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1988 European Tour

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1988 European Tour season
Duration10 March 1988 (1988-03-10) – 18 December 1988 (1988-12-18)
Number of official events29
Most wins5 – Seve Ballesteros
Order of MeritSeve Ballesteros
Golfer of the YearSeve Ballesteros
Sir Henry Cotton rookie of the yearColin Montgomerie
1987
1989

The 1988 European Tour was the 17th official season of golf tournaments known as the PGA European Tour. It marked the beginning of a long association for the tour with Swedish car maker Volvo, who became the tour's first official title sponsor.[1][2]

The Order of Merit was won by Spain's Seve Ballesteros.

Schedule

The table below shows the 1988 European Tour schedule which was made up of 29 tournaments counting for the Order of Merit, and several non-counting "Approved Special Events".[3] There were several changes from the previous season, with the addition of the Open de Baleares, the Biarritz Open, the English Open and the Volvo Masters; the return of the Barcelona Open, which had been cancelled due to bad weather in 1987; and the loss of the Lawrence Batley International.[1][4] The Moroccan Open, originally scheduled to open the season, was initially postponed until October but ultimately cancelled.[5]

Dates Tournament Host country Winner[a] OWGR
points[6]
Notes
10–13 Mar Mallorca Open de Baleares Spain Spain Seve Ballesteros (35) 20 New tournament
17–20 Mar Torras Hostench Barcelona Open Spain England David Whelan (1) 18
31 Mar – 3 Apr AGF Biarritz Open France Wales David Llewellyn (1) 16 New tournament
7–10 Apr Masters Tournament United States Scotland Sandy Lyle (14) 100 Major championship; non-tour event[a]
14–17 Apr Cannes Open France Zimbabwe Mark McNulty (7) 20
21–24 Apr Cepsa Madrid Open Spain England Derrick Cooper (1) 22
28 Apr – 1 May Portuguese Open Portugal Australia Mike Harwood (1) 18
5–8 May Epson Grand Prix of Europe Wales West Germany Bernhard Langer (19) 40
12–15 May Peugeot Spanish Open Spain England Mark James (9) 38
19–22 May Lancia Italian Open Italy Australia Greg Norman (12) 24
27–30 May Volvo PGA Championship England Wales Ian Woosnam (9) 44
2–5 Jun Dunhill British Masters England Scotland Sandy Lyle (15) 42
9–12 Jun Wang Four Stars National Pro-Celebrity England Australia Rodger Davis (3) 20
16–19 Jun U.S. Open United States United States Curtis Strange (n/a) 100 Major championship; non-tour event[a]
16–19 Jun Volvo Belgian Open Belgium Spain José María Olazábal (3) 16
23–26 Jun Peugeot Open de France France England Nick Faldo (14) 40
29 Jun – 2 Jul Monte Carlo Open Monaco Spain José Rivero (3) 24
6–9 Jul Bell's Scottish Open Scotland England Barry Lane (1) 44
14–17 Jul The Open Championship England Spain Seve Ballesteros (36) 100 Major championship
21–24 Jul KLM Dutch Open Netherlands Wales Mark Mouland (2) 34
28–31 Jul Scandinavian Enterprise Open Sweden Spain Seve Ballesteros (37) 34
4–7 Aug Benson and Hedges International Open England England Peter Baker (1) 38
11–14 Aug PGA Championship United States United States Jeff Sluman (n/a) 100 Major championship; non-tour event[a]
11–14 Aug PLM Open Sweden New Zealand Frank Nobilo (1) 16
18–21 Aug Carroll's Irish Open Republic of Ireland Wales Ian Woosnam (10) 42
25–28 Aug German Open West Germany Spain Seve Ballesteros (38) 38
1–4 Sep Ebel European Masters Swiss Open Switzerland England Chris Moody (1) 44
8–11 Sep Panasonic European Open England Wales Ian Woosnam (11) 42
15–18 Sep Lancome Trophy France Spain Seve Ballesteros (39) 46
22–25 Sep German Masters West Germany Spain José María Olazábal (4) 44
29 Sep – 2 Oct English Open England England Howard Clark (11) 16 New tournament
6–10 Oct Suntory World Match Play England Scotland Sandy Lyle (n/a) 32 Approved Special Event
3–6 Mar
6–9 Oct
Moroccan Open Morocco Cancelled
13–16 Oct Dunhill Cup Scotland England England n/a Approved Special Event; team event
17–18 Oct Equity & Law Challenge England Northern Ireland Ronan Rafferty (n/a) Approved Special Event
20–23 Oct BNP Jersey Open Jersey Republic of Ireland Des Smyth (6) 16
24–27 Oct UAP European Under-25s Championship France France Jean van de Velde (n/a) n/a Approved Special Event
27–30 Oct Volvo Masters Spain England Nick Faldo (15) 44 New tournament
3–6 Nov Europcar Cup France Sweden Sweden n/a Approved Special Event; team event
10–13 Nov Benson & Hedges Trophy Spain Zimbabwe Mark McNulty & France Marie-Laure Taya n/a Approved Special Event; mixed pairs event
8–11 Dec World Cup Australia United States United States n/a Approved Special Event; team event
World Cup International Trophy United States Ben Crenshaw (n/a) n/a Approved Special Event; individual prize
15–18 Dec Kirin Cup United States United States United States n/a Approved Special Event; team event
  1. ^ a b c d The numbers in parentheses after the winners' names show the number of official career wins they had on the European Tour up to and including that event. Totals are only shown for members of the European Tour and are inclusive of the three United States-based major championships since, although not official tour events at the time, they have been recognised as such retrospecively. Victories in "Approved Special Events" are not recognised as official tour wins.

Order of Merit

The PGA European Tour's money list was known as the "Volvo Order of Merit". It was based on prize money earned during the season and calculated in Pound sterling.[2]

Position Player Country Prize money (£)
1 Seve Ballesteros  Spain 451,560
2 Nick Faldo  England 347,971
3 José María Olazábal  Spain 285,964
4 Ian Woosnam  Wales 234,991
5 Sandy Lyle  Scotland 186,018
6 Mark McNulty  Zimbabwe 180,992
7 Des Smyth  Ireland 171,951
8 Mark James  England 152,900
9 Ronan Rafferty  Northern Ireland 132,395
10 José Rivero  Spain 131,079

Awards

Award Winner Country
European Tour Golfer of the Year Seve Ballesteros  Spain
Sir Henry Cotton Rookie of the Year Colin Montgomerie  Scotland

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Davies, David (1 December 1987). "Rich pickings for Europe's Volvo drivers". The Guardian. London, England. Retrieved 26 May 2020.
  2. ^ a b "Tour History". PGA European Tour. Retrieved 21 June 2013.
  3. ^ Platts, Mitchell (1 December 1987). "Shooting for £10m in the rosy tour garden of Europe". The Times. p. 42. Retrieved 26 May 2020 – via The Times Digital Archive.
  4. ^ "At last! English get their own Open". Irish Independent. 26 January 1988. p. 15. Retrieved 25 May 2020 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  5. ^ "Sport in brief | Open closed". The Times. 12 September 1988. p. 38. Retrieved 26 May 2020 – via The Times Digital Archive.
  6. ^ "Events | European Tour | 1988". Official World Golf Ranking. Retrieved 26 April 2020.

External links