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World Golf Championships Wiki Information
The World Golf Championships
are a group of four annual events for male professional golfers created by the International Federation of PGA Tours. They are official money events on the PGA Tour, the European Tour and the Japan Golf Tour, and officially sanctioned by the Asian Tour, Sunshine Tour and PGA Tour of Australasia.
Event
| Format
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WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship (1999-)
| Match play
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WGC-CA Championship (1999-)
| Stroke play
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WGC-Bridgestone Invitational (1999-)
| Stroke play
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WGC-HSBC Champions (2009-)
| Stroke play
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The first three events all began in 1999, although the Bridgestone Invitational is the direct successor of the World Series of Golf, which began in 1976. The CA Championship superseded a long-standing event at the Doral Resort in Florida after the 2006 season. It previously traveled to different venues around the world.
In April 2009, it was announced that the HSBC Champions had been awarded World Golf Championships status, starting with the next tournament in November. It is now the fourth tournament on the worldwide calendar. [1]
The WGC concept was introduced to create a larger group of golf tournaments with a high global profile by bringing the leading golfers from different tours together on a more regular basis, rather than just for the major championships. At the time the publicity spoke of a "World Tour" which might develop on the basis of the World Championships and the majors. That concept seems to have been dropped, but the four events usually attract entries from almost all of the elite players who are eligible to compete and they rank among the most prestigious and high profile events outside of the majors. The prize money on offer is very close to being the highest for any professional golf tournament. Winners generally receive 70 to 78 Official World Golf Ranking Points, the most awarded for any tournament apart from the major championships, which carry 100 points, and The Players Championship, which is allocated 80. [2] Tiger Woods has dominated these tournaments, winning 16 of the first 32 events and winning at least one event each year since their inception.
From 2000 to 2006 the men's golf World Cup, a tournament for teams of two players representing their country, was a World Golf Championship event, although it was not an official money event on any tour. Beginning in 2007 it is no longer part of the World Golf Championships, but it is still played, and is currently known as the Mission Hills World Cup.
From 2000 to 2006 most years two or three of the four events were staged in the United States and one or two were staged elsewhere. Starting in 2007, all three of the individual World Golf Championships events were played in the United States, which attracted criticism from some golfers, including Tiger Woods and Ernie Els, and in the media outside the United States. PGA Tour Commissioner Tim Finchem responded by insisting that playing in the U.S is best for golf as more money can be made there than elsewhere. [3] The 2009 elevation of the HSBC Champions, held in China, to full WGC status may mute this criticism.
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WORLD GOLF CHAMPIONSHIPS TICKETS
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Winners
Year
| Match Play
| Championship
| Invitational
| Champions
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2009
| Geoff Ogilvy (3/3)
| Phil Mickelson
| Tiger Woods (16/16)
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Year
| Match Play
| Championship
| Invitational
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2008
| Tiger Woods (15/16)
| Geoff Ogilvy (2/3)
| Vijay Singh
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2007
| Henrik Stenson
| Tiger Woods (13/16)
| Tiger Woods (14/16)
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Year
| Match Play
| Invitational
| Championship
| World Cup
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2006
| Geoff Ogilvy (1/3)
| Tiger Woods (11/16)
| Tiger Woods (12/16)
| Bernhard Langer & Marcel Siem
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2005
| David Toms
| Tiger Woods (9/16)
| Tiger Woods (10/16)
| Stephen Dodd & Bradley Dredge
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2004
| Tiger Woods (8/16)
| Stewart Cink
| Ernie Els
| Paul Casey & Luke Donald
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2003
| Tiger Woods (6/16)
| Darren Clarke (2/2)
| Tiger Woods (7/16)
| Trevor Immelman & Rory Sabbatini
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2002
| Kevin Sutherland
| Craig Parry
| Tiger Woods (5/16)
| Toshimitsu Izawa & Shigeki Maruyama
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2001
| Steve Stricker
| Tiger Woods (4/16)
| Cancelled due to 9/11
| Ernie Els & Retief Goosen
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2000
| Darren Clarke (1/2)
| Tiger Woods (3/16)
| Mike Weir
| Tiger Woods & David Duval
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Year
| Match Play
| Invitational
| Championship
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1999
| Jeff Maggert
| Tiger Woods (1/16)
| Tiger Woods (2/16)
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National summary
Rank
| Nation
| Wins
| Individual winners
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1
| align=left
| 22
| 7
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2
| align=left
| 4
| 2
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3
| align=left
| 3
| 1
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4
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| 2
| 1
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T5
| align=left
| 1
| 1
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| 1
| 1
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align=left
| 1
| 1
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| 1
| 0
|
align=left
| 1
| 0
|
align=left
| 1
| 0
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align=left
| 1
| 0
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Notes and references
- Asian event joins elite WGC list
- Prior to 2007, the official points allocations were half of these values, but points won in the current year were given a weighting of 2 in the ranking calculation. The system was revised in 2007, so that points are now given an initial weighting of 1, which then tapers to zero over a two-year period starting 13 weeks after the award.
- PGA Tour chief defends US dates
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