Chattanooga Times Free Press

TOP OF THE WORLD

USA MAINTAINS STRONG GRIP ON PRESIDENTS CUP

BY DOUG FERGUSON

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — The Americans won the Presidents Cup again, no asterisk needed. Sure, the International team lost at least four players, maybe more, who defected to LIV Golf and were deemed ineligible by the PGA Tour for joining the upstart rival series funded by Saudia Arabia.

A roster made up of players from outside the United States — but not Europe, which competes against the Americans in the Ryder Cup — had eight rookies asked to play before 40,000 flag-waving fans chanting for the home team. And the Internationals have never won on American soil since these lopsided matches began in 1994.

No matter. The Americans are tough to beat right now in any cup, under any circumstances.

Jordan Spieth made putts from all over Quail Hollow Club and capped off a 5-0 showing at the four-day event, Xander Schauffele delivered the cup-clinching point and lit up his big cigar Sunday, and the Americans won the Presidents Cup for the ninth straight time.

Anyone surprised?

“I think that the biggest challenge for us this week was staying within ourselves and not letting the outside noise get to us,” Spieth said. “We saw notes … put up all over the place that we were supposed to win and we’re favorites and all that.

“What was so cool — which has been very consistent in the previous few cups that I’ve been involved in — is everyone’s really, really good at what they do.”

The final score was 17 1/2-12 1/2, not quite the rout it was at Liberty National in 2017 when this U.S. team started to take shape. The plucky International team still made them work for it.

Spieth and Patrick Cantlay were in control of their matches and set the tone. Even so, the Internationals kept it interesting, a resilient effort considering they were down 8-2 going into the weekend.

But then Tony Finau flipped his match, Collin Morikawa played like a two-time major champion, Schauffele delivered the winner and another celebration was on.

International captain Trevor Immelman referred to the LIV disruption as one of many hurdles facing his team. And he reacted strongly to any notion his 12 players — only three of them among the top 25 in the Official World Golf Ranking — never had a chance.

“When you consider that we were 8-2 down on Friday evening, this team is no joke, and I’m sick and tired of it being spoken of as a joke,” Immelman said. “We love this event, and we love our team. And we cannot wait to run this back and have another shot.”

The Internationals showed plenty of fight. They just don’t have a trophy to show for it.

The Presidents Cup stays squarely in the hands of the country that was coming off a record romp over Europe in the Ryder Cup last year before another one-sided home crowd.

Even the American newcomers produced, starting with Max Homa. He rallied from 3 down by winning four straight holes and then holding off South Korean phenom Tom Kim for a 1-up victory that gave Homa a 4-0 week in his Presidents Cup debut.

U.S. Captain Davis Love III paid tribute to Immelman for having to fill out his team three weeks ago after British Open champion Cameron Smith of Australia and Chile’s Joaquin Niemann were among the latest batch to join LIV.

Immelman’s thoughts aside, this was a mismatch. The Internationals still made a game of it, and at one point the matches were tight enough that a shocker at Quail Hollow was still possible. They needed everything to go right, though, and it didn’t.

“Trevor and his team did an incredible job of rising to the occasion,” Love said.

All 12 players on Love’s roster are ranked among the top 25 in the world, and just like last fall in the Ryder Cup at Whistling Straits in Wisconsin, most of them played like it.

“We really don’t have to do much,” Love said. “All we have to do is not mess it up.”

Spieth was in Sunday’s second match out and made putts from 25 feet, 20 feet and 30 feet for par after driving into the water and 45 feet that made Cameron Davis feel hopeless. He closed out the Australian on the 15th hole.

Spieth became only the sixth player to win all five matches in the Presidents Cup, winning his team matches with Justin Thomas.

Spieth, a three-time major champion and former No. 1 player, first qualified for U.S. teams when he was 20, but he had never won a singles match. He was 0-3 in the Presidents Cup, 0-3-1 in the Ryder Cup.

And then he fell 2 down after two holes before turning it around in a big way.

“I was more nervous than I should have been because I wanted to get that monkey off my back,” Spieth said. “When you get off early on a Sunday, they’re looking for red on the board. And it feels good to provide it.”

Thomas was trying to join him, but he lost to South Korea’s Si Woo Kim in a match that came down to 10-foot birdie putts on the last hole.

Cantlay put red American numbers on the board quickly for a 3-up lead over Australia’s Adam Scott and had lost only two holes in a 3-and-2 victory.

For Scott, it was another dose of disappointment. His first Presidents Cup in 2003 in South Africa ended in a tie. He has played on every team since then, all losses.

Still, he saw enough out of a scrappy team and the shield on their shirts with which they are starting to identify to not lose all hope.

“It still hurts not to win,” he said. “I think the big difference I felt the last couple years is what’s going on in our team room, what’s going on between the captains and the players, the caddies, everybody involved on our team. I think good things are really starting to happen in that environment.

“A cup is coming our way soon.”

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2022-09-26T07:00:00.0000000Z

2022-09-26T07:00:00.0000000Z

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