Pressure on USA to deliver on home soil

Fri, Sep 28, 2012, 01:00

   

RYDER CUP:EVERY TWO years, the metamorphosis at the Ryder Cup is a strange one to behold. Players who, week-in and week-out, compete with a greedy, singular focus must adapt to a situation where they are part of a team. Rather than do their own thing, these multi-millionaires – for these few days – must bond and high-five and hug the very same players who, week-in and week-out, are their on-course rivals.

And, yet, somehow, it works.

For this 39th edition of the Ryder Cup – over the Number Three course here at Medinah Country Club on the outskirts of Chicago – the two teams, Europe and the USA, have performed their duties with some aplomb. Their hands are tired from writing autographs, their eyes tired from staring at menus as one official function after another has engaged them. In between, there has been some time for golf, nothing too tiring. Now, the serious business has arrived. It will be all golf.

A little spice has been thrown in the mix by the words from Ian Poulter and Brandt Snedeker. “Boy, do you want to kill them in the Ryder Cup,” said Poulter, only outmatched by Snedeker – speaking at the rate of a hundred miles an hour – who remarked, “I’m going to try to beat their brains in as bad as I can.”

Winning, as ever, is what sport – and especially professional sport – is all about and such attitudes as those expressed by Poulter and Snedeker encapsulate the viewpoint that the Ryder Cup, of all team events in golf, is the one which most engages the players. Winning really does matter.

And, on this occasion, the collective strength of the two teams is probably the strongest in the match’s history: all 12 players on the USA team are inside the world’s top-23, all 12 players on the Europe team inside the world’s top-35.

Most of the pressure is on the Americans to deliver. The simple statistic which shows only two USA wins in the last eight stagings of the contest – to Europe’s six – is something which the American players find hard to take, never mind fathom. That this abject run has been subjected on them at a time when Tiger Woods – certainly the greatest player of his generation and some would attest of all time – and Phil Mickelson were in their prime only adds salt to the wounds.

In seeking to understand why Woods and Mickelson have experienced more pain than joy in these matches, Davis Love III offered the opinion that “they both came on to teams trying to win a whole bunch of points, they thought that is what they were supposed to do. Now, they just want to win. I can’t tell you how many times Tiger and Phil have both said, ‘whatever you want us to do, we’ll do it’.”

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