Tiger leads from the front to claim Presidents Cup for the USA

By Geoff Parkes / Expert

One notable absentee from this week’s Presidents Cup was the President himself, otherwise occupied at home rebutting political opponents who would prefer the trophy was presided over by a head of state more to their liking.

But if Donald Trump – golf tragic himself – could relate to any player and trust him to deliver for his nation, it would be Tiger Woods: a kindred figure, larger than life and also no stranger to extreme controversy.

Until things turned south for Woods in November 2009, after his personal life spectacularly blew up in his face at Melbourne’s Crown, Woods had been an enthusiastic and frequent visitor to Melbourne. And while his golfing presence on the sandbelt has fallen away in recent years due to sustained injury and a sharply curtailed schedule, Woods clearly has forgotten none of those lessons taken from earlier in his career.

Woods was the best player from either side this week, and by some distance. His seventh career singles win is a Presidents Cup record, his performance made all the more remarkable by having carried the weight of 11 other players as team captain, in this format no small responsibility.

(Speed Media/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

Courteous and respectful and showing grace and good humour when required, Woods drew people into Royal Melbourne in their thousands, recalling the grand old days of Australian golf, when there was a world-class tour and the world’s best players found reasons to travel Down Under, not reasons to avoid doing so.

International captain Ernie Els pitched his best player of the tournament, Mexico’s Abraham Ancer, into battle with Woods, both captains recognising the importance of seizing the early initiative. Ancer didn’t disgrace himself but was simply no match.

With the US 3.5 of the first four points on offer, the die was cast and the red team duly marched to an authoritative, come-from-behind win 16-14.

The final day of singles play had started nervously, the first four players all missing gettable birdie putts. That was fixed when bad boy Patrick Reed came through on his way to a sizzling start five under after seven holes.

There they were, the two biggest names of the week, Woods and Reed, lapping up the limelight.

Unlike thousands of fans who had worked themselves into a lather all week over the appearance of the Texan, Reed seemed completely unfazed by the drama of losing his regular bag man Kessler Karain, who was stood down by tournament organisers after an altercation with a fan on Saturday.

It would be naive not to have expected Reed to cop a few mouthfuls from fans after his lamentable bunker escapades in the Bahamas last week, but by Sunday the joke had well and truly worn thin.

While some fans believe that the price of their ticket entitles them to shout whatever they like at players, it also entitles them to act with a bit more class than some showed.

Four and two over CT Pan, Reed conspired to win a few fans back, firstly by letting his golf do the talking and also when he generously conceded a birdie to Pan in front of an appreciative gallery on the 11th green.

While all matches are worth the same points, as always on the final day of singles a handful of pivotal contests shaped the final result.

Hideki Matsuyama led Tony Finau by four shots after ten holes, but a poor bunker shot on the 12th triggered a slide, and a careless three-putt on the 17th opened the door for Finau to halve a match the Internationals badly needed.

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Young Chilean Joaquin Niemann led Patrick Cantlay after ten holes, but Cantlay powered home on the back. Meanwhile, Adam Scott, a leadership figure in the International team, hardly fired a shot in his match against Xander Schauffle, and a point that Els might have pencilled in for his side fell instead to his opponent.

As events developed into a putting contest during the afternoon the experience and composure within the US team shone through, with only Gary Woodland, four and three loser to Sungjae Im, failing to apply pressure in reverse.

Player after player drained clutch putts – Bryson De Chambeau, Schauffle, Webb Simpson and Cantlay just too relentlessly steady for their opponents.

The American onslaught also had the effect of taking the home crowd out of the equation, and while there were sporadic bursts of parochial excitement, the Internationals were never allowed to generate the type of buzz and momentum which spreads across a golf course like wildfire and feeds into inspired play from the remaining players.

With a mood of resignation hanging in the air, it was South Africa’s Louis Oosthuizen who suffered the indignity of his missed birdie putt on the 17th, securing the cup for the US. That would, however, underplay the effort of US veteran Matt Kuchar, who turned around a three-hole deficit at the turn.

Leaving the course on Saturday night, the consensus was that the Internationals needed to carry a lead larger than the 10-8 they had into the singles. And thus it proved, the team Woods described as “all my boys” grinding their opponents into the sandbelt on the final afternoon.

In the final wash-up only two Internationals notched a singles win: Australia’s Cameron Smith, a brave two and one winner over Justin Thomas, and impressive Korean youngster Im.

That wasn’t nearly enough for Els, who was left to rue his side’s soft finish on Friday when the Internationals didn’t quite turn the screws when the opportunity was there to shut the Americans out of the contest at the halfway point.

But as the vast crowds streamed out of the course, any disappointment must surely have been tempered by the fact they once again got to see the world’s greatest golfer grace a Melbourne golf course, a prospect that had seemed nigh impossible over the last few years.

In the end it was more than satisfying. Kuchar spoke for all the US players afterwards about how “cool” it was to play both for Woods as captain and alongside Woods as a teammate at the same time.

Cool it was. This Presidents Cup didn’t need the President. It had Tiger.

The Crowd Says:

2019-12-16T07:32:36+00:00

Birdie Bye Bye

Guest


The US PGA has had an office at Royal Melb GC for the past couple of years. From my understanding having a permanent event on the US PGA Tour has been discussed any number of times before and they are more than aware of Australia's situation. In the past there was a big issue with scheduling, but they want the season in America over with by the start of the NFL in September. Currently there is trip to Japan, China and Malaysia included on the tour and possibly they could pop down to Melbourne as a part of that one day. The big issue still is distance to get to Australia and also the purse you need to stump up. It is something like 10 million USD minimum required in today's money. I believe it could happen one day, but who knows how long away that is and will a lot of top pros bother coming? Maybe the throngs that attended RMGC over the past week might jolt a few folks in realising what we could have. From my point of view, we have a lot of people employed in the golf industry in Victoria compared to say the tennis industry and a hell of a lot more money tied up in golfing assets compared to tennis. Our government should look past the glamour pusses of tennis and look at supporting the sports industry that needs a leg up. With all that money thrown at tennis for generations I do not see that many people employed in the sport or performing in the sport in Victoria or Australia to warrant the insane money being tossed at tennis to benefit the Johnny Foreigners not us.

2019-12-16T04:21:29+00:00

IAP

Guest


True, they could've been way further ahead early. Saturday arvo was what gave the yanks a chance; even if they had have stayed even with them they would have won. But it was the Aussies that let them down. Yeah Scott (when they bothered to show him) and Leishman were so frustrating to watch. I like the look of Im, he was very cool under pressure. The yanks seem to consistently hit their approach shots 2-3 metres closer to the hole, which gave them many more realistic chances at birdies. It was good to see Patrick Reed stink it up though.

2019-12-16T04:01:02+00:00

Albo

Roar Rookie


The Internationals blew it on the Friday when they were heading for an 8-2 lead before crumbling late to finish 6.5 to 3.5. The big differences were the greater experience of the US team, the leadership and terrific form of Tiger Woods & Kucher, and continued poor form of the Internationals big guns like Adam Scott ( who still can't putt) and Mark Leishman who is still as inconsistent as ever. Ancer, Im and Smith were best for the Internationals , and Woods , Kucher & Thomas for the US. Experience got them home again, but augurs well for the future with these young Internationals promise of things to come.

2019-12-16T03:21:37+00:00

Jason Cave

Guest


Which PGA Tour event (not the 4 majors ie Masters, US Open, British Open, US PGA) could be considered to be held at Royal Melbourne after the success of the President's Cup?

2019-12-16T01:44:36+00:00

IAP

Guest


A massive choke from the internationals there. Should have been further up after Saturday and then blew it on Sunday. Why did we get American coverage on Sunday?

AUTHOR

2019-12-16T01:33:52+00:00

Geoff Parkes

Expert


It was very disappointing Chook, but overall everyone was a winner. The course was outstanding, the crowds were awesome and it was great to have true world class golf being played again in Australia. Might be a while for the next one though - Japan, SA and probably China all in the queue.

AUTHOR

2019-12-16T01:29:54+00:00

Geoff Parkes

Expert


That was definitely the key match, Luke. The mood around the course and in the media centre definitely changed when Matsuyama faltered. The US players and coaches were all glowing of Finau and his effort to come back. He’s a really unflappable guy.

2019-12-16T00:12:52+00:00

Machooka

Roar Guru


Morning G... and noice Wrap of what was a thrilling four days of golf. And some excellent golf there was indeed! There was no shame in the In'tls being run down by a very strong USA team... and agree a lead of 10-8 leading going into Sunday was never going to be enough. Just shows how important those 2 points gained in the last two games on Saturday turned out to be eh!?! Anyhow, thoroughly enjoyable golf for we tragic hackers to have witnessed... even though it didn't go our way for a rare victory in the end. :thumbup: :crying:

2019-12-15T23:24:52+00:00

Luke Ringland

Guest


I felt we were done for after Matsuyama's half point only. We needed to put them under some pressure.

2019-12-15T22:58:01+00:00

hammertime

Roar Rookie


I felt that Smith was potentially underplayed by Els. Although not having his best form his knowledge and comfort at RMGC is a huge advantage that could have been better utilised.

2019-12-15T22:36:24+00:00

Omnitrader

Roar Rookie


To be standing on the 17th when the putt went in was electric!

AUTHOR

2019-12-15T22:32:42+00:00

Geoff Parkes

Expert


Definitely feels like a missed opportunity hammertime.

AUTHOR

2019-12-15T22:31:38+00:00

Geoff Parkes

Expert


Im was outstanding tomothy. Woodland said afterwards that he felt that he played really well himself, but Im just never gave him a chance to get into the contest. Thomas is an outstanding player - what a great feather in Smith's cap to beat him one on one.

2019-12-15T21:26:16+00:00

hammertime

Roar Rookie


Great theatre even if the end felt sadly inevitable. Ernie had every right to feel that the best is still to come from his young squad but the next presidents cup tournament will be played on a course tricked up to suit the American bombers. It almost feels like it needs to be played on the sandbelt every time if we are ever going to win this again.

2019-12-15T20:50:26+00:00

Omnitrader

Roar Rookie


Was a massive effort by the internationals to just get close to the yanks, who had a combined ranking of 12 vs 40 for the internationals. In saying that, the senior players didn’t step up on the last day when it counted and that cost them the cup. Im and Smith were two shining lights.

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