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Que leads elite field into unpredictable TCC Match Play battles
November 22, 2025
Que leads elite field into unpredictable TCC Match Play battles
Que leads elite field into unpredictable TCC Match Play battles
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The field is set for the ICTSI The Country Club Match Play Invitational, where the Top 32 performers from the season-long 10-leg Philippine Golf Tour will trade the grind of cumulative scoring for the ruthless, hole-by-hole combat of match play.

It’s a different battlefield – one where reputations offer no guarantees and every hole becomes its own war.

The P2 million, season-ending tournament gets going Tuesday (Nov. 25) at the demanding TCC course in Laguna, with first-time Order of Merit champion Angelo Que looking to cap a triumphant season.

Though a stomach ailment forced his withdrawal in the Valley finale, Que’s dominant run – two victories at Pradera Verde and Eagle Ridge plus multiple podium finishes – secured his first-ever OOM crown with P1,560,916 in earnings. Now, he turns his focus to a format where experience, nerve and adaptability weigh heavier than conventional form.

Last year’s edition underscored the volatility of match play as unheralded contenders Arnold Villacencio and Albin Engino stunned higher-ranked rivals to crash the finals before Villacencio completed the improbable run with a commanding 4&3 triumph.

Match play’s beauty lies in its unpredictability. Unlike stroke play – where one bad hole can wreck an entire tournament – match play resets the battlefield every hole. A disastrous double bogey only costs a player one point, not a meltdown on the leaderboard. This frees players to attack aggressively, strategize boldly and recover instantly.

Momentum also swings quickly, psychological pressure mounts faster, and an underdog with a fearless streak can topple even the most decorated player.

Yet despite its reputation for chaos, this year’s cast suggests the form chart might hold – though history warns that reversals and surprises remain the persistent theme of this Pilipinas Golf Tournaments, Inc. centerpiece.

Villacencio returns as the No. 20 qualifier, while Engino missed the cut at 46th in the OOM, leaving the draw wide open for new shockers to emerge.

Que opens his title bid against former national teammate Gerald Rosales, who slipped into the draw as the 32nd seed. No. 2 Keanu Jahns, who skipped the Valley leg, will test his polished all-around game against Taewon Ha, while No. 3 Fidel Concepcion braces for a gritty encounter with veteran Mars Pucay, one of the most cunning match-play duelists in the field.

Other opening-day faceoffs include Guido van der Valk vs. Marvin Dumandan; Rupert Zaragosa vs. Sean Ramos; Reymon Jaraula vs. Nilo Salahog; Russell Bautista vs. James Ryan Lam; and Jaehyun Jung vs. Chonkoo Kang.

Meanwhile, Carl Corpus, fresh off his breakthrough PGT victory at Valley, steps into his first major professional match-play challenge against Tae Soo Kim. Former Philippine Open champion Clyde Mondilla, familiar with TCC’s punishing layout, takes on Elee Bisera.

Rounding out the strong cast are Aidric Chan, Jeffren Lumbo, Tony Lascuña, Collin Wheeler, Mike Bibat, Atsushi Ueda, Dino Villanueva, Jhonnel Ababa, Ryan Monsalve, Zanieboy Gialon, and Gabriel Manotoc – a group stacked with power players, tacticians and seasoned match-play contenders.