The tightest victories at Valderrama

The venue of the Andalucía Valderrama Masters hosted by the Sergio García Foundation, to be held from October 18-21 under the sponsorship of the Council of Tourism and Sport of the Junta de Andalucía is one of the most exciting layouts in continental Europe. Tight fairways, small firm greens and relentless wind present a stiff challenge up to the last shot.

There is no sure win at Valderrama, but only six of the 21 Tour events staged at this historic layout – besides the Ryder Cup – have gone to extra holes.

Scottish duel

Sandy Lyle and Colin Montgomerie starred in the first of these showdowns at the 1992 Volvo Masters. Lyle led by four entering the final round, but Monty worked his way up with a superb 69. The lead was shared for most of the day until Lyle three-putted for bogey on 14. He came back with a birdie on 15 and saved a miraculous par on 17 after a shanked 9-iron hit a tree out of bounds and bounced back into light rough.

They ended tied at 287 (+3). On the first play-off hole, Lyle hit a perfect tee shot. Monty tried to fade his in a left-to-right wind, but hit a tree 60 yards out and ended his challenge.

This was the 18th and last of Lyle’s European Tour victories. As for Montgomerie, he came back by winning the following edition of the Volvo Masters in 1993, the year he triggered his incredible feat of winning seven European Tour Orders of Merit in a row.

Tiger and Jiménez face-to-face

One of the best remembered play-offs at Valderrama pitched local hero Miguel Ángel Jiménez against a dominant Tiger Woods at the 1999 WGC-American Express Championship.

Woods looked to be cruising toward his eighth win of the season three strokes ahead of Jimenez, but disaster awaited him in the final stretch. After bogeying 16, a triple bogey 8 on 17 put Jimenez one ahead on the last tee, supported by a thrilled home crowd. The Spanish dreams were shattered as Miguel failed to par 18 (278 -6) and the then world number one ensured victory with a perfect birdie on the first extra hole.

A handshake at twilight

At the 2002 Volvo Masters Bernhard Langer and Colin Montgomerie agreed to share the title as night fell in Valderrama. Langer and Montgomerie had tied on 281 (-3) after signing for scores of 67 and 70.

The play-off was delayed because Montgomerie was whisked from the recording unit at the 18th green to the television compound to view a video tape of an incident at the 10th. There had been a possibility that Montgomerie had addressed a moving ball before tapping in, which could have resulted in a two stroke penalty.

Once it was determined that there had been no rules infraction, both players headed for the 18th tee in the gathering gloom. After halving two extra holes in pars, both contenders accepted the offer by Ken Schofield, The European Tour’s Executive Director, to share the spoils and shook hands in pitch darkness.

The decision to share the trophy was not unprecedented, and coincidentally the last occasion a draw was declared also involved Langer. He and Seve Ballesteros had completed four holes of a play-off for the 1986 Trophée Lancôme when darkness brought proceedings to a close in Paris.

The longest duel in Valderrama history

The following year, the 2003 Volvo Masters ended in a tie between Sweden’s Fredrik Jacobson and Spain’s Carlos Rodiles. It was a 28-hole Sunday for the leaders, as they had to complete six holes of the weather suspended third round and needed four extra holes to determine the winner.

The final stretch was as tense as could be. Rodiles bogeyed 16 to trail by one, but 17 proved to be key once again as the Spaniard birdied while Jacobson spun his third into the water for a double bogey. The local favorite held a two stroke lead going into the final hole, which at some courses is a comfortable lead, but not at Valderrama.

Rodiles tugged his tee shot and had to settle for a bogey while Jacobson conjured up a towering 9-iron from 151 yards to two and a half feet for the birdie that forced the play-off.

Rodiles set up winning chances on the first three extra holes, but the putts refused to drop. Memories of the 2002 stalemate were fast resurfacing when the players returned to the 18th. th for the sixth time of the day – the first being when they completed their delayed third rounds in the morning (276 -12). When Rodiles mishit his tee shot and could only chip sideways from the trees, Jacobson took his chance with an immaculate 8-iron to six feet and the contest was over.

Three in a row

In 2004 Valderrama lived up to its reputation of ‘Valde-drama’ as for the third succesive year the Volvo Masters Andalucía provided the sudden-death excitement of a play-off. Ryder Cup teammates Ian Poulter and Sergio Garcia had carded matching rounds of 70 to finish regulation at 277 (-7). Garcia had missed a golden chance to seal the title in regular play when he launched an eight iron approach from 175 yards to five feet at the 72nd hole, but failed to convert. Poulter joined the Spaniard in the play-off as he missed a birdie try of his own on the last.

Back to the 18thBoth players hit poor drives, but Poulter ended up in much better shape. Garcia could not get out of the rough while his opponent knocked down a 7-iron to the apron and saved par to claim the title.

