Junior Presidents Cup
Tournament information | |
---|---|
Location | 2024: Quebec, Canada |
Established | 2017 |
Course(s) | 2024: Le Club Laval-sur-le-Lac |
Format | Match play |
Month played | September |
Current champion | |
United States |
The Junior Presidents Cup is a junior team golf competition between the United States and an International team representing the rest of the world excluding Europe. It is based around the Presidents Cup and is run by the PGA Tour and American Junior Golf Association. The inaugural event took place at the Plainfield Country Club, Edison, New Jersey on September 25 and 26, 2017.[1] The United States have won all four events that have been contested.
Qualification
[edit]The teams consist of 12 junior boys. Participants must be at least 12 years old at the start of the event and must be 18 or younger and have not yet graduated high school as of January 1 of the year of the contest. Players must be amateurs who have not yet started college and are not members of a competitive collegiate golf program. Members of each team mostly qualify through a ranking system, the United States team based on the Rolex AJGA Rankings, and the International Team based on the World Amateur Golf Rankings.[2]
In 2017 11 members of each team were selected based on the rankings on August 3 with the final place being given to the leading player in the rankings, not already qualified, on September 6.[3][4] In 2019 all 12 members of the team were selected based on the rankings on September 5. In 2022 10 members of each team were selected based on the rankings on August 19, with one player selected by the team captain and the final place being given to the leading player in the rankings, not already qualified, on September 8.[5]
Format
[edit]The event is held over two days, with six fourballs and six foursomes matches on the first day, and twelve singles matches on the second day.[6]
Results
[edit]Year | Venue | Location | Winning team | Score | USA captain | International captain |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2024 | Le Club Laval-sur-le-Lac | Quebec, Canada | United States | 15–9 | Charley Hoffman | Graham DeLaet |
2022 | Myers Park Country Club | Charlotte, North Carolina | United States | 13–11 | Notah Begay III | Tim Clark |
2019 | Royal Melbourne Golf Club | Melbourne, Australia | United States | 13–11 | Justin Leonard | Stuart Appleby |
2017 | Plainfield Country Club | Edison, New Jersey | United States | 14–10 | David Toms | Trevor Immelman |
Teams
[edit]United States
[edit]- 2024: Pennson Badgett, Ronin Banerjee, Blades Brown, Jackson Byrd, Luke Colton, Will Hartman, Tyler Mawhinney, Logan Reilly, Michael Riebe, Miles Russell, Asher Vargas, Tyler Watts
- 2022: Johnnie Clark, Ethan Gao, Nicholas Gross, Henry Guan, Bryan Kim, Carson Kim, Jackson Koivun, Eric Lee, P. J. Maybank, Matt Moloney, Aaron Pounds, Preston Stout
- 2019: Stephen Campbell Jr., Canon Claycomb, Jack Heath, Benjamin James, Maxwell Moldovan, Brett Roberts, Vishnu Sadagopan, Ian Siebers, Preston Summerhays, Michael Thorbjornsen, Jackson Van Paris, Alex Yang
- 2017: Garrett Barber, Akshay Bhatia, Jacob Bridgeman, Prescott Butler, Canon Claycomb, Noah Goodwin, Cole Hammer, Joe Highsmith, Eugene Hong, Turner Hosch, William Mouw, Trent Phillips
International
[edit]- 2024: Joshua Bai, Warut Boonrod, Xihuan Chang, Le Khanh Hung, Samuel Gonzalez, Liangliang Gu, Antoine Jasmin, Rayhan Abdul Latief, Thanawin Lee, Nguyen Anh Minh, Kartik Singh, Hanjie Yu
- 2022: Joshua Bai, Wenyi Ding, Jayden Ford, Jeffrey Guan, Jonathan Xavier Hartono, Pongsapak Laopakdee, Rayhan Abdul Latief, Aldrich Potgieter, Yurav Premlall, Chris Richards Jr., Juan Carlos Velasquez, Anson Yeo
- 2019: Jordan Duminy, Joshua Greer, Bo Jin, Christo Lamprecht, Lee Jang-hyun, Lin Chuan-tai, Jayden Schaper, Kartik Sharma, Samuel Simpson, Karl Vilips, Martin Vorster, Andi Xu
- 2017: Joshua Armstrong, Luca Filippi, Garrick Higgo, Christo Lamprecht, Fred Lee, Sean Maruyama, Naraajie Emerald Ramadhan, Jayden Schaper, Rayhan Thomas, Karl Vilips, Atiruj Winaicharoenchai, Wocheng Ye
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Junior Presidents Cup announced as new precursor to Presidents Cup 2017". www.ajga.org. October 5, 2016.
- ^ "2017 Junior Presidents Cup selection, eligibility criteria finalized". www.ajga.org. November 19, 2016.
- ^ "First Junior Presidents Cup Qualifiers Announced". www.ajga.org. August 2, 2017.
- ^ "Junior Presidents Cup field finalized". www.ajga.org. September 6, 2017.
- ^ "Junior Presidents Cup - 2022 Criteria". www.ajga.org. 2 August 2017. Retrieved September 17, 2022.
- ^ "Day 1 at #JrPresidentsCup". www.ajga.org. September 24, 2017.