2004 Eisenhower Trophy

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2004 Eisenhower Trophy
Tournament information
Dates28–31 October
LocationRío Grande, Puerto Rico
18°13′20″N 66°25′49″W / 18.2223°N 66.4303°W / 18.2223; -66.4303
Course(s)
River and Ocean courses
Format72 holes stroke play
Statistics
Par72 (River)
72 (Ocean)
Field66 teams
198 players
Champion
 United States
Spencer Levin, Ryan Moore &
Lee Williams
407 (−25)
Location Map
Río Mar CC is located in Caribbean
Río Mar CC
Río Mar CC
Location in the Caribbean
← 2002
2006 →

The 2004 Eisenhower Trophy took place 28–31 October at Rio Mar Country Club in Río Grande, Puerto Rico. It was the 24th World Amateur Team Championship for the Eisenhower Trophy. The tournament was a 72-hole stroke play team event with 66 three-man teams. The best two scores for each round counted towards the team total. Each team was due to play two rounds on the two courses. The leading teams played on the River course on the third day and were due to play on the Ocean course on the final day.

Heavy rain and lightning caused the final day to be abandoned and the event was reduced to 54 holes. The leading 36 teams had played their third round on the River course while the others played on the Ocean course.[1]

The United States won their 13th Eisenhower Trophy, nine strokes ahead of Spain, who took the silver medal. Sweden took the bronze medal while Canada, Italy and Switzerland finished tied for fourth place. Ryan Moore had the best 54-hole aggregate of 204, 12 under par.[1]

The 2004 Espirito Santo Trophy was played on the same courses one week prior.

Teams[]

66 three-man teams contested the event.

The following table lists the players on the leading teams.[2][1]

Country Players
 Australia Jarrod Lyle, James Nitties, Michael Sim
 Austria , , Bernd Wiesberger
 Canada , James Lepp, Richard Scott
 Chile Benjamín Alvarado, ,
 Denmark , Mark Haastrup,
 England James Heath, Matthew Richardson, Gary Wolstenholme
 Finland Antti Ahokas, Mikko Korhonen,
 Germany Florian Fritsch, Martin Kaymer,
 India , , Amarbir Singh Lehal
 Ireland , ,
 Italy Matteo Delpodio, Edoardo Molinari, Francesco Molinari
 Japan Yuta Ikeda, ,
 Malaysia , Ben Leong,
 Netherlands Wil Besseling, ,
 Scotland Jamie McLeary, George Murray, Stuart Wilson
 South Africa , , Dawie van der Walt
 Spain Rafa Cabrera-Bello, , Álvaro Quirós
 Sweden , Oscar Florén, Alex Norén
  Switzerland , ,
 United States Spencer Levin, Ryan Moore, Lee Williams
 Wales Rhys Davies, Nigel Edwards, Gareth Wright

Results[]

# Country Score To par
1st place, gold medalist(s)  United States 132-136-139=407 −25
2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Spain 137-139-140=416 −16
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Sweden 138-141-138=417 −15
T4  Canada 143-143-136=422 −10
 Italy 136-146-140=422
  Switzerland 137-142-143=422
7  Wales 141-138-144=423 −9
T8  England 137-146-141=424 −8
 Malaysia 143-143-138=424
T10  Denmark 143-143-139=425 −7
 Germany 138-145-142=425
T12  Australia 142-141-145=428 −4
 Japan 141-143-144=428
 Netherlands 140-147-141=428
T15  Chile 143-145-142=430 −2
 Finland 148-142-140=430
T17  Ireland 143-146-142=431 −1
 South Africa 147-138-146=431
19  India 143-148-141=432 E
20  Austria 145-143-145=433 +1
T21  Mexico 148-141-145=434 +2
 New Zealand 150-144-140=434
T23  France 148-142-145=435 +3
 Philippines 143-148-144=435
 South Korea 144-144-147=435
26  Portugal 141-150-145=436 +4
T27  Argentina 144-150-143=437 +5
 El Salvador 140-150-147=437
 Iceland 142-147-148=437
 Thailand 143-150-144=437
31  Scotland 141-150-149=440 +8
32  Czech Republic 150-145-147=442 +10
33  Peru 146-145-152=443 +11
T34  Bermuda 143-150-151=444 +12
 Chinese Taipei 151-146-147=444
 Norway 148-145-151=444
T37  Guatemala 146-153-146=445 +13
 Pakistan 148-153-144=445
 Puerto Rico 147-152-146=445
T40  Colombia 148-149-149=446 +14
 Dominican Republic 145-151-150=446
42  Brazil 150-147-151=448 +16
T43  Belgium 148-148-153=449 +17
 Bolivia 146-150-153=449
 Trinidad and Tobago 149-149-151=449
 Turkey 146-152-151=449
47  Zimbabwe 151-150-149=450 +18
48  Ecuador 155-148-153=456 +24
T49  Panama 150-153-154=457 +25
 Venezuela 149-156-152=457
51  Paraguay 156-148-154=458 +26
52  Slovenia 158-152-149=459 +27
53  Barbados 158-147-157=462 +30
54  Russia 157-154-153=464 +32
55  Slovakia 158-157-151=466 +34
56  Hong Kong 154-158-156=468 +36
57  Costa Rica 153-162-157=472 +40
T58  Cayman Islands 158-162-159=479 +47
 Greece 160-161-158=479
60  Eswatini 168-160-157=485 +53
61  Bahamas 165-159-162=486 +54
62  Estonia 161-169-159=489 +57
63  Croatia 164-161-165=490 +58
64  United States Virgin Islands 164-163-166=493 +61
65  United Arab Emirates 162-173-159=494 +62
DQ  Egypt 156-161-DQ

Source:[2]

The leading 36 teams played their third round on the River course with the remaining teams playing on the Ocean course.

Individual leaders[]

There was no official recognition for the lowest individual scores.

# Player Country Score To par
1 Ryan Moore  United States 65-67-72=204 −12
2 Spencer Levin  United States 70-69-67=206 −10
T3 Wil Besseling  Netherlands 68-71-69=208 −8
Alex Norén  Sweden 69-70-69=208
T5 Benjamín Alvarado  Chile 71-69-69=209 −7
Nigel Edwards  Wales 70-67-72=209
Josh Geary  New Zealand 72-69-68=209
Juvic Pagunsan  Philippines 69-70-70=209
  Switzerland 66-70-73=209
T10  Canada 70-73-67=210 −6
Florian Fritsch  Germany 69-71-70=210
 Spain 68-71-71=210
Ben Leong  Malaysia 72-69-69=210
Francesco Molinari  Italy 68-73-69=210

Source:[2]

Players in the leading teams played two rounds on the River course and one on the Ocean course.

References[]

  1. ^ a b c "2004 World Amateur Golf Team Championships Record Book" (PDF). IGF. Retrieved 2 November 2018.
  2. ^ a b c "Team/Player Leaderboard". Golfstat. 2 November 2018.

External links[]

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