Misplaced Pages

Presidents Cup

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from The Presidents Cup) Golf tournament between the United States and an international team "President's Cup" redirects here. For other uses, see President's Cup (disambiguation).

Golf tournament
Presidents Cup
Tournament information
Location2024: Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Established1994
Course(s)2024: Royal Montreal Golf Club
Tour(s)PGA Tour
FormatMatch play
Month playedSeptember
Current champion
 United States
2024 Presidents Cup

The Presidents Cup is a series of men's golf matches between a team representing the United States and an International Team representing the rest of the world except Europe as that continent competes against the United States in a similar but considerably older event, the Ryder Cup.

The Presidents Cup has been held biennially since 1994. Initially it was held in even-numbered years, with the Ryder Cup being held in odd numbered years. However, the cancellation of the 2001 Ryder Cup due to the September 11 attacks pushed both tournaments back a year, and the Presidents Cup was then held in odd-numbered years. It reverted to even-number years following the postponement of the 2020 Ryder Cup due to the COVID-19 pandemic. It is hosted alternately in the United States and in countries represented by the International Team.

The International team competes under a specifically designed logo and flag.

The next Presidents Cup will be held in 2026 at Medinah Country Club in Medinah, Illinois, United States.

Format

The scoring system of the event is match play. The format is drawn from the Ryder Cup and consists of 12 players per side. Each team has a captain, usually a highly respected golf figure, who is responsible for choosing the pairs in the doubles events, which consist of both alternate shot and best ball formats (also known as "foursomes" and "fourball" matches respectively). Each match, whether it be a doubles or singles match, is worth one point with a half-point awarded to each team in the event of a halved match.

There have been frequent small changes to the format, although the final day has always consisted of 12 singles matches. The contest was extended from three days to four in 2000. In 2015, there were nine foursome doubles matches, nine fourball doubles matches, and 12 singles matches. With a total of 30 points, a team needed to get 15.5 points to win the Cup.

Year Day 1 Day 2 Day 3 Day 4 Total
Points
Morning Afternoon Morning Afternoon Morning Afternoon
1994, 1996 5 fourballs 5 foursomes 5 fourballs 5 foursomes 12 singles 32
1998 5 foursomes 5 fourballs 5 foursomes 5 fourballs 12 singles 32
2000 5 foursomes 5 fourballs 5 foursomes 5 fourballs 12 singles 32
2003 6 foursomes 5 fourballs 5 foursomes 6 fourballs 12 singles 34
2005–2011 6 foursomes 6 fourballs 5 foursomes 5 fourballs 12 singles 34
2013 6 fourballs 6 foursomes 5 fourballs 5 foursomes 12 singles 34
2015, 2017 5 foursomes 5 fourballs 4 foursomes 4 fourballs 12 singles 30
2019 5 fourballs 5 foursomes 4 fourballs 4 foursomes 12 singles 30
2022 5 foursomes 5 fourballs 4 foursomes 4 fourballs 12 singles 30
2024 5 fourballs 5 foursomes 4 fourballs 4 foursomes 12 singles 30

Ties

Until the 2005 event, prior to the start of the final day matches, the captains selected one player to play in a tie-breaker in the event of a tie at the end of the final match. Upon a tie, the captains would reveal the players who would play a sudden-death match to determine the winner. In 2003, however, the tiebreaker match ended after three holes because of darkness, and the captains, Gary Player and Jack Nicklaus, agreed that the Cup would be shared by both teams.

From 2005 to 2013, singles matches ending level at the end of the regulation 18 holes were to be extended to extra holes until the match was won outright. All singles matches would continue in this format until one team reaches the required point total to win the Presidents Cup. Remaining singles matches were only to be played to the regulation 18 holes and could be halved. Although this rule was in force for five Presidents Cup contests, no matches actually went beyond 18 holes.

History

Presidents Cup

The event was created and is organized by the PGA Tour.

Each contest has an Honorary Chairman or Chairwoman, the head of state or head of government of the host nation.

Year Chairman or Chairwoman Title
1994 United States Gerald Ford 38th President of the United States
1996 United States George H. W. Bush 41st President of the United States
1998 Australia John Howard 25th Prime Minister of Australia
2000 United States Bill Clinton 42nd President of the United States
2003 South Africa Thabo Mbeki 2nd President of South Africa
2005 United States George W. Bush 43rd President of the United States
2007 Canada Stephen Harper 22nd Prime Minister of Canada
2009 United States Barack Obama 44th President of the United States
2011 Australia Julia Gillard 27th Prime Minister of Australia
2013 United States Barack Obama (2) 44th President of the United States
2015 South Korea Park Geun-hye 11th President of South Korea
2017 United States Donald Trump 45th President of the United States
2019 Australia Scott Morrison 30th Prime Minister of Australia
2022 United States Joe Biden 46th President of the United States
2024 Canada Justin Trudeau 23rd Prime Minister of Canada

Charity

There is no prize money awarded at the Presidents Cup. The net proceeds are distributed to charities nominated by the players, captains, and captains' assistants. The first ten Presidents Cups raised over US$32 million for charities around the world.

