1975 European Amateur Team Championship

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1975 European Amateur Team Championship
Tournament information
Dates26–29 June 1975
LocationKillarney, County Kerry, Republic of Ireland
52°03′38″N 9°33′48″W / 52.060459°N 9.563379°W / 52.060459; -9.563379
Course(s)Killarney Golf & Fishing Club (Mahony's Point Course)
Organized byEuropean Golf Association
FormatQualification round: 18 holes stroke play
Knock-out match-play
Statistics
Par73
Length6,727 yards (6,151 m)
Field18 teams
108 players
Champion
 Scotland
Charlie Green, Ian Hutcheon,
,
,
Qualification round: 368 (+3)
Final: 4.5–2.5
Location Map
Killarney Golf is located in Europe
Killarney Golf
Killarney Golf
Location in Europe
← 1973
1977 →

The 1975 European Amateur Team Championship took place 28 June – 1 July at Killarney Golf & Fishing Club on the shore of Lough Leane, 3 kilometres west of Killarney, County Kerry, Ireland. It was the ninth men's golf European Amateur Team Championship.

The tournament was played at the club's 18-hole Mahony's Point Course, opened in 1939. The course was set up with par 35 over the first nine holes and par 38 on the second nine, finishing with a par 3 hole.

All participating teams played one qualification round of stroke-play with six players, counted the five best scores for each team.

The eight best teams formed flight A, in knock-out match-play over the next three days. The teams were seeded based on their positions after the stroke play. The first placed team were drawn to play the quarter final against the eight placed team, the second against the seventh, the third against the sixth and the fourth against the fifth. In each match between two nation teams, two 18-hole foursome games and five 18-hole single games were played. Teams were allowed to use six players during the team matches, selecting four of them in the morning foursome matches and five players in to the afternoon single matches. Games all square at the 18th hole were declared halved, if the team match was already decided.

The six teams placed 9–14 in the qualification stroke-play formed Flight B and the four teams placed 15–18 formed Flight C, to play similar knock-out play to decide their final positions.

The course was dry and the whether warm and sunny during the whole tournament.

Scotland won the gold medal, earning their first title, beating Italy in the final 4.5–2.5. The Scottish team won the qualifying competition for the fourth consecutive occasion and had previously in the history of the championship finished second three times, losing the last two finals to England.

Team Sweden, earned the bronze on third place, just as at the previous event two years earlier, after beating Switzerland 4–3 in the bronze match.

Defending champions England did not make it to the quarter-finals, finishing tied 8th in the qualifying competition and losing the tie-breaker to France with a one stroke higher non-counting sixth score. Team Wales' low scorer Jeff Toye holed from eight feet on both of his last two greens, giving his team a final one-stroke advantage over England and France, but the sixth score for Wales would not have beaten the sixth scores of neither England or France in the event of a tie.

Individual leader in the opening 18-hole stroke-play qualifying competition was Ian Hutcheon, Scotland, with a score of 3-under-par 70. There was no official award for the lowest individual score.

Teams[]

18 nation teams contested the event. Each team consisted of six players.

Country Players
 Austria Uli Berlinger, M. Gohn, J. Göss-Saurau, E. Huber, Lampert Stolz, W. Wewalka
 Belgium John Bigwood, Benoit Dumont, Thierry Goosens, Yves Mahain, Freddy Rodesch, Jean Rolin, R. de Vooght
 Denmark Kjeld Friche, Lars Jacobsen, Niels Elsøe.Jensen, Henry Knudsen, John Nielsen, Jens Thomasen
 England , , , Mark James, ,
 Finland Patrick Halamaa, Hannu Kussaari, Harry Safonoff, Kari Salonen, Juha Utter, Lauri Wirkala
 France , , , , ,
 Iceland Torbjörn Kjaerbo, Einar Gudnason, Ragnar Olafsson, Oskar Saemundsson, , S. Thorarensen
 Ireland , , , , ,
 Italy Stefano Betti, Franco Gigliarelli, Antonio Lionello, Lorenzo Silva, Giuseppe Sita, Carlo Tadini
 Luxembourg A, Graas, N. Graas, Y. Görgen, C. Schock, J. Schock, G. Schumann
 Netherlands Carel Braun, Barend van Dam, T. Krol, Bart Nolte, Jaap van Neck, Victor Swane
 Norway Erik Dønnestad, Petter Dønnestad, Ole-Christian. Hammer, Johan Horn, Asbjörn Ramnefjell, L. Stensrud
 Scotland Charlie Green, Ian Hutcheon, , , ,
 Spain Santiago Fernández, , Ivan Maura, A. Perales, Nicasio Sagardia,
 Sweden Dag Aurell, Bob Bäckstedt, Hans Hedjerson, Göran Lundqvist, Jan Rube, Michael Örtegren
  Switzerland Yves Hofstetter, Thomas Fortmann, Martin Kessler, Carlo Rampone, Michel Rey, Johnny Storjohann
 Wales , , , , ,
 West Germany Hans-Hubert Giesen, Freidrich Janssen, C. Killan, Hans Lampert, , Christian Strenger

