What Race Is Dubai

What Race Is Dubai Rating: 3,9/5 8964 votes

Lee Westwood made European Tour history as pantomime villain Patrick Reed crumbled in Dubai. And while the system needs changing, it does add to the already wonderful drama, writes Alex Perry

  1. Dubai Races Today
  2. What Race Is Dubai People
  3. What Race Is Dubai United Arab Emirates
  1. 'The opportunity to win the Race to Dubai is a thrill and it would be a great way to end an unforgettable year.' At the other end of the age spectrum, Lee Westwood lies in fourth place and the 47.
  2. Patrick Reed remains on course to become the first American to win the European Tour's Race to Dubai at the DP World Tour Championship.
  3. The name The Race to Dubai suggests the end of the tournament, the Dubai World Championship, which is normally held during the end of November every year in Dubai. As said above the tournament prize money is US$ 7.5 million and it has been consisted by 60 top players in the race and it is played after the Hong Kong Open.
  4. Race to Dubai Race to Dubai Overview Rankings Projected Rankings News.

Spread the loveDP World Tour Championship: The European Tour hosts the DP World Tour Championship, and the season-ending ‘Race to Dubai ‘Finale. In what has been an eventful year, we have been lucky to see 23 events, since the Tour returned in July. With 15 of them being created from scratch. Crucially, Europe’s leading golfers.

There are three certainties in life: Death, taxes, and having a good old complain about the flawed Race to Dubai system.

It’s a debate as old as the year-long competition itself. A debate we’re reminded of every time the season-ending DP World Tour Championship rolls around.

How can someone who hasn’t even played in Europe be crowned European No 1?

In recent years it’s been Patrick Reed making the headlines. The honorary European Tour member shows up for a couple of pay cheques each year then heads to Dubai to boost his bank balance by a few more million.

This year he was joined – inexplicably, you might say – by Collin Morikawa in the spotlight as they both looked to become the first American player to win the Race to Dubai title. (And no, I don’t need reminding that Tiger Woods would have won the European Tour’s Order of Merit 48 years in a row if he had taken up full membership on this side of the Atlantic.)

Reed, the commentary team remind us every time he’s on screen, is a wonderful servant to the European Tour. There is no doubt he enjoys playing all around the world. He’s teed up everywhere from England to Australia, Hong Kong to Dubai.

But “wonderful servant”? Please. A quick flick through his record shows he’s played in 23 regular European Tour events in his entire career – five of which were DP World Tour Championships and two of which were the wallet-fattening Saudi International. And you can confidently assume he wouldn’t have played in any Scottish Opens had they not preceded a certain challenge for a Claret Jug.

Reed led the Race to Dubai at the start of the week having only a missed cut in Saudi Arabia and a tie for 3rd at Wentworth to show for it. The other points were picked up at two WGCs – one of which he won – and the three majors. He ended it in third.

At least Reed had set foot on European soil, I suppose. Before flying to Dubai, Morikawa had only left the US once for business purposes – the Mexico Championship, where Reed triumphed. A tie for 10th at Jumeirah Estates was enough to finish fifth in the Race to Dubai, largely thanks to his results in the WGCs and majors, including his breakthrough win at the PGA Championship.

So what’s the answer?

Well of course there should be a system that says players must play in at least X amount of regular European Tour events in order to be eligible for the Race to Dubai. But that significantly weakens the field and organisers won’t do anything to miss out on having a few more major champions in the field – even if it does just make the tournament a glorified version of Sports Personality of the Year.

It makes a complete mockery of it all when a player can go so close to becoming European No 1 when we’re not entirely convinced they would find the continent on a map.

Hopefully the PGA Tour’s takeov—sorry, “partnership” with the European Tour will now mean more players coming over from the US to compete. We’ll see.

But I can’t stay mad for too long. Like many Brits, there’s nothing I love more than a good moan about something that doesn’t really affect me. Plus it’s pantomime season and we all need a villain. Several times my phone lit up on Sunday alone with people telling me they hope Reed doesn’t win the Race to Dubai.

And it added just a little something extra to what was already a magnificent ending.to the strangest of European Tour seasons. The beauty, you might say, is in its flaws.

Race to Dubai drama

So why we were all busy booing and hissing in the Americans’ direction, Lee Westwood was quietly but efficiently piecing together a third successive round of 68 to move up into second and within touching distance of leader Matt Fitzpatrick.

And while Fitzpatrick clung on to win his second DP World Tour Championship and sixth European Tour title overall, all the drama was under the R2D column on the leaderboard.

Westwood, in the clubhouse at 14-under, needed to finish on his own in second to take the title. For Fitzpatrick to win it, he needed someone to tie for second alongside his compatriot.

