2024 - WEEK 51 Dec 16 - Dec 22
WORLDWIDE LEADERBOARDS
PGA TOUR EUROPEAN TOUR JAPAN TOUR SUNSHINE TOUR
ASIAN TOUR AUSTRALASIAN TOUR CHAMPIONS TOUR
LPGA TOUR LET JLPGA TOUR EPSON
KORN FERRY CHALLENGE AMERICAS
THE WEEK IN REVIEW (8/25 -8/31)
PGA Tour: Deutsche Bank Championship
Winner: Vijay Singh 64-66-69-63 262 (beat M. Weir by 5)
Site: TPC Boston - Norton, MA
STORY RESULT MONEY LIST STATS INTERVIEWS
European PGA Tour: Johnnie Walker Championship at Gleneagles
Winner: Gregory Havret 68-71-69-70 278 (beat G. Storme by 1)
Site: Gleneagles Hotel (PGA Centenary course) - Perthshire, Scotland
STORY RESULT MONEY LIST STATS INTERVIEWS
Japan Tour: Vana H Cup KBC Augusta
Winner: Shintaro Kai 69-70-70-69 278 (beat H. Hoshino by 1)
Site: Keya Golf Club - Fukuoka, Japan
STORY RESULT MONEY LIST STATS INTERVIEWS
Sunshine Tour: Vodacom Origins of Golf at Arabella
Winner: Garth Mulroy 69-72-69 210 (beat R. Sterne by 4)
Site: Arabella Country Club - Overberg, South Africa
STORY RESULT MONEY LIST STATS INTERVIEWS
Asian Tour: Pertmina Indonesia President Invitational
Winner: Scott Hend 71-69-66-66 272 (beat W.T. Lin by 3)
Site: Damai Indah Golf & Country Club - Jakartah, Indonesia
STORY RESULT MONEY LIST STATS INTERVIEWS
Champions Tour: Wal-Mart First Tee Open at Pebble Beach
Winner: Jeff Sluman 69-66-67 202 (beat C. Stadler & F. Zoeller by 5)
Site: Pebble Beach Golf Links - Pebble Beach, CA
STORY RESULT MONEY LIST STATS INTERVIEWS
Elsewhere…
Homestanding Minea Blomqvist edged fellow Fin Ursula Wikstrom by a single stroke to win the LET’s Finnair Masters in Helsinki. A birdie at the final holes gave Blomqvist a closing 65 for a 202 total………Rui Kitada claimed her fifth career JLPGA title at the Yonex Ladies in Nagaoka, her 207 54-hole total beating Erina Hara by three………Gordon J. Brand won his second consecutive European Seniors Tour event at the Travis Perkins Senior Masters in Woburn, England, his 54-hole score of 207 edging Juan Quiros by two………Finland’s Antti Ahokas won his second European Challenge Tour title of 2008 at the EKKO Tour Championship in Copenhagen, carding 272 aggregate to slip past Wil Besseling, Eirik Tage Johansen, Roope Kakko and Taco Remkes by one………Canadian Kent Eger posted an impressive 26-under-par 258 total to win the Canadian Tour’s Seaforth Country Classic in Ontario, edging Americans Wil Collins, John Ellis andDaniel Im by two.
ENGLISH AS A SECOND LANGUAGE
It wasn’t so very long ago – only about three years in fact – that Ty Votaw stepped aside, leaving the LPGA to search for the seventh Commissioner in its then 55-year history. At the time, Annika Sorenstam looked on her way to challenging the career records of Mickey Wright and Kathy Whitworth, marketable young stars like Cristie Kerr, Paula Creamer and Lorena Ochoa were in abundance, and, most tantalizingly, Michelle Wie seemed capable of lifting the entire enterprise upon her shoulders in the not-too-distant future. I wasn’t paying enough attention at the time to know what motivated Votaw to quit, but I did know enough to make one cogent statement:
“They shouldn’t have any trouble finding a quality replacement because the way the tour is positioned, nobody could screw this up.”
Guess I was wrong.
Truthfully, I didn’t join all the naysayers who slammed the eventual choice, Carolyn Bivens, when she quickly got into a spat about photo rights with, among others, the Associated Press (talk about people who buy their ink by the gallon!), nor did I dwell too much on the cries of one or two tournament sponsors who felt pushed aside by the new regime. Business, after all, is business – or something like that.