Results[]

Qualification round

Team standings

Place Country Score To par
1  Scotland 368 +3
2  Italy 377 +12
T3  Sweden * 378 +13
 West Germany * 378
  Switzerland 378
6  Ireland 380 +15
7  Wales 382 +17
T8  France * 383 +18
 England 383
10  Spain 395 +30
11  Norway 402 +37
T12  Belgium * 403 +38
 Netherlands 403
14  Denmark 405 +40
15  Finland 412 +47
16  Iceland 426 +61
T17  Luxembourg * 431 +66
 Austria 431

* Note: In the event of a tie the order was determined by the better non-counting score.

Individual leaders

Place Player Country Score To par
1 Ian Hutcheon  Scotland 70 −3
2 Geoff Marks  England 71 −2
T3 Stefano Betti  Italy 72 −1
Lorenzo Silva  Italy 72
Giuseppe Sita  Italy 72
T6 Göran Lundqvist  Sweden 73 E
 France 73
Jeff Toye  Wales 73

Note: There was no official award for the lowest individual score.

Sources:[1][2][3]

Flight A

Quarter finals

 Scotland  France
6 1
 Italy  Wales
5 2
 Sweden  Ireland
5.5 1.5
  Switzerland  West Germany
5 2

Elimination matches

 West Germany  France
4 3
 Wales  Ireland
4 3

Match for 7th place

 Ireland  France
4 3

Match for 5th place

 Wales  West Germany
6 1

Semi finals

 Scotland   Switzerland
5 2
 Italy  Sweden
5 2

Bronze match

 Sweden   Switzerland
4 3

Final

 Scotland  Italy
4.5 2.5
Hutcheon / Green Silva / Lionelli 19th
Stuart / MacGregor 5 & 3 Betti / Sita
Hugh Stuart 2 & 1 Carlo Tadini
Ian Hutcheon AS* Antonio Lionelli AS*
Sandy Stephen Guiseppe Sita 1 hole
Charlie Green 3 & 2 Stefano Betti
George MacGregor 6 & 5 Lorenzo Silva

* Note: Game declared halved, since team match already decided.

Flight B

Elimination matches

 England  Norway
5 2
 Spain  Netherlands
5 2
 Norway  Denmark
4 3
 Netherlands  Belgium
5 2

Match for 13th place

 Denmark  Belgium
5 2

Match for 11th place

 Netherlands  Norway
4 3

Match for 9th place

 England  Spain
5 2

Flight C

First round

 Luxembourg  Iceland
5 2
 Finland  Austria
4.5 2.5

Second round

 Iceland  Austria
6 1
 Finland  Luxembourg
4 3

Third round

 Iceland  Finland
4.5 2.5
 Luxembourg  Austria
4 3

Final standings

Place Country
1st place, gold medalist(s)  Scotland
2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Italy
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Sweden
4   Switzerland
5  Wales
6  West Germany
7  Ireland
8  France
9  England
10  Spain
11  Netherlands
12  Norway
13  Denmark
14  Belgium
15  Iceland
16  Luxembourg
17  Finland
18  Austria

Sources:[2][4][5][6][7][8]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Jacobs, Raymond (27 June 1975). "Scots finish top as England fail". The Glasgow Herald. p. 27. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
  2. ^ a b Jansson, Anders (July 1975). "Dagbok från EM" [Dairy from the Men's European Championship]. Svensk Golf (in Swedish). No. 5. pp. 26–29. Retrieved 22 March 2021.
  3. ^ "Mannschafts-Europameisterschaften" (PDF). golf.de, German Golf Federation. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
  4. ^ Jansson, Anders (1979). Golf - Den gröna sporten [Golf - The green sport] (in Swedish). Swedish Golf Federation. pp. 153–158. ISBN 9172603283. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
  5. ^ Jansson, Anders (2004). Golf - Den stora sporten [Golf - The great sport] (in Swedish). Swedish Golf Federation. pp. 188–190. ISBN 91-86818007. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
  6. ^ "European Amateur Team Championship – European Golf Association". Retrieved 24 March 2021.
  7. ^ Jacobs, Raymond (30 June 1975). "Europe triumph for Scots". The Glasgow Herald. p. 20. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
  8. ^ "European Amateur Team Championship Results 1975 Killarney, Ireland". European Golf Association. Retrieved 24 March 2021.

External links[]

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