Mexico230-216-221-222=889+25
6 Canada223-222-225-220=890+26
7 Chinese Taipei225-224-221-222=892+28
8 Japan228-224-226-216=894+30
9 West Germany224-228-223-225=900+36
T10 Italy230-221-228-226=905+41
 New Zealand222-224-229-230=905
T12 France229-224-225-230=908+44
 Sweden226-226-229-227=908
14 Chile225-230-227-227=909+45
15 Belgium232-221-232-227=912+48
16 Rhodesia223-234-226-232=915+51
17 India221-227-229-239=916+52
18 Zambia228-242-227-232=929+65
19 Brazil235-230-233-234=932+68
20 Philippines229-239-234-236=938+74
21 Guatemala231-240-229-239=939+75
22 Spain234-230-240-236=940+76
23 Bermuda236-239-234-238=947+83
24 Venezuela232-239-241-238=950+86
25  Switzerland239-240-239-234=952+88
26 Jamaica242-236-246-232=956+92
27 Denmark237-243-234-243=957+93
28 Uruguay242-239-243-234=958+94
29 Peru246-239-254-244=983+119
30 Iceland262-251-258-253=1024+160
31 Dominican Republic268-260-254-251=1033+169
32 Puerto Rico272-272-273-253=1070+206

Source:[1]

Individual leaders

There was no official recognition for the lowest individual scores.

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
1Ronnie Shade Great Britain
&  Ireland
74-69-72-68=283−5
2Patrick Cros France71-71-72-76=290+2
T3Deane Beman United States76-73-73-69=291+3
Ginjiro Nakabe Japan76-73-73-69=291
5Bob Murphy United States74-71-74-73=292+4
6P. G. Sethi India75-70-73-75=293+5
T7Phil Billings Australia72-74-74-74=294+6
Angelo Croce Italy76-70-74-74=294
T9Harry Berwick Australia74-75-74-72=295+7
Walter Brühne West Germany74-73-73-75=295
Gary Cowan Canada75-73-75-72=295
Roberto Halpern Mexico76-71-73-75=295
Dave Symons South Africa75-75-70-75=295
Bob White Rhodesia73-75-75-72=295

Sources:[1][2][3][4]

References

  1. "Record Book 1966–67 World Amateur Golf Team Championships" (PDF). World Amateur Golf Council. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 August 2018. Retrieved 26 October 2018.
  2. Jansson, Anders (1979). Golf - Den gröna sporten [Golf - The green sport] (in Swedish). Swedish Golf Federation. pp. 150–152. ISBN 9172603283.
  3. Jansson, Anders (2004). Golf - Den stora sporten [Golf - The great sport] (in Swedish). Swedish Golf Federation. pp. 180–183. ISBN 91-86818007.
  4. "Golf-VM genom åren, VM-resultat genom tiderna" [World Team Championship through the years]. Svensk Golf (in Swedish). No. 8. August 1988. pp. 176–177. Retrieved 29 December 2020.

19.278°N 99.159°W / 19.278; -99.159

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