But this time Ms. Bivens has hit the jackpot.
Anyone with enough interest in golf to read this website is by now aware of the LPGA’s plan to make fluency in English mandatory among its players by 2009 – an utterly mind boggling idea that feels like it was pulled from a different century (and not even the 20th…). Make no mistake, the idea of making players more sponsor and media friendly is a solid one; to a large degree, the tour relies on sponsors for its very existence, so making pro-am or press conferences easier is a more-than-reasonable goal, but…
How did Ms, Bivens not think this would be a P.R. disaster?
How did she not figure that it would strike many as discriminatory? That some might even see it as an underhanded way to slow down the wave of young, highly skilled Asian players currently washing over the tour? That it would certainly raise the hackles of the politically correct just on general principle? Or, most tellingly, that with the LPGA being based in Florida, such a rule wouldn’t quickly get the attention of Sunshine State lawmakers wondering if it violates state laws preventing discrimination in places of public accommodation (which, as the Casey Martin case taught us, professional golf events most certainly are)?
And here’s another concern which might have struck Bivens & Co. as problematical: At present, the LPGA tour is far and away the tour in women’s golf. Whereas the PGA Tour is occasionally overshadowed by events on the European or Asian circuits (where many foreign stars play as frequently as they do here), the LPGA holds a virtual monopoly. It’s nearest competitor, the Ladies European Tour, is essentially a minor league by comparison, while the Japanese and Korean ladies circuits are, by LPGA standards, irrelevant. But if a significant number of Asian players choose not to comply with Bivens’ edict, what will happen? Since it’s unlikely that any such players will opt for retirement, they will surely head for the LET or Japan – very possibly the first step in those circuits closing the gap on the American tour just as the E Tour so effectively has on the men’s side.
So why risk the monopoly?
We’re only just scratching the surface on this but already, it would appear that the English-only rule has the word D-E-B-A-C-L-E written all over it – in bright red neon. Having already garnered the LPGA all manner of unwanted headlines, it is the type of story which is not likely to drift away in the next sports week’s news cycle. Short of a complete scrapping of the entire idea, this mess figures to get a lot worse before it gets better – and it’s really very difficult to envision it all ending well.
What were they thinking?
MORE RYDER CUP
There is a bit of a rumble growing that with his victory at last weekend’s KLM Open at Kennemer, Northern Ireland’s Darren Clarke may well have played his way onto Nick Faldo’s European Ryder Cup team – and, I believe, rightly so. The likeable Clarke, who closed with rounds of 64-66-66 over the venerable Dutch layout, has certainly been through it, enduring the death of his wife in 2006, then struggling to a 138th-place finish in the E Tour Order of Merit during a disappointing 2007. But in 2008 Clarke has returned to his elite form of the past, logging early top-four finishes at the South African and Joburg Opens before breaking through for a win at the BMW Asian Open in April. A tie for 6th at August’s WGC-Bridgestone Invitation slipped him back onto the international stage, and while an MC at the PGA Championship slowed the momentum, it was recaptured quickly enough in the Netherlands, where Clarke easily cruised past Paul McGinley by four. Currently standing 17th on both the European Ryder Cup world and E Tour points lists, Clarke will not play his way into an automatic berth on the team with anything shy of a miracle. However, with five past Ryder Cup appearances and a career Cup record of 10-7-3, it would seem difficult for Faldo not to select so proven a performer. And given the magnitude of Clarke’s personal tragedy and comeback, it will be a very well-deserved selection indeed.
Meanwhile, I ran into an exceptionally well-placed source this weekend who indicated real optimism that Rocco Mediate will, in fact, be one of Paul Azinger’s four upcoming captain’s picks for the American team. The popular Mediate, whose MC at the Barclay's broke a streak of 13 consecutive cuts made, may be slightly past his peak form of late spring, but were I Azinger I’d pick him instantly – and not just because the two are close friends. On a U.S. team that may struggle mightily to find players capable of producing under the stifling Ryder Cup pressure, Mediate, whose game settled in at a new level after taking Tiger Wood’s to the limit at June’s U.S. Open, would appear an ideal prospect. It seems odd that both he and fellow veteran Steve Stricker would be Ryder Cup rookies if tabbed by Azinger, as each has logged volumes worth of good golf over the years. But inexperienced in this particular event or not, I’d sooner bet on either of them to come through at Valhalla than any of Azinger’s other obvious choices. Indeed, I’d be inclined to pencil them onto Zinger’s dance card right now, leaving Zach Johnson Sean O’Hair, Hunter Mahan, Brandt Snedeker and several others to sweat over roster spots 11 and 12. But we’ll see…
IN MEMORIUM: BOB LABBANCE
Though he spent little time mixing with the world of professional golf, the game lost one of its greatest friends and historians when Bob Labbance passed away this past weekend after an all-too-short battle with Lou Gehrig’s disease. A Vermonter for as long as I knew him, Bob’s writing résumé covered a great deal of ground, including the guidebooks for Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine public-access courses, numerous club histories throughout the region and, most recently, a pair of wonderfully diverse titles that summarized well the range of his knowledge: The Life and Work of Wayne Stiles (an attractive and detailed catalog of the underrated Golden Age designer’s career) and The Vardon Invasion: Harry’s Triumphant 1900 American Tour, a long-overdue title that I told Bob, enviously, that I wish I had written – but I doubt I could have done it as well.
Yet beyond his huge literary contributions, Bob meant an even larger amount to me personally, this despite the fact that we never actually met face-to-face. The reason for this was simple. Much of my own golfing past lies in New England, where I went to college, worked for a number of years in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, and enjoyed the chance to play so many of the region’s little-known Golden Age courses that Bob so ably chronicled. But 17 years ago I moved to Los Angeles – about as far from all those quirky old New England designs as it gets. Almost immediately I pined for the Old Country (and still occasionally do), and it was Bob who always kept me in touch, sending copies of his regional magazines, and faithfully answering whatever questions my own research led me to ask regarding one ancient New England track or another.
A whole lot of people in the golfing world will miss Bob Labbance, but in a strange way, none more than me.
New England, which Bob kept right at my fingertips all of these years, now feels a million miles away.
THE WEEK AHEAD (8/25 - 8/31)
Site: TPC Boston - Norton, MA
Yards: 7,207 Par: 71
Defending: Phil Mickelson 268 (beat A. Oberholser, B. Wetterich & T. Woods by 2)
Field: World Top 25: All except Tiger Woods (1), Henrik Stenson (6), Lee Westwood (12), Justin Rose (14), Miguel Angel Jimenez (18), Robert Karlsson (21) & Luke Donald (22) Other Notables: All who survived the Barclay’s.
ENTRANTS WEBSITE GOLF COURSE AERIAL
European PGA Tour: Johhnie Walker Championship at Gleneagles
Site: Gleneagles Hotel (PGA Centenary course) - Perthshire, Scotland
Yards: 7,320 Par: 73
Defending: Marc Warren 280 (beat S. Wakefield in a playoff)
Field: World Top 25: Lee Westwood (12), Justin Rose (14) Other Notables: Michael Campbell, David Howell, Graeme McDowell & Colin Montgomerie
ENTRANTS WEBSITE GOLF COURSE AERIAL
Japan Tour: Vana H Cup KBC Augusta
Site: Keya Golf Club - Fukuoka, Japan
Yards: 7,173 Par: 72
Defending: Katsumasa Miyamoto 269 (beat S. Conran & K. Oda by 1)
Field: World Top 25: None Other Notables: Toshi Izawa, Prayad Marksaeng, Frnkie Minoza, Jet Ozaki, Jumbo Ozaki & Craig Parry.
ENTRANTS WEBSITE GOLF COURSE AERIAL
Asian Tour: Pertmina Indonesia President Invitational
Site: Damai Indah Golf & Country Club - Jakartah, Indonesia
Meters: 6.048 Par: 72
Defending: Juvic Pagunsan 269 (beat G. Bhullar by 2)
Field: World Top 25: None Other Notables: Wen-The Lu & Thaworn Wiratchant
ENTRANTS WEBSITE GOLF COURSE AERIAL
Sunshine Tour: Vodacom Origins of Golf at Arabella
Site: Arabella Country Club - Overberg, South Africa
Meters: 6,381 Par: 73
Defending: Andrew Curlewis 207 (beat A. Michell in a playoff)
Field: World Top 25: None Other Notables: Desvonde Botes, Darren Fichardt & Richard Sterne.
