|
Nine
years, three defeats, two wipeouts and one absent superstar since the last time
it belonged to the United
States, the Ryder Cup changed hands Sunday
at Valhalla Golf Club, where the routine cheer was just as unexpected as the
outcome.
"Red,
white, Boo!"
For
sure, the homespun Boo Weekley inspired the U.S. team and its fans, but it
still wasn't easy coming up with a blueprint for success that didn't include
top-ranked Tiger Woods - who is recovering from season-ending knee surgery. Yet
that is exactly how the underdog U.S.
team played it, winning 16 ½-11 ½, with a trump of Europe's
aces that most observers didn't expect.
Sergio
Garcia of Spain, Lee
Westwood of England and
Padraig Harrington of Ireland
didn't win a match in three days. When Anthony Kim, a 23-year-old Ryder Cup
rookie, put a bruising, 5-and-4 defeat on Garcia in the first of the day's 12
singles matches, the Americans were off and running.
Jim
Furyk's 2-and-1 victory over Miguel Angel Jimenez of Spain
in the eighth match secured the victory, giving the United States the 14 ½ points it
needed, and it was over with four matches in progress.
And
so, after standing in mute misery, watching back-to-back-to-back victory
celebrations of group singing, flag waving and Guinness swilling by the
European side, it was somebody else's turn to smile.
"I'm
coming out of my skin right now, I'm so excited," said Kim, who was 2-1-1
and set the tone for the pressure-soaked last day with the way he handled
Garcia. "We're feeling pretty proud of ourselves."
Paul
Azinger, the first-time U.S.
captain, led the celebratory parade in his red golf cart, speeding down a
fairway past fans holding large flags.
U.S. players
quickly joined the act around the clubhouse. Weekley removed his cap and bowed.
Furyk fought back tears of joy. J.B. Holmes raised his arms to encourage fans
to raise the roof. Phil Mickelson grinned, as usual. Hunter Mahan and Kenny
Perry waved American flags from the clubhouse veranda.
Then
the champagne came out, and its spray filled the air. Azinger emptied the
contents of one bottle on Weekley's head.
On
the raucous scale, this one bordered on subdued, but it was surely satisfying.
The previous U.S. victory
was in 1999 in Brookline, Mass.
Perhaps
because that was so long ago, the U.S. team came up with a boisterous
performance and won by its largest margin since 1981.
"We
stuck to a message," Azinger said. "What's important now. We stayed
on message, and I wanted them just to play, and I told every player that they
were on a free roll this week because they weren't expected [to win] that
much."
Kim
was among six Ryder Cup rookies for Azinger, who tweaked the rules to focus
more qualifying points on this year's play and also doubled his captain's picks
from two to four.
Holmes'
2-and-1 comeback victory over Soren Hansen of Denmark set up Furyk's
door-slamming moment.
Holmes,
a long-hitting 26-year-old from nearby Campbellsville,
Ky., birdied his last two holes.
"I'm
still flying," he said. "I think I'm higher now than when I was out
on the golf course."
There
were some trying moments for the United States, but that is expected
on the last day of the Ryder Cup. The difference this time is that there were
more good moments than bad.
England's Ian
Poulter won more matches than anyone and finished 4-1-0 over three days.
Then
there was Mickelson, who finished 1-2-2 but couldn't have seemed happier. After
playing on five losing Ryder Cup teams, it is easy to understand why. Like
everyone else on the U.S.
team, he is riding a winning streak.
Source: Seattle Times
|