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Tournament History

1996 Final Scores
Kapalua Home Page
1982 David Ishii
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1983 Greg Norman
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1984 Sandy Lyle
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1985 Mark O'Meara
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1986/1987 Andy Bean
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1988 Bob Gilder
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1989 Peter Jacobsen
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1990 David Peoples
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1991 Mike Hulbert
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1992 Davis Love III
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1993/1994 Fred
Couples
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1995 Jim Furyk
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TOURNAMENT HISTORY
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THE SEED THAT SPROUTED SECOND SEASON
GOLF ON PGA TOUR
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Mark Rolfing and Fred Couples
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Its difficult to imagine a time when the PGA TOUR schedule didnt run
from January to December, but it wasnt long ago when the heart of the
televised golf season ended in late August and there was no PGA TOUR
golf in the final two months of the year. |
Then along came Mark Rolfing and the Kapalua resort on Maui. Their
idea for a post-season stroke-play championship eventually helped
change the face of professional golf in America. Kapalua gave rise to
what is now known as the "Second Season" on the PGA TOUR. |
Kapalua's reputation for great performances dates back to its first
tournament in 1982, then called the Kapalua Open. Hawaii native David
Ishii shot three rounds under par on The Bay Course and beat a stellar
field for the title and first place check of $15,000. USA Network
televised a 30 minute highlight show of that first championship, which
featured well known players such as Hale Irwin, John Mahaffey, Craig
Stadler, Ben Crenshaw and Curtis Strange. |
"That was a great start for us," said Rolfing, the accomplished ABC golf
reporter who was Kapalua's marketing director at the time and now
serves as tournament chairman. "People had to sit up and take notice." |
Which was precisely the reason the tournament was started - to bring
more attention to the Maui island resort. But prior to that first
competition doubt abounded over whether a late season golf event could
be successful. The PGA TOUR gave its blessing - but not its backing -
to go ahead with the event. |
"The thinking at the TOUR, as I remember it, 'You can go ahead and put
on a tournament, but who's going to play in it? And who's going to
televise it?'," Rolfing recalls. "They said it was too late in the year, but if
we wanted to try it, we were welcome to do so. No one expected to us
to find a television partner. In 1982, we were just having to test to see if
we could do it." Kapalua found out it could be done - and with aplomb. |
Just one year later ESPN televised the final three rounds of the
tournament live in prime time. The purse grew to $300,000 with
$100,000 going to the winner, a then obscure Australian player named
Greg Norman. Since then, the Lincoln-Mercury Kapalua International
has continued to grow, boasting a purse of $1.2 million, four days of live
coverage on ESPN and ABC-TV and some of the game's best players. |
The success of Kapalua's 1983 tournament (and a first year
made-for-TV event called The Skins Game) inspired the TOUR to
reassess the viability of late season golf properties. "The prevailing
wisdom was that no one would watch golf, that it couldn't compete with
football," said PGA TOUR's Steve Rankin, Vice President of
Tournament, Sponsor Affairs. "What those two tournaments proved was
that something other than football could be successful that time of year." |
What resulted from that conclusion was the advent of what is known as
the PGA TOUR coordinated event, which now includes the
Lincoln-Mercury Kapalua International and The Skins Game. |
"The turning point was 1983," Rolfing says. "We were basically playing
by our own rules and after that, we decided it was best to coordinate our
event with the TOUR. In the long run, it's turned out great for everyone." |
"There has been so much talk about post season and its role in the
game," adds Rolfing. "Clearly, this part of the year has become very
important to the players. Kapalua is not simply a made-for-TV event, its
a legitimate 72 hole stroke-play championship. This event started it all."
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