ENTRANTS WEBSITE GOLF COURSE AERIAL
Champions Tour: Wal-Mart First Tee Open at Pebble Beach
Site: Pebble Beach Golf Links - Pebble Beach, CA
Yards: 6,822 Par: 72
Defending: Gil Morgan 202 (beat H. Irwin by 2)
Field: Ranked: The entire Charles Schwab Cup top 20 except Bernhard Langer (2), Eduardo Romero (4) & Scott Hoch (5) Other Notables: Ben Crenshaw, Bruce Fleisher, Hale Irwin, Tom Kite, Sandy Lyle, Gil Morgan, Larry Nelson, Mark O’Meara, ave Stockton, Curtis Strange & Fuzzy Zoeller.
ENTRANTS WEBSITE GOLF COURSE AERIAL
Elsewhere…
LET – Finnair Masters – Helsinki, Finland
JLPGA – Yonex Ladies – Nagaoka, Japan
KLPGA – SBS Charity Ladies Open – Gangwon-do Province, Korea
European Seniors – Travis Perkins Senior Masters – Woburn, England
European Challenge – EKKO Tour Championship – Copenhagen, Denmark
Canadian Tour – Seaforth Country Classic – Seaforth, Ontario
THE WEEK IN REVIEW (8/18 - 8/24)
Winner: Vijay Singh 70-70-66-70 276 (beat S. Garcia & K. Sutherland in a playoff)
Site: Ridgewood Country Club - Paramus, NJ
STORY RESULT MONEY LIST STATS INTERVIEWS
European PGA Tour: KLM Open
Winner: Darren Clarke 68-64-66-66 264 (beat P. McGinley by 4)
Site: Kennemer Golf & ; Country Club - Zandvoort, Netherlands
STORY RESULT MONEY LIST STATS INTERVIEWS
Asian Tour: Brunei Open
Winner: Rick Kulacz 68-66-67-70 271 (beat W.T. Lu in a playoff)
Site: Empire Hotel & Country Club - Jerudong, Brunei
STORY RESULT MONEY LIST STATS INTERVIEWS
LPGA Tour: Safeway Classic
Winner: Cristie Kerr 71-67-65 203 (beat H. Alfredsson & S. Gustafson in a playoff)
Site: Columbia Edgewater Country Club - Portland, OR
STORY RESULT MONEY LIST STATS INTERVIEWS
Champions Tour: Boeing Classic
Winner: Tom Kite 69-67-66 202 (beat S. Simpson by 2)
Site: TPC Snoqualmie Ridge - Snoqualmie, WA
STORY RESULT MONEY LIST STATS INTERVIEWS
Elsewhere…
France’s Gwladys Nocera claimed her eighth career LET victory at the SAS Masters in Oslo, her 13-under-par 203 total beating Tania Elosegui and Samantha Head by three………Miho Koga won for the ninth time on the JLPGA tour, carding a nine-under-par 210 total at the CAT Ladies to edge Mi-Jeong Jeon by one………British Columbia’s Samantha Richdale took the Futures Tour’s Gettysburg Championhip with a 211 total, edging the tour’s dominant player, Vicky Hurst, by two………Scott Piercy won for the second time in three weeks on the Nationwide Tour, posting a 267 aggregate to win the Northeast Pennsylvania Classic by two over Brendon De Jonge and Cameron Percy………England’s wonderfully named Seve Benson won his second European Challenge Tour title at the Ypsilon Challenge in the Czech Republic, beating Rafael Cabrera Bello and Branden Grace in sudden death after the trio tied on 16-under-par 268 in regulation………Gordon J. Brand beat his near namesake, Gordon Brand Jr., on the sixth hole of sudden death to capture the British Senior PGA Championship on the European Senior Tour. The pair deadlocked after 72 holes at four-over-par 292………American Alex Coe won the Canadian Tour’s Jane Rogers Championship, his 265 total beating Canada’s Graham DeLaet by three in Mississauga, Ontario.
