3 min read" />

News

CPG Renews Partnership With Glenmuir to Enhance Apparel Offering Across Global Network

14th Apr 2026

Global Game Gathers Again: CPG Festival of Golf heads to Porto Carras in 2026

10th Apr 2026

Edoardo Molinari Named Vice Captain for the 2027 Ryder Cup

2nd Apr 2026

From Coaching to Curation: Why Sotogrande Matters for Pro-Led Travel Experiences

2nd Apr 2026

CPG & Bois d’Arlon Golf & Resort Form New Partnership to Stage CPG International Series Grand Final

27th Mar 2026

Germany Expands GolfSixes League as Junior Golf Participation Accelerates

13th Mar 2026

Iceland Launches 2026 Winter GolfSixes League on Simulators

2nd Mar 2026

Czech Golf Federation Expands Junior Participation Through GolfSixes Mini League

24th Feb 2026

GolfSixes Inspires New Golfers at Africa Amateur Championship

23rd Feb 2026

From Sotogrande to the LPGA: Mimi Rhodes’ Journey to the World Stage

21st Feb 2026

GolfSixes Participation Surges as Poland Delivers Record Breaking 2025 Season

18th Feb 2026

Women in Coaching – Register Now for the 2026 Strategic Coach Education Program

10th Feb 2026

Applications Open to Become a 2027 Ryder Cup Volunteer

7th Feb 2026

Poland’s Tomkiewicz Recognised With Prestigious CPG 5-Star Professional Award

28th Dec 2025

CPG Honours van Heuven van Staereling With Special Recognition Award

28th Dec 2025

Trackman’s Transformational Impact on Golf Recognised With CPG Christer Lindberg Bowl

28th Dec 2025

Football to Fairways: Takis Gonias Honoured for Growing Golf in Greece

28th Dec 2025

From Coaching Trips to Complete Experiences: Lessons from Sotogrande’s Stéphane Menou

22nd Dec 2025

Beyond Technique: Lessons from a Global Coaching Career at Viya Golf

19th Dec 2025

EDGA Releases Powerful New Film “You Can” to Inspire Golfers with Disability

1st Dec 2025
load more

ITC 20103 min read


Posted on: 1st Dec 2010

England Complete ITC Hat-trick

A combination of collective patience, all-round professional resilience and flexible management by the tournament staff, prevented the Confederation of Professional Golf International Team Championship (ITC) from being washed away.

It also kept playing conditions playable enough – though only just! – to enable England to claim the title for the third time, their having done so previously on the Costa del Sol and in Tunisia.

The move to Portugal’s Algarve and the Vale de Lobo course, from its spell in Spain’s Murcia region, gave a fresh perspective to the increasingly prestigious event though rain and subsequent waterlogging had been a constant threat to its survival.

Sponsored by Glenmuir and the Associacao Turismo do Algarve, and also supported by The Tivoli Victoria, the Vale de Lobo Golf Club and the Ryder Cup European Development Trust’, the ITC found that Mother Nature had the last word.

The rain that had caused a rescheduling in the second round returned with a vengeance on the fourth day and, but for Tournament Director, Ben Groutage, having turned two par fives into par threes on that second day, the annual event may not have even reached its satisfactory 54-hole destination.

Accompanied by thunder and lightning, which felled a tree alongside the par three 17th hole, the deluge swamped the course and caused the fourth round to be abandoned. Consequently England were declared the winners as a result of leading the 26-strong field by four strokes at the end of the third round.

This unavoidable outcome was particularly galling for France’s Rogez Sabarros who recorded the tournament’s second-hole-in-one, on the shortened sixth. “He was playing very well,” said skipper Benjamin Nicolay. “In fact we all were, so we’re very frustrated by what’s happened.”

In contrast England’s team captain, Jon Bevan, was delighted with the victory but admitted he would have preferred to have secured as a result of playing 72-holes.

“A win’s a win,” he said. “So obviously we’re very pleased. But it would have been better and more satisfying if we’d won it with the tournament going the distance.

“I know the French are disappointed,” he added. “And so would we be in their position.“ The good thing is that we led from the start of the tournament and were still in front when it was abandoned.”

As Bevan’s best round of the tournament – a four-under-par in the third – ensured England went into the final day in pole position, he was entitled to some personal satisfaction. He was quick, however, to praise the part played by his team-mates, David Shacklady, who was under par in each of his three rounds, and John Wells.

“It was a real team effort and John and David both made huge contributions,” added Bevan. “They laid the foundations in the first two rounds and David was very consistent throughout.”

The trio earned €6,000 for their victory while Scotland and France picked up €4,500 each for finishing joint-second. But that was cold comfort to both teams who had begun to shave England’s lead when the tournament was called off. Scotland had trimmed it to two strokes after the first six holes of the ill-fated fourth round while France had reduced it to three.

The first of the event’s two holes in one was executed by Janez Grilc of Slovenia – who shares the record of the number of ITC appearances with team mate Danny Kraljic – at the 144 metres par-three eighth hole.

Final Leaderboard – Click Here

Final Scores – Click Here

Leave a Reply