Reed kept up his part for the bad guy deal, sticking in until the very end before two bogeys in the last three holes ended his chances. Sami Valimaki – the likely Rookie of the Year – finished bogey-par to end his chances. And when Viktor Hovland missed an eight-footer for birdie at the last, it meant only Laurie Canter – playing with Fitzpatrick in the final group – could thwart Westwood.

The Englishman, yet to break his European Tour duck, was tied with Westwood on the 17th tee, but a double-bogey five dropped him back to 12-under, and when his eagle attempt at 18 finished six feet short of the hole, Westwood could celebrate a third Harry Vardon Trophy success, having previously won in 2000 and 2009.

In the end Westwood pipped Fitzpatrick by just 17.8 points. For context, that’s about the same amount as finishing in the top 30 of the Mauritius Open. (It’s also about the distance in miles between where the two were born, if you’re looking for something irrelevant but interesting.)

  • Related: What’s in Westwood’s bag?
  • Related: What’s in Fitzpatrick’s bag?

History maker

For Westwood there was a little slice of history. At the age of 47 years, seven months and 20 days he is the oldest to top the European rankings.

20 years after his first Order of Merit, @WestwoodLee on winning the Race to Dubai.#DPWTC#RolexSeriespic.twitter.com/zIFlQvF29n

— The European Tour (@EuropeanTour) December 13, 2020

Not only that, he joins Seve Ballesteros (1976, 1977, 1978, 1986, 1988, 1991), Sandy Lyle (1979, 1980, 1985), Colin Montgomerie (1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2005) and Rory McIlroy (2012, 2014, 2015) as the only players to win the Vardon on three or more occasions.

And to think he wasn’t sure if he’d even be able to tee it up having arrived in Dubai suffering from a bad back.

“At the start of the week, I had no expectations,” Westwood explained. “The lads in the physio unit have stretched me in places I didn’t think I had. They kept me going this week.”

The obvious question

In an emotional interview after his win at the Abu Dhabi Championship in January, Westwood was asked if he was thinking about the Ryder Cup, which at the time was still due to take place just eight months later. Westwood said he was “not sure [he] could take any more Ryder Cups”, adding that he “was done as a player in the Ryder Cup”.

Now it’s a very different outlook as he looks to make an 11th and final appearance on the team before he becomes the likely successor to Padraig Harrington as captain in 2023.

“I’d love to play again, obviously,” he said on Sunday. “It beats watching.

What Race Is DubaiDubai

“But if I do qualify for the team then I’m clearly good enough. That’s the way I’m going to play it.

“I’m not going to say it’s one of my goals for next year because you should never make the Ryder Cup one of your goals. But I could see it happening.”

The masked major champion

The US Women’s Open finished on Monday after Sunday’s play was completely wiped out.

And what a final day it was. Hinako Shibuno – the 2019 Women’s British Open champion – led for a bit, then Amy Olson led for a bit, and World No 1 Jin Young Ko made a late push. But in the end it was wildcard A Lim Kim – playing in her first event in the US – who came from five shots back to take the biggest prize in women’s golf.

She doesn’t even have a Wikipedia page! (Though she will have by the time you read this.)

The South Korean star, who plays her golf on the KLPGA in her homeland, birdied the the last three holes to take a one-shot lead into the clubhouse. Then she just sat back and watched as her challengers fell away.

No player made more birdies on Monday than A Lim Kim!
Our #USWomensOpen champion's closing 67 is the @Lexus Top Performance of the Day. pic.twitter.com/t9ZEYq4yp0

— U.S. Women's Open (USGA) (@uswomensopen) December 14, 2020

Women’s golf just loves a surprise major winner. Kim began the week as the World No 94, having just broken into the top 100 a few weeks ago, and who can forget Sofia Popov winning at Royal Troon in the summer as the World No 304? And last year Shibuno herself made the whole world fall in love with her

Also, a huge shout out to Olson, who not only carried on playing but gave herself a shot at winning just 24 hours after learning of the death of her father-in-law.

Anyway, I am absolutely all in on December majors. What a treat. Same again next year?

  • Related: What’s in Kim’s bag?

That’s enough from me. You can follow me on Twitter if that’s your thing, and don’t forget to…

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DP World Tour Championship, Dubai
Tournament information
LocationDubai, UAE
Established2009
Course(s)Jumeirah Golf Estates
(Earth Course)
Par72
Length7,675 yards (7,018 m)
Tour(s)European Tour
FormatStroke play
Prize fund$8,000,000
Month playedNovember
Tournament record score
Aggregate263 Henrik Stenson (2013)
To par−25 as above
Current champion
Matthew Fitzpatrick
Location Map
Location in the United Arab Emirates

The DP World Tour Championship, Dubai is a golf tournament on the European Tour and is the climax of the European Tour Race to Dubai. It is contested on the Earth course at the Jumeirah Golf Estates in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. The title sponsor is DP World, a shipping company based in Dubai.[1]

The tournament was first held in 2009 when the Order of Merit was replaced by the Race to Dubai. It is contested by the leading 60 players in the Race to Dubai at the start of the tournament. It is the replacement for the Volvo Masters, which was a similar event for the leading 60 money winners on the Order of Merit.