A NEW ERA IN GOLF
Having avoided writing about this for several days, I had absolutely no clue how to begin this, an obligatory piece on a tiresome subject. But then I ran into a club professional friend on Thursday afternoon, and before I could say much beyond “Hello,” he asked, very simply, “Does anyone care about the FedEx Cup?”
Of course, there’s a fundamental (and generally overlooked) truth about the PGA Tour’s decision to build its business model after the culturally not-so-analogous sport of stock car racing:
The FedEx Cup was a resounding success before its first spine-tingling shot was ever struck.
Why?
Because few people keep their eye on the sparrow more effectively than Tour Commissioner Tim Finchem. This, after all, is a man who spearheaded the creation of the World Golf Championship events – not because there was any great need to drag international stars to America any more often, but rather to quell any rumblings about the creation of a world tour.
The FedEx Cup is little different. A former economic advisor to President Jimmy Carter, Finchem more than understands that from a competitive perspective, the FedEx Cup serves no meaningful purpose. In a game dominated by four time-honored Major championships, it is historically irrelevant and will likely remain so, regardless of how many promotional dollars the Tour throws at it. Indeed, I suspect that history will far better recall Rocco Mediate for losing the U.S. Open that it will whomever holds up the vaunted cup next month at East Lake.
But that was never the point.
The FedEx Cup was, in fact, a really brilliant idea because it served a vital purpose. Conceived during 2005, it was hatched as a bargaining chip for dealing with the major American TV networks as yet another massive broadcasting contract was set to expire. At the time, golf’s TV ratings were on the decline, and the rumblings were loud that the days of jacking the networks for ever more money were fast coming to a close. So Finchem and his administrative cast of thousands devised their “playoffs” – or, more accurately, decided that where money was concerned, stock car racing was an ideal role model for the PGA Tour.
The results, we should note, were not altogether perfect. ABC/ESPN saw through the ruse (or simply found the Tour’s increasingly dull product a bad investment at any price) and walked away outright. With the other networks picking up the slack, this may not have affected week-to-week broadcasts too much (save for those who’d fallen in love with ABC’s inspired Nick Faldo-Paul Azinger broadcast pairing) but it does figure to prove a crucial negative in one harder-to-define way. With ABC/ESPN out of the equation, the Tour’s placement on Sportscenter, the sports information vehicle of modern American society, will inevitably slide – and it’s going to be difficult for Finchem to reach his goal of competing with this nation’s major sports if his standard weekly events are garnering only brief mentions in Sportscenter’s 28th minute.
But this little hiccup notwithstanding, the FedEx Cup achieved Finchem’s fundamental goal, because despite little logical reason to do so, CBS and NBC indeed broke the bank and shelled out record money for a new broadcast deal. This remarkable achievement on the Commissioner’s part kept his bosses – the PGA Tour players – a happy bunch.
The manifest silliness of a golfing “playoff,” after all, is of little interest to them. When it comes to judging their Commissioner, they simply see four consecutive seven million dollar purses in August and September and know they’ve got the right man for the job.
THE WEEK AHEAD (818 - 8/24)
Site: Ridgewood Country Club - Paramus, NJ
Yards: 7,304 Par: 71
Defending: Steve Stricker 268 (beat K.J. Choi by 2)
Field: World Top 25: All except Tiger Woods (1), Henrik Stenson (6), Justin Rose (12), Lee Westwood (13), Miguel Angel Jimenez (19), Robert Karlsson (21) & Luke Donald (22) Other Notables: Most everyone who’s healthy.
ENTRANTS WEBSITE GOLF COURSE AERIAL
European PGA Tour: KLM Open
Site: Kennemer Golf & Country Club - Zandvoort, Netherlands
Yards: 6,626 Par: 70
Defending: Ross Fisher 268 (beat J. Luiten by 1)
Field: World Top 25: Henrik Stenson (6), Justin Rose (12) Other Notables: Michael Campbell, Anders Hansen, David Howell & Paul Lawrie.
ENTRANTS WEBSITE GOLF COURSE AERIAL
Asian Tour: Brunei Open
Site: Empire Hotel & Country Club - Jerudong, Brunei
Yards: 7,013 Par: 71
Defending: Lin Wen-Tang 269 (beat A. Le Vescontes by2)
Field: World Top 25: None Other Notables: Lin Wen-Tang & Thaworn Wiratchant.
