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RYDER CUP BLOG

FROM OUR REPORTERS AT THE K CLUB, IRELAND

Captains' blog

  • Rob Hodgetts - Ö÷²¥´óÐã Sport golf writer
  • 21 Sep 06, 04:31 PM

rob_hodgetts55x55.jpgK Club – Ryder Cup captains Ian Woosnam and Tom Lehman have laid their opening cards on the table. And what hands.

The debate has less than 24 hours to run before we find out what beats what.

Both skippers have gone for arguably their trump cards first up.

Tiger Woods and Jim Furyk against Padraig Harrington and Colin Montgomerie is a mouth-watering clash to kick off the 36th Ryder Cup at the K Club.

The match-up is a classic-in-waiting on many levels.

Woods is the best player of his generation trying to reverse a lacklustre Ryder Cup record; Furyk, the world number three, is the man hand-picked to help him achieve that and banish the memory of Woods’ ill-fated 2004 pairing with Phil Mickelson. The pair lost to Montgomerie and Harrington in the first match as Europe went on to post a record victory.

Harrington is the local hero whose face is plastered all over buses and hoardings in his native Dublin; and Montgomerie, playing in his eighth Ryder Cup, is the man who holed the winning putt in 2004 and Europe’s talisman and on-course captain.

Neither team can win ultimate victory after the first match but the result will set the tone and deliver an early statement of overall intent.

The other matches in the fourballs are Stewart Cink and JJ Henry versus Paul Casey and Robert Karlsson; David Toms and Brett Wetterich against Spanish duo Sergio Garcia and Jose Maria Olazabal; and Phil Mickelson and Chris DiMarco playing Lee Westwood and Darren Clarke.

Fire meets fire in that last one as well.

But there are some big names to miss out on the first round, notably perhaps Luke Donald, though Woosnam and Lehman both stressed that all 12 players will appear at least once before the singles.

"I told my guys that this is a team game and whether you’re sitting out or you’re playing, you're adding significantly to the success of the team," said Lehman.

Woosnam added: "I’ve got nine players in the top 25 in the world and Stenson, Donald and Howell are right up there, and it is difficult to tell them they are not playing. Everybody is playing well but somebody has to be dropped. I could put anybody with anybody and every pairing would look fantastic."

The skippers both performed admirably at the opening ceremony, speaking more or less fluently and saying all the right things.

And if Lehman has looked assured from the start, Woosnam has certainly grown into the role after a shaky beginning.

But both men know that the initial PR softening-up phase is over and the main thrust of Operation K Club is about to begin.

From now on, their golf nous will be centre stage, and they will be judged on how shrewdly they shuffle their deck.

And then, it's up to their players to perform.

°ä´Ç³¾³¾±ð²Ô³Ù²õÌýÌý Post your comment

  • 1.
  • At 09:20 PM on 21 Sep 2006,
  • Akbar wrote:

I think your last line sums it up. Ace or no ace, it all falls down to the players performance and how each pair reacting to the adversity. Captains can only do so much.

May the best team win. Go Tiger!!

  • 2.
  • At 10:20 PM on 21 Sep 2006,
  • phil wrote:

Finally the small talk has finished and the greatest team event in golf will begin. Looking at the pairings from both sides looks good for the fourball format. But foursomes well that's a different matter. Alternate shot will always at this level be decided on short game and the nerve / ownership of your own actions. A captain cannot help you there!

  • 3.
  • At 01:16 AM on 22 Sep 2006,
  • Glenn Staunton wrote:

A lot is being made of the US Rookies, But I don't ever remember a Rookie in the Ryder cup who has been playing well all season performing badly when it comes to the event. The european team has been the true exponents of the " Whos he and my god he's just beaten our no 1 offering " for a long time now, Price V Mickleson is just one example in a long list. I would rather have rookies in form and confident with there games than headliner's who are struggling to find consistency with there games. I think the European team has some top names who have been inconsistent this season and as a result I think this match is more even than it looks on paper.

  • 4.
  • At 05:25 AM on 22 Sep 2006,
  • Ali wrote:

It's a mouthwatering prospect. Let's hope, whoever wins, that it's nerve racking, tension filled, and us spectators are glued to it.

  • 5.
  • At 02:26 PM on 22 Sep 2006,
  • steve cook wrote:

I think Woosnam has made a big mistake sending Monty out in the afternoon - even Monty said he was tired after Wentworth. I hope I am wrong.

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