Tiger Woods helps USA retain Presidents Cup

By Darren Walton / Wire

The USA have won the Presidents Cup for the eighth straight time after establishing an unbeatable lead over the Internationals at Royal Melbourne.

Led by inspirational playing captain Tiger Woods, the US turned a 10-8 overnight deficit into Cup glory after dominating Sunday’s singles session.

Wins for Woods, Dustin Johnson, Patrick Cantlay, Xander Schauffele and the maligned Patrick Reed, two halved matches plus a guaranteed half point for Matt Kuchar were enough to give the star-studded Americans an unbeatable lead.

Kuchar, who had lost all four of his previous Presidents Cup singles encounters, clinched victory with a birdie on the 17th hole to go one up against Louis Oosthuizen.

Oosthuizen had been three up at the turn before Kuchar produced a tenacious back-nine comeback as the US became the first team in the event’s 25-year history to win the Cup after trailing into the final day.

Woods sparked the US fightback when he downed the Internationals’ previously unbeaten spearhead Abraham Ancer three and two in the opening singles match.

In doing so, the 15-times major champion became the most prolific winner in Presidents Cup history, surpassing countryman and career-long rival Phil Mickelson’s 26 victories in the match-play competition.

Johnson was never threatened in a four-and-three victory over Cup rookie Haotong Li that locked the scores up at 10-all.

Defeat for Li earned the Chinese youngster a dubious place in the history books as the only International player not to contribute even half a point at the 2019 edition.

After losing his previous three matches in a horror week, Reed ironically gave the US the lead for the first time since Thursday morning with his four-and-two success against CT Pan.

In a cruel blow for the Internationals, Hideki Matsuyama then blew a four-up lead to square with Tony Finau.

Sungjae Im restored hope for the underdogs with a four-and-three win over US Open champion Gary Woodland that locked the scores up at 11.5 points apiece before Adam Hadwin scrambled to square his match with Bryson DeChambeau.

But a three-and-two win for Cantlay over Joaquin Niemann, a two-and-one victory for Shauffele over Adam Scott (Internationals) and Webb Simpson’s two-and-one defeat of Byeong Hun An gave the Americans an insurmountable three-point buffer.

Not even Cameron Smith’s stirring two-and-one comeback victory over the previously undefeated Justin Thomas could save the Internationals from another beating after Kuchar sealed the deal.

The Crowd Says:

2019-12-16T04:10:11+00:00

Albo

Roar Rookie


The Internationals did pretty well for a mixed team of young kids and out of form oldies. With a bit of luck or some better team selections they could well have pinched this 2019 edition. They blew what should have ended the Friday with an 8-2 Internationals lead, and the writing was emerging onto the wall from that point on. Another couple of years experience from the likes of Im, Ancer, Niemann & Smith will benefit the Internationals for next time.

2019-12-15T22:13:21+00:00

Omnitrader

Roar Rookie


wasn’t a local broadcast, 9 was just broadcasting the golf channels pictures

2019-12-15T21:53:37+00:00

ProtectedZone

Roar Rookie


Anyone else underwhelmed by the local TV 'coverage'? Multiple matches in play, but ages spent staring into the same bunker while the US broadcast conducted an interview or whatever. Some matches/players hardly sighted.

2019-12-15T06:51:23+00:00

Mark

Guest


The Europeans beat the US regularly on their own. They don’t need the Internationals (and they wouldn’t agree anyway).

2019-12-15T06:43:26+00:00

Mark

Guest


But the problem is that it has been so terribly one sided. 13 editions, 11 US wins, usually by blowout margins. One tie and only one International win, 21 years ago. This 2019 event was very competitive and probably the Internationals should have at least tied, but if they can’t win at Royal Melbourne, it might be they don’t ever win again. In contrast the Europeans have dominated the Ryder Cup since 1983, winning 11 and tieing one of the last 17. And some of the Ryder Cups in that time have gone to the last match, in some cases (1991) the last putt of the last match. The comebacks on the last day by the US in 1999 and the Europeans in 2012 are famous, and the tension in 2010 as the last match went to the 17th was unbelievable.

2019-12-15T05:38:08+00:00

Jason Cave

Guest


Maybe merging the Internationals with the European Ryder Cup team (ie Team World v US) might be one way to keep the President Cup format going.

2019-12-15T05:27:44+00:00

SandBox

Roar Guru


Hope one day the internationals win a few. It’s needed to generate interest. No reason the President’s cup, can’t be similar to the Ryder cup. Just need it to stop being so one sided

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