ENTRANTS WEBSITE GOLF COURSE AERIAL
LPGA Tour: Safeway Classic
Site: Columbia-Edgewater Country Club - Portland, OR
Yards: 6,397 Par: 72
Defending: Lorena Ochoa 204 (beat I. Park, C. Kim, S. Gustafson & M. McKay by )
Field: World Top 20: The entire Rolex top 20 except Ji-Yai Shin (6), Momoko Ueda (16), Yuri Fudoh (18) & Juli Inkster (20) Other Notables: Liselotte Neumann, Se Ri Pak & Grace Park.
ENTRANTS WEBSITE GOLF COURSE AERIAL
Champions Tour: Boeing Classic
Site: TPC Snoqualmie Ridge - Snoqualmie, WA
Yards: 7,264 Par: 72
Defending: Denis Watson 207 (beat G. Morgan, D. Quigley, R.W. Eaks, D. Eger, Jo. Ozaki & C. Stadler in a playoff)
Field: Ranked: Entire Charles Schwab Top 20 except: Jay Haas (1), Bernhard Langer (2), Eduardo Romero (4), Loren Roberts (7), Tom Watson (8), Joey Sindelar (17), Greg Norman (20) Other Notables: Ben Crenshaw, Bruce Fleisher, Hale Irwin, Tom Kite, Sandy Lyle, Graham Marsh, Gil Morgan, Mark O’Meara, Curtis Strange & Fuzzy Zoeller.
ENTRANTS WEBSITE GOLF COURSE AERIAL
Elsewhere…
LET - SAS Masters – Oslo, Norway
JLPGA – Cat Ladies – Hakone, Japan
Futures – Gettysburg Championship – Gettysburg, PA
Nationwide – Northeast Pennsylvania Classic – Moscow, PA
Euro Seniors – British Senior PGA Championship – Northumberland, England
Euro Challenge – Ypsilon Challenge – Liberec, Czech Republic
Canadian – Jane Rogers Championship – Mississauga, Ontario
THE WEEK IN REVIEW (8/11 - 8/17)
PGA Tour: Wyndham Championship
Winner: Carl Pettersson 64-61-66-68 259 (beat S. McCarron 2)
Site: Sedgefield Country Club - Greensboro, NC
STORY RESULT MONEY LIST STATS INTERVIEWS
European PGA Tour: SAS Masters
Winner: Peter Hanson 66-66-68-71 271 (beat N. Dougherty & P. Edberg by 2)
Site: Arlandastad Golf - Stockholm, Sweden
STORY RESULT MONEY LIST STATS INTERVIEWS
LPGA Tour: CN Canadian Women’s Open
Winner: Katherine Hull 71-65-72-69 277 (beat S.R. Pak by 1)
Site: Ottawa Hunt & Golf Club - Ottawa, Ontario
STORY RESULT MONEY LIST STATS INTERVIEWS
Champions Tour: Jeld-Wen Tradition
Winner: Fred Funk 69-66-65-69 269 (beat M. Goodes by 3)
Site: Crosswater Golf Club - Bend, OR
STORY RESULT MONEY LIST STATS INTERVIEWS
Elsewhere…
Sweden’s Lotta Wahlin won the LET’s S4C Wales Ladies Championship of Europe by defeating Germany’s Martina Eberl on the second hole of sudden death after missing a three-footer at the last that would have secured victory outright. The win was Wahlin’s second on 2008………Twenty-year-old Erina Hara claimed her first JLPGA victory at the NEC Karuizawa 72, her streaking 195 aggregate routing Ji-Hee Lee by seven………Seventeen-year-old rookie Haeji Kang of Korea won her first Futures Tour event at the Greater Richmond Classic, defeating Sophia Sheridan in a playoff after the paire tied on 205………Brendon De Jonge rode a Friday 64 to a four-shot victory at the Nationwide Tour's Xerox Classic, his 267 total beating Australian Jarrod Lyle by four………Sweden’s Klas Eriksson closed with a stunning 63, then defeated Wil Besseling and Alexandre Rocha in sudden death to win the European Challenge Tour’s Trophee de Golf Club de Geneve………Scotland’s Richie Ramsay recorded his first professional victory at the European Challenge Tour’s Vodaphone Challenge, his 272 total besting George Murray and German amateur Stephan Gross Jr. by one………Graham DeLaet won a three-way playoff with Daniel Im and George Bradford to win the Canadian Tour’s Desjardins Montreal Open after the threesome tied over 72 holes at 10-under-par 274.
