1996 Espirito Santo Trophy

The 1996 Espirito Santo Trophy took place 7–10 November at St. Elena Golf Club in Manila, Philippines.

1996 Espirito Santo Trophy
Tournament information
Dates7–10 November
LocationManila, Philippines
14°19′19″N 121°02′38″E / 14.322°N 121.044°E / 14.322; 121.044
Course(s)St. Elena Golf Club
Organized byWorld Amateur Golf Council
Format54 holes stroke play
Statistics
Par72
Field34 teams
102 players
Champion
 South Korea
Han Hee-won, Kang Soo-yun, Kim Kyung-sook
438 (+6)
Location map
St. Elena Golf Club, Manila is located in Philippines
St. Elena Golf Club, Manila
St. Elena Golf Club, Manila
Location in the Philippines
← 1994
1998 →

It was the 17th women's golf World Amateur Team Championship for the Espirito Santo Trophy.

The tournament was a stroke play team event, due to heavy rain, shortened from 72 holes to 54 holes. There were 34 team entries, each with three players. The best two scores for each round counted towards the team total.

The South Korea team won the Trophy for their first title, beating team Italy by two strokes. Italy earned the silver medal while the defending champions United States took the bronze on third place another four strokes back.

The individual title went to Silvia Cavalleri, Italy, whose score of one-over-par, 217, was one stroke ahead of Janice Moodie, Great Britain & Ireland.[1]

Teams

34 teams entered the event and completed the competition. Each team had three players.

CountryPlayers
 ArgentinaMaria Larrauri, Maria Olivero, Antionieta Torres
 AustraliaTamie Durdin, Kate MacIntosh, Simone Williams
 AustriaLilian Mensi-Klarbach, Nina Mensi-Klarbach, Katharina Poppmeier
 BelgiumAnnabelle Haxhe, Catherine Pons, Stephanie Schinkel
 BermudaJudithanne Astwood, Madeline Joell-Warren, Kim Marshall
 BrazilMaria Candida Hanneman, Elisabeth Nickhorn, Cristina Menichetti
 CanadaMary Ann Lapointe, Barbara Lilley, Tracey Lipp
 Czech RepublicMartina Dornikova, Petra Kvidova, Gabriela Teissingova
 ChileMaria Jose Hurtado, Gloria Soto, Beatriz Steeger
 Chinese TaipeiHsiao-chuan Lu, Ya-huei Lu, Yun-jye Wei
 ColombiaCristina Baena, Maria Isabel Baena, Luisa Fernanda Cuartas
 DenmarkLotta Greve, Karen Margrethe Juul, Christina Kuld
 Dominican RepublicDominique Gagnon, Teresa Garcia, Caroline Greven
 FinlandRiikka Hakkarainen, Anna Hokkanen, Nina Laitinen
 FranceMaitena Alsuguren, Marine Monnet, Amandine Vincent
 GermanyElisabeth Esterl, Anika Heuser, Ester Poburski
 Great Britain
&  Ireland
Mhairi McKay, Janice Moodie, Elaine Ratcliffe
 GuatemalaBeatriz Arenas, Naomi Lida, Florencia De Rolz
 IndonesiaAni Iman, Retno Mustari, Titi Puryanti
 ItalySilvia Cavalleri, Sophie Sandolo, Giulia Sergas
 JapanMia Nakada, Mayumi Nakajima, Kimiyo Yoshida
 MexicoMarta Ostos, Vinny Riviello, Nancy Veraslegvi
 NetherlandsFrederique Lempers, Marcella Neggers, Marieke Zelsman
 New ZealandRenee Fowler, Catherine Knight, Gina Scott
 PeruClaudia Ferrini, Gilda Hawie, Ninoska Villegas
 PhilippinesDorothy Delasin, Maricel Manguino, Jennifer Rosales
 Puerto RicoKaren Calvesbert, Sacha Medina, Carmen Ana Rivera
 South AfricaSanet Marais, Lelitia Moses, Barbara Plant
 South KoreaHan Hee-won, Kang Soo-yun, Kim Kyung-sook
 SpainSara Beautell, María José Pons, Ana Belen Sánchez
 SwedenAnna Berg, Sara Eklund, Mia Löjdahl
 SwitzerlandSophie Ducrey, Alexandra Gasser, Sandra Storjohann
 ThailandJuruwan Gulyanamitta, Rhungthiwa Pangjan, Sasikarn Utajan
 United StatesKellee Booth, Brenda Corrie-Kuehn, Kelli Kuehne

Results

The first round of the 72-hole tournament was cancelled due to monsoon rains and lightning and the competition was played over 54 holes. Players were permitted to lift, clean and place their balls on the fairway during all three completed rounds.

PlaceCountryScoreTo par
1  South Korea147-139-152=438+6
2  Italy146-144-150=440+8
3  United States143-149-152=444+12
T4  Spain146-151-148=445+13
 Great Britain
&  Ireland
146-145-154=445
T6  Germany153-149-149=451+19
 Sweden149-149-153=451
 Chinese Taipei147-147-157=451
T9  Colombia144-147-161=452+20
 Finland150-152-150=452
11  South Africa151-147-155=453+21
T12  Australia149-154-151=454+22
 France152-146-156=454
14  New Zealand147-150-158=455+23
15  Canada148-151-157=456+19
16  Netherlands152-150-155=457+21
17  Philippines152-151-155=458+26
18  Japan154-154-151=459+27
T19  Austria156-151-153=460+28
 Denmark148-157-155=460
21  Brazil150-162-149=461+29
22  Mexico152-154-158=464+32
23  Switzerland156-153-157=466+34
24  Belgium152-157-158=467+35
25  Indonesia161-151-157=469+37
26  Argentina154-154-162=470+38
27  Thailand157-156-163=476+44
28  Czech Republic162-154-161=477+45
29  Bermuda160-161-158=479+47
30  Puerto Rico160-159-163=482+50
31  Chile165-158-163=486+54
32  Guatemala164-169-163=496+64
33  Peru166-171-171=510+78
34  Dominican Republic174-181-173=528+96

Sources:[1][2][3]

Individual leaders

There was no official recognition for the lowest individual scores.

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
1Silvia Cavalleri  Italy71-73-73=217+1
2Janice Moodie  Great Britain
&  Ireland
69-75-74=218+2
T3Nina Laitinen  Finland73-72-75=220+4
Kelli Kuehne  United States71-75-74=220
T5Anna Berg  Sweden72-73-76=221+5
Han Hee-won  South Korea79-68-74=221
Ana Belen Sánchez  Spain73-76-72=221
8Simone Williams  Australia72-77-73=222+6
9Hsiao-chuan Lu  Chinese Taipei73-73-77=223+7
T10Sara Beautell  Spain73-75-76=224+8
Kellee Booth  United States72-74-78=224
Kang Soo-yun  South Korea72-71-81=224
Giulia Sergas  Italy75-71-78=224

References