Originally the tournament was to have a record prize fund of $10,000,000, of which the winner's share would be $1,666,660,[2][3] however in September 2009 it was announced that there would be a 25% reduction in both the overall prize fund and the winners cheque.[4] The prize fund was increased to $8,000,000 in 2012.[5]

The tournament also determines the Race to Dubai Bonus Pool, which goes to the top golfers on the Race to Dubai after the tournament. It was original set at $10,000,000 but reduced to $7,500,000 paid to the top 15 players with the Race to Dubai winner getting $1.5 million.[2][4] In 2012 the bonus pool was cut in half to $3.75 million and reduced to the top 10 golfers, with the winner getting $1.0 million.[5]

The 2013 DP World Tour Championship at Jumeirah Golf Estates delivered a US$44 million gross economic benefit to Dubai, according to independent research commissioned by tournament organisers, The European Tour as stated in Vision magazine.[6]

Final Series and Rolex Series[edit]

What race is dubai people

In 2013 the European Tour introduced the Final Series, a four tournament end of season series of tournaments consisting of the Turkish Airlines Open, WGC-HSBC Champions, BMW Masters, and culminating in the DP World Tour Championship. In 2016 the series was reduced to three tournaments with the removal of the WGC-HSBC Champions and BMW Masters, and the addition of the Nedbank Golf Challenge.

In 2017 the Rolex Series was launched, which is a series of tournaments with higher prize funds than regular tour events and includes the three Final Series tournaments.

Winners[edit]

European Tour (Tour Championship and Rolex Series)2017–
European Tour (Final Series)2013–2016
European Tour (Tour Championship)2009–2012
What Race Is Dubai
#YearWinnerScoreTo parMargin of
victory
Runner(s)-upPurse ($)Winner's
Share ($)
Ref
DP World Tour Championship, Dubai
12th2020Matthew Fitzpatrick(2)273−151 strokeLee Westwood8,000,0003,000,000
11th2019Jon Rahm(2)269−191 strokeTommy Fleetwood8,000,0003,000,000
10th2018Danny Willett270−182 strokesPatrick Reed
Matt Wallace
8,000,0001,333,300
9th2017Jon Rahm269−191 strokeKiradech Aphibarnrat
Shane Lowry
8,000,0001,333,300
8th2016Matthew Fitzpatrick271−171 strokeTyrrell Hatton8,000,0001,333,300
7th2015Rory McIlroy(2)267−211 strokeAndy Sullivan8,000,0001,333,300
6th2014Henrik Stenson(2)272−162 strokesVictor Dubuisson
Rory McIlroy
Justin Rose
8,000,0001,333,300
5th2013Henrik Stenson263−256 strokesIan Poulter8,000,0001,333,300
4th2012Rory McIlroy265−232 strokesJustin Rose8,000,0001,333,300
Dubai World Championship presented by DP World
3rd2011Álvaro Quirós269−192 strokesPaul Lawrie7,500,0001,166,600
2nd2010Robert Karlsson274−14Playoff[a]Ian Poulter7,500,0001,166,600[7]
1st2009Lee Westwood265−236 strokesRoss McGowan7,500,0001,166,600
  1. ^Karlsson won with a birdie on the second hole of a sudden-death playoff.

Dubai Races Today

References[edit]

  1. ^'DP World Championship, Dubai Unveils New Logo'. PGA European Tour. 16 May 2012. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
  2. ^ ab'McIlroy heads quartet in Race to Dubai'. CNN. 23 November 2009. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  3. ^'Montgomerie supports The Race to Dubai's global reach'. PGA European Tour. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  4. ^ ab'Revised Dubai prize fund levels announced'. PGA European Tour. 21 September 2009. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  5. ^ abBallengee, Ryan (5 January 2012). 'Race to Dubai bonus pool slashed in half for 2012'. Golf Channel. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  6. ^Szreter, Adam (April 2014). 'Teeing off: the changing face of golf'. Archived from the original on 20 April 2015. Retrieved 7 April 2015.Cite magazine requires magazine= (help)
  7. ^Bisset, Fergus (28 November 2010). 'Robert Karlsson wins Dubai World Championship'. Golf Monthly. Retrieved 8 December 2020.

What Race Is Dubai People

External links[edit]

Coordinates: 25°01′19″N55°11′56″E / 25.022°N 55.199°E

What Race Is Dubai United Arab Emirates

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=DP_World_Tour_Championship,_Dubai&oldid=1009690070'