RYDER CUP, PART II
European Captain Nick Faldo figures to have an easier time of it than his American counterpart (and former ABC broadcast partner) Paul Azinger, partially because he’ll be fielding a deeper, more talented team, but also because by virtue of the Euro selection system, he’ll only have to make the more traditional two captain’s picks.
With a large number of Europe’s best players spending regular time playing in America, Ryder Cup Europe uses a two-pronged points system, taking the top five players from a worldwide points list, as well as the top five players (not already qualified from the former list) from a points list generated exclusively from E Tour results.
Unlike in America, where the eight automatic qualifiers were determined following last weekend’s PGA Championship, the Euro points derby continues for the rest of the month, closing on August 31st. At present, the 10 automatics would be as follows:
From the world points list:
1) Padraig Harrington – Without question, the top active golfer in the world right now. Where better to start?
2) Lee Westwood – The world’s 14th-ranked player has finished among the top five in five of his last 10 worldwide starts, including a solo 3rd at the U.S. Open. Winless – amazingly – in 2008, but very much on form.
3) Sergio Garcia – His Major championship disappointments aside, Garcia has a sterling career Ryder Cup ledger of 14-4-2 in four appearances. However… It is interesting to note that he is only 1-3 in singles play, so without the right partner….
4) Henrik Stenson – The world’s 6th-ranked player went 1-1-1 in his Ryder Cup debut (2006) and arrives very much on form, tying for 3rd at the Open Championship and 4th at the PGA.. Point of reference: Stenson ranks 4th on Europe’s world points list, but only Phil Mickelson on the American side stands higher in the Official World Ranking.
5) Robert Karlsson – Has logged top-10 finishes in nine of his last 12 worldwide starts, and hasn’t finished worse than 20th anywhere since Doral in March. May be slightly past his peak of form, but still looks to be pumping on all cylinders.
And from the Euro points list:
1) Miguel Angel Jimenez – The 44-year-old Jimenez has enjoyed a strong E Tour campaign, winning twice and at times topping the Order of Merit. Has been consistent all year, tying for 8th at Augusta, and 6th at the U.S. Open, winning the prestigious BMW PGA Championship, and recently tying for 10th at Firestone. This will be his third Ryder Cup.
2) Graeme McDowell – It’s been a breakthrough year in Europe for the talented McDowell, with two wins and seven top 10s. A Ryder Cup rookie, but a tie for 15th at last week’s PGA Championship suggests he’s reasonably on form.
3) Justin Rose – The world’s 12th-ranked player has experienced a fairly flat season, recording only two top 10s in America and Europe – though one was a tie for 9th at last week’s PGA. On the plus side, however, Captain Faldo has a pretty deep squad if the world’s 12th best player falls so deep in his batting order.
4) Oliver Wilson – The first potential kink in a star-studded lineup. Though winless, the little-known (in America) Wilson has managed four 2nd-place finishes on the 2008 E Tour, including at the South African Open and the BMW PGA Championship. Something of a wildcard.
5) Soren Hansen – Like Wilson, a Ryder Cup rookie who rode several strong May/June finishes to a contending position here.
Faced with only two captain’s selections, Faldo’s work might get either easier or harder in the coming weeks as several bigger-name players potentially leapfrog men like Wilson and Hansen. As it stands now, however, the seemingly obvious choices would be:
Martin Kaymer – Twice an E Tour winner in 2008, and one of the world’s elite under-25s. On a team with plenty of experience already in place, a sound, logical choice.
Ian Poulter – For all the talk and the sartorial splash, Poulter is a seven-time E Tour winner who showed his mettle by charging home to 2nd at the recent Open Championship. He seems to welcome the challenge – plus he’s got one previous Ryder Cup (2004) under his belt.
Faldo lost a sizable contributor when Luke Donald went down with season-ending wrist surgery, but if either Kaymer or Poulter play their way onto the team, he might opt for his protégé Nick Dougherty or five-time Ryder Cup veteran Darren Clarke over the then-non-automatic Oliver Wilson or Soren Hansen.