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1959 European Amateur Team Championship

1959 European Amateur Team Championship
Tournament information
Dates22–27 June 1959
LocationBarcelona, Spain
41°17′49″N 002°04′42″E / 41.29694°N 2.07833°E / 41.29694; 2.07833
Course(s)Real Club de Golf El Prat
Organized byEuropean Golf Association
Format36 holes stroke play
round-robin system match play
Statistics
Par72
Length6,359 yards (5,815 m)
Field9 teams
circa 60 players
Champion
 Sweden
Ola Bergqvist, Gustaf Adolf Bielke,
Gunnar Carlander, Per-Olof Johansson,
Göran Lindeblad, Bengt Möller,
Nils Odqvist (captain and substitute player),
Elis Werkell
Qualification round: 612 (+36)
Flight A matches: 5 points
Location map
Real Club de Golf El Prat is located in Europe
Real Club de Golf El Prat
Real Club de Golf El Prat
Location in Europe
Real Club de Golf El Prat is located in Spain
Real Club de Golf El Prat
Real Club de Golf El Prat
Location in Spain
Real Club de Golf El Prat is located in Province of Barcelona
Real Club de Golf El Prat
Real Club de Golf El Prat
Location in the Province of Barcelona
1961 →

The 1959 European Amateur Team Championship took place 22–27 June on the Real Club de Golf El Prat outside Barcelona, Spain. It was the first men's golf European Amateur Team Championship.

Venue

The championship took place in strong heat at Real Club de Golf El Prat, Barcelona, Spain.[1] The club was founded in 1912. It was at the time a private club and the course was situated in El Prat de Llobregat, 15 kilometers south of the city center, close to the Barcelona-El Prat Airport. In 1997, when the airport expanded, the club had to move its course and in 2003 the club established 45 holes in Terrassa, 30 kilometers north of Barcelona. The club hosted the professional tournament Open de Espana in both 1956 and 1959 and had done so several times since.[2][3]

Course layout

Hole Meters Par    Hole Meters Par
1 365 4 10 450 5
2 250 4 11 130 3
3 150 3 12 430 5
4 285 4 13 320 4
5 360 4 14 400 4
6 160 3 15 480 5
7 355 4 16 380 4
8 335 4 17 150 3
9 440 5 18 345 4
Out 2,730 35 In 3,085 37
Source:[1] Total 5,815 72

Format

All participating teams played two qualification rounds of stroke-play over two days, counting the four best scores out of up to six players for each team. The four best teams formed flight A. The next four best teams formed flight B.

The winner in each flight was determined by a round-robin system. All teams in the flight met each other with six players in each team and the team with most points for team matches in flight A won the tournament, using the scale, win=2 points, halved=1 point, lose=0 points. In each match between two nation teams, three foursome games and six single games were played. The teams were allowed to change players from one day to another, but not during a day from morning to afternoon.

Teams

Nine nation teams contested the event. Each team consisted of a minimum of six players.

Players in the leading teams

Country Players
 France Henri de Lamaze, Marius Bardana, Yves Caillol, Philippe Chassigny, Jean-Louis Dupont, Gaëtan Mourgue D'Algue
 Spain Juan Antonio Andreu, Iván Maura, Enrigue Muro, Eduardo de la Riva, Fransisco Sanchiz, Ignacio Urguijo
 Sweden Ola Bergqvist, Gustaf Adolf Bielke, Gunnar Carlander, Per-Olof Johansson, Göran Lindeblad, Bengt Möller, Nils Odqvist,* Elis Werkell
 West Germany Hermann Ernst, Jost Burghartz, Werner Götz, Hans Lampert, Dietrich von Knoop, Hermann Tissies

* Note: Odqvist entered the tournament as non-playing captain, but since Lindeblad and Möller was not able to play on June 25th in Sweden's match against Spain and Bielke and Carlander was not able to play on June 26th in Sweden's match against West Germany, due to food poisoning, Odqist played in these two matches.

Other participating teams

Country
 Belgium
 Italy
 Netherlands
 Portugal
 Switzerland

Winners

Team Sweden won the championship, earning 5 points in flight A. Team France finished second, ahead of host country Spain.

Individual winner in the opening 36-hole stroke-play qualifying competition was Dietrich von Knoop, West Germany, with a score of 2-over-par 146. Henri de Lamaze, France, shot a new course record in the second round, with a score of 69 over 18 holes at the El Prat course.

Results

Qualification rounds

Flight A

Team matches

Team standings

Country Place W T L Game points Points
 Sweden 1 2 1 0 15.5–11.5 5
 France 2 2 0 1 14.5–12.5 4
 Spain 3 1 0 2 14–13 2
 West Germany 4 0 1 2 12–15 1

Flight B

Team matches

Team standings

Country Place W T L Game points Points
 Italy 5 3 0 0 20–7 6
 Belgium 6 2 0 1 14.5–12.5 4
 Switzerland 7 1 0 2 14–13 2
 Netherlands 8 0 0 3 21.5–5.5 0

Final standings

Place Country
1st place, gold medalist(s)  Sweden
2nd place, silver medalist(s)  France
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Spain
4  West Germany
5  Italy
6  Belgium
7  Switzerland
8  Netherlands
9  Portugal

Sources:[1][4][5][6]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c "Sverige första Europamästaren" [Sweden first European Champions]. Svensk Golf (in Swedish). No. 6. August 1959. pp. 2–5. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
  2. ^ "Golf El Prat". Outofbounds Golfresor. Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  3. ^ "Golf El Prat, History". Real Club de Golf El Prat. Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  4. ^ Jansson, Anders (1979). Golf - Den gröna sporten [Golf - The green sport] (in Swedish). Swedish Golf Federation. pp. 153–158. ISBN 9172603283.
  5. ^ Jansson, Anders (2004). Golf - Den stora sporten [Golf - The great sport] (in Swedish). Swedish Golf Federation. pp. 188–190. ISBN 91-86818007.
  6. ^ "European Amateur Team Championship – European Golf Association". Retrieved 18 December 2017.
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