Results

Year Venue Location Winning team Score U.S. captain International captain
1994 Robert Trent Jones Golf Club Gainesville, Virginia, United States  United States 20–12 Hale Irwin Australia David Graham
1996 Robert Trent Jones Golf Club (2) Gainesville, Virginia, United States  United States 161⁄2–151⁄2 Arnold Palmer Australia Peter Thomson
1998 Royal Melbourne Golf Club Melbourne, Victoria, Australia International Team 201⁄2–111⁄2 Jack Nicklaus Australia Peter Thomson (2)
2000 Robert Trent Jones Golf Club (3) Gainesville, Virginia, United States  United States 211⁄2–101⁄2 Ken Venturi Australia Peter Thomson (3)
2003 Fancourt Hotel and Country Club George, Western Cape, South Africa Tied 17–17 Jack Nicklaus (2) South Africa Gary Player
2005 Robert Trent Jones Golf Club (4) Gainesville, Virginia, United States  United States 181⁄2–151⁄2 Jack Nicklaus (3) South Africa Gary Player (2)
2007 Royal Montreal Golf Club Montreal, Quebec, Canada  United States 191⁄2–141⁄2 Jack Nicklaus (4) South Africa Gary Player (3)
2009 Harding Park Golf Club San Francisco, California, United States  United States 191⁄2–141⁄2 Fred Couples Australia Greg Norman
2011 Royal Melbourne Golf Club (2) Melbourne, Victoria, Australia  United States 19–15 Fred Couples (2) Australia Greg Norman (2)
2013 Muirfield Village Dublin, Ohio, United States  United States 181⁄2–151⁄2 Fred Couples (3) Zimbabwe Nick Price
2015 Jack Nicklaus Golf Club Korea Incheon, South Korea  United States 151⁄2–141⁄2 Jay Haas Zimbabwe Nick Price (2)
2017 Liberty National Golf Club Jersey City, New Jersey, United States  United States 19–11 Steve Stricker Zimbabwe Nick Price (3)
2019 Royal Melbourne Golf Club (3) Melbourne, Victoria, Australia  United States 16–14 Tiger Woods South Africa Ernie Els
2022 Quail Hollow Club Charlotte, North Carolina, United States  United States 171⁄2–121⁄2 Davis Love III South Africa Trevor Immelman
2024 Royal Montreal Golf Club (2) Montreal, Quebec, Canada  United States 181⁄2–111⁄2 Jim Furyk Canada Mike Weir

Champions by team

Nationality Wins
 United States 13
International Team 1
Shared 1

Future venues

Records

Main article: List of Presidents Cup records See also: List of American Presidents Cup golfers and List of International Presidents Cup golfers

Sources

See also

References

  1. Haggar, Jeff (September 30, 2013). "History of Presidents Cup TV coverage (1994-present)". Classic TV Sports.
  2. Porter, Kyle (July 8, 2020). "Ryder Cup at Whistling Straits postponed to 2021, Presidents Cup to 2022 amid coronavirus pandemic". CBS Sports. Retrieved July 8, 2020.
  3. Colgan, James (December 14, 2019). "The cool hidden symbolism behind the International Team logo at the Presidents Cup". Golf.com. Retrieved January 22, 2022.
  4. "Medinah Country Club named host venue of 2026 Presidents Cup". PGA Tour. December 11, 2020.
  5. Brennan, Christine (November 23, 2003). "Els-Woods playoff unable to settle Presidents Cup". USA Today. Retrieved November 19, 2011.
  6. "The Presidents Cup – Format". Presidents Cup. Archived from the original on September 26, 2013. Retrieved August 21, 2013.
  7. Shedloski, Dave. "Presidents Cup primer". PGA Tour. Archived from the original on June 22, 2011. Retrieved August 21, 2013.
  8. "Australia in the Presidents Cup". On Course Golf.
  9. "The Presidents Cup: History". Presidents Cup.
  10. "The Presidents Cup Charity". PGA Tour. December 12, 2014.
  11. "Medinah Country Club named host venue of 2026 Presidents Cup". PGA Tour. December 11, 2020.
  12. "Australia's Kingston Heath to host 2028 Presidents Cup". ESPN. Associated Press. June 26, 2023.
  13. "Bellerive Country Club will host 2030 Presidents Cup". PGA Tour. November 3, 2021.
  14. "Presidents Cup Record Book".
  15. Robson, Douglas (October 6, 2009). "Matchup for the ages? Perry at 49, Ishikawa at 18". USA Today.

External links

Golf
Overview
Technical
Facilities
Governing
organizations
Majors
(Grand Slam,
Triple Crown)
Men
Women
Senior
Senior Women's
International
events
Team
Multi-sport event
Rankings
Golfers
Lists of
golf courses
by feature
by country
by designer
Countries
Years
Miscellaneous
Variations
Media
Presidents Cup
PGA Tour events
Major championships
FedEx Cup playoff events
Other tournaments
Team events
Unofficial money events
Other
All events are listed in chronological order. (E) - co-sanctioned by the European Tour; (J) - co-sanctioned by the Japan Golf Tour.
Categories: