The International (styled as The INTERNATIONAL) was a professional golf tournament in Colorado on the PGA Tour. It was played for 21 seasons, from 1986 through 2006, at the Castle Pines Golf Club at Castle Pines Village in Castle Rock, south of Denver.

It had the distinction of being one of two PGA Tour events not conducted at traditional stroke play, the only other exception is the match-play event, the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship. The International was the only tournament to use the Modified Stableford scoring system,

On February 8, 2007, the PGA Tour announced the permanent cancellation of the International. It was replaced by the AT&T National, hosted by the Tiger Woods Foundation, and held in the Washington, D.C. area; near sea level and at standard stroke play.

The Modified Stableford scoring system returned to the PGA Tour in 2012 at the Reno–Tahoe Open, also at high elevation.

Format

The Modified Stableford system awards points on each hole, based on the score relative to par. It is designed to reward aggressive play, taking chances to go for birdies (or better), as the reward for a low score on a hole is typically greater than the punishment for a poor score. For example, over a two-hole span, a birdie (+2) and a bogey (−1) gain one point, where two pars gain nothing. The scoring operates as follows:

  • 1986: Field cut to 78 after first round; cut to 39 after second round based solely on second-round scores; cut to 12 after third round based solely on third-round scores; winner determined solely by final-round score
  • 1987–1988: Field cut to 78 after first round; cut to 54 after second round based solely on second-round scores; cut to 18 after third round based solely on third-round scores; winner determined solely by final-round score
  • 1989: Field cut to 72 after second round based on two-round cumulative scores; cut to 24 after third round based solely on third-round scores; winner determined solely by final-round score
  • 1990–1992: Field cut to 72 after second round based on two-round cumulative scores; cut to 24 after third round based on three-round cumulative scores; winner determined solely by final-round score
  • 1993–1997: Field cut to 72 after second round based on two-round cumulative scores; cut to 24 after third round based on three-round cumulative scores; winner determined by four-round cumulative score
  • 1998–2004, 2006: Field cut to top 70 and ties after second round based on two-round cumulative scores; cut to top 35 and ties after third round based on three-round cumulative scores; winner determined by four-round cumulative score
  • 2005: Due to rain, schedule changed; no play Thursday; field cut to top 60 and ties after second round based on two-round cumulative scores; 36 holes played on Sunday, with winner determined by four-round cumulative score

Winners

{| class="wikitable" style="font-size:95%"

!Year!!Winner!!Score!!Margin of<br>victory!!Runner(s)-up!!Winner's<br>share ($)

|-

! colspan=7|The International

|-

| 2006 || Dean Wilson || align=center|34 points || Playoff || Tom Lehman|| align=center|990,000

|-

| 2005 || Retief Goosen || align=center|32 points || 1 point || Brandt Jobe|| align=center|900,000

|-

| 2004 || Rod Pampling || align=center|31 points || 2 points || Alex Čejka|| align=center|900,000

|-

| 2003 || Davis Love III (2) || align=center|46 points || 12 points || Retief Goosen<br> Vijay Singh|| align=center|900,000

|-

| 2002 || Rich Beem || align=center|44 points || 1 point || Steve Lowery|| align=center|810,000

|-

| 2001 || Tom Pernice Jr. || align=center|34 points || 1 point || Chris Riley|| align=center|720,000

|-

| 2000 || Ernie Els || align=center|48 points || 4 points || Phil Mickelson|| align=center|630,000

|-

! colspan=7|Sprint International

|-

| 1999 || David Toms || align=center|47 points || 3 points || David Duval|| align=center|468,000

|-

| 1998 || Vijay Singh || align=center|47 points || 6 points || Phil Mickelson<br> Willie Wood|| align=center|360,000

|-

| 1997 || Phil Mickelson (2) || align=center|48 points || 7 points || Stuart Appleby|| align=center|306,000

|-

| 1996 || Clarence Rose || align=center|31 points || Playoff || Brad Faxon|| align=center|288,000

|-

| 1995 || Lee Janzen || align=center|34 points || 1 point || Ernie Els|| align=center|270,000

|-

| 1994 || Steve Lowery || align=center|35 points || Playoff || Rick Fehr|| align=center|252,000

|-

! colspan=7|The International

|-

| 1993 || Phil Mickelson || align=center|45 points || 8 points || Mark Calcavecchia|| align=center|234,000

|-

| 1992 || Brad Faxon || align=center|14 points || 2 points || Lee Janzen|| align=center|216,000

|-

| 1991 || José María Olazábal || align=center|10 points || 3 points || Ian Baker-Finch<br> Scott Gump<br> Bob Lohr|| align=center|198,000

|-

| 1990 || Davis Love III || align=center|14 points || 3 points || Steve Pate<br> Eduardo Romero<br> Peter Senior|| align=center|180,000

|-

| 1989 || Greg Norman || align=center|13 points || 2 points || Clarence Rose|| align=center|180,000

|-

| 1988 || Joey Sindelar || align=center|17 points || 4 points || Steve Pate<br> Dan Pohl|| align=center|180,000

|-

| 1987 || John Cook || align=center|11 points || 2 points || Ken Green|| align=center|180,000

|-

| 1986 || Ken Green || align=center|12 points || 3 points || Bernhard Langer|| align=center|180,000

|}

Notes

References

  • Official tournament website
  • Coverage on the PGA Tour's official site