Jamaica’s ladies bag Jodi Munn-Barrow Trophy at CGC
JAMAICA’s ladies returned to the island recently with the Jodi Munn-Barrow Trophy which they won at the 26th Caribbean Golf Classic held at the Casa de Campo golf course in Puerto Rico.
Although it’s Jamaica’s second hold on it, the Jodi Munn-Barrow Trophy has been around for the past ten years.
Munn-Barrow, who is president of the Jamaica Golf Association, was on the golf course and posted the best individual score to lead Jamaica to victory in the ladies’ section of the competition.
The Jamaican ladies’ team amassed 47.5 points for the win ahead of Puerto Rico who got 47 for their second place in the 13-country, three-day competition.
“The Jamaica Golf Association is very proud that the Jamaican team became victorious at the 2022 Caribbean Golf Association Classic held in Casa de Campo, Dominican Republic,” said Munn-Barrow.
“The ladies came out on top in the Jodi Munn-Barrow Trophy and we are very proud of our women. It was a very small delegation but they all fought valiantly and they came out on top — beating Puerto Rico by half a point in the final standings — and we hope that this is the beginning of even more victories for our ladies teams,” she continued.
The other members of the winning ladies’ team were Michele McCreath, Sonia Stewart-Wittock, Diane Hudson, Leann Chong, Krystal Chung, Suzan White and Deborah Newnham.
There were two other trophies on offer, namely the Robert Grell Trophy for the men’s team and the George Noon Trophy for the country which amassed the most points in the ladies’ and men’s sections. Those trophies both went to Puerto Rico, who scored 120 points to win the Robert Grell Trophy and 167 points to take the George Noon Trophy.
Jamaica came fourth overall with 101.5 points, ahead of The Bahamas on 87 points.
Jamaica’s male team bagged fifty-four (54) points for fifth place while Trinidad and Tobago, on fifty-three (53), were sixth.
The members of the Jamaican male team were William Knibbs, Dr Mark Newnham, Robert Chin, Radcliff Knibbs, Carlyle Hudson, Dorrel Allen, Norman Pryce, Richard White, Peter Chin and Bruce Robertson.
The Caribbean Golf Classic is an event comprising teams of unlimited numbers from each participating member country playing 18 holes each day. The teams are divided into flights (or groups) based on handicap and gender. It is a modified, stableford competition in which points are awarded on a gross basis depending on the quality of play — par, over or under par, or the number of strokes taken to the score on a particular hole.