Once again, the home crowd was disappointed, and Sergio was left to rue missed birdie opportunities on 17 and 18. Seven years later he would put things right by winning the 2011 Andalucía Valderrama Masters in front of an enthusiastic gallery, and again in 2017. This year he will return to one of his favourite courses as defending champion and tournament host.

Rose prevails in the end

The last play-off at Valderrama was a three-way fight for the 2007 Volvo Masters title between Britons Justin Rose and Simon Dyson and Dane Søren Kjeldsen (283 -1). Rose had started the day four shots ahead of the field and maintained his lead until a double bogey on 11 started a worrying run of four dropped shots in five holes. He looked like losing the Order of Merit as well as the tournament, but managed to hang on with a superb two-putt birdie on 17 that earned him a spot in the play-off.

Reaching the play-off ensured him the Order of Merit, but that would have been no consolation had he blown the tournament. He was determined to win, and did just that by birdieing the second extra hole from 15 feet to clinch the season-ending title.

Tickets for the 2018 Andalucía Valderrama Masters hosted by the Sergio García Foundation are available HERE

Children aged under 14 are admitted to the event free of charge when accompanied by a ticket holding adult.

A handshake at dusk

The playoff between Bernhard Langer and Colin Montgomerie at the 2002 Volvo Masters went down in history for something unusual: the players agreed to share the victory at nightfall over Valderrama.

Langer and Montgomerie finished the tournament with 281 strokes (-3) after turning in cards of 67 and 70 strokes respectively, but the playoff was delayed because a video review was needed to clarify a Montgomerie incident on the 10th hole. It was thought he may have hit a moving ball, which would have resulted in a two-stroke penalty. Ultimately, it was determined that there was no infraction so the tournament was to be decided in a playoff.

Both made par on the first extra hole and played the second in poor visibility. The two European golf heavyweights tied again and kept the match in a draw.

Again on the 18th tee and in the absence of light, the executive director of the European Tour, Ken Schofield, proposed that they share the prize. A brief exchange of words and a handshake was enough to seal the tie, curiously, the second in Langer’s career. The German had already shared victory with Severiano Ballesteros, for similar reasons, in the 1986 Lancôme Trophy, after four play-off holes.

Valderrama’s most agonizing duel

A year later, in the 2003 Volvo Masters, the Swede Fredrik Jacobson and the Spaniard Carlos Rodiles, played the longest and most agonizing duel at Valderrama. That day they played 28 holes: six of the third day, suspended due to rain, 18 of the fourth and four more of the playoff. An epic duel in which victory eluded the illusions of the player and the Spanish fans.

The sequence of the last holes reflects the enormous tension that was experienced at Valderrama. They were tied at the 16th, where Rodiles made a bogey. On the 17th, always decisive, he recovered a stroke while Jacobson signed a double bogey after sending his ball into the water. The Malaga-born player came out at the 18th with a two-stroke lead to secure the victory, but the pressure and the complicated final par four of the course affected his game and he made a bogey, while his rival forced the playoff with a sensational birdie (276 strokes -12). Rodiles had a chance to win the first three sudden death holes, but he was not accurate with the putt and Swede took advantage of his mistake at the start of the fourth and last playoff hole.

Poulter in match play mode

The 2004 Volvo Masters Andalucia was also decided in a head-to-head match between Sergio Garcia and Ian Poulter (277 strokes -11). Sergio had had the tournament in his hands shortly before, as he missed two birdie putts on the 17th and 18th that would have given him the victory. That bad feeling of having let slip an almost won victory took its toll on him in the first and last hole of the play-off, as the player from Castellón, after a bad start, could only make a bogey. Poulter, the great specialist in head-to-head matches, won the tournament to the disappointment of the local fans. Years later, Sergio would settle the debt with the course, winning the Andalucía Valderrama Masters 2011 and 2017.

A three-way fight

The last playoff held at Valderrama took place in 2007 and pitted Englishmen Justin Rose and Simon Dyson against Denmark’s Søren Kjeldsen (283 strokes -1). Rose had started the last day at the top of the leaderboard with a four-stroke lead, but suffered more than expected to take the victory. A terrible sequence of double bogey at the 11th, bogey at the 12th and bogey at the 13th, forced him to seek victory in a three-way playoff.

The three players tied on the first hole, but Rose made a sensational birdie on the second hole, the 10th, to win the tournament and the season’s Order of Merit.

Tickets for the Andalucía Valderrama Masters-Sergio García Foundation available at: TICKETS

Admission is free for children under 14 years of age when accompanied by an adult.

The Andalucía Valderrama Masters, tournament valid for the Race to Dubai, is sponsored by the Ministry of Tourism and Sport of the Andalusian Government and the collaboration of the European Union (European Regional Development Fund), La Reserva de Sotogrande, Rolex, Heineken, Dubai Duty Free, Shell, Exterior Plus and Santander Private Banking.

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