Americans' Dominance Leads To Presidents Cup Victory
President Donald Trump showed up about
an hour after the final match was underway Sunday at the Presidents Cup. Had he
shown up much later, he might have missed the start of a long celebration for
an American team that rarely had it this easy.
This contest really was over before it started.
"Honestly, it was really weird being out there today,
knowing there was no chance of losing," Dustin Johnson said after going
unbeaten in five matches. "I don't know how to explain it, but it was like
playing golf with my buddies. We were going to win no matter what."
The Americans so thoroughly defeated and demoralized the
International team that they needed just one point from 12 singles matches to
win the gold trophy. Daniel Berger delivered the cup-clinching moment in the
fourth match.
Charley Hoffman, one of five Americans who had never
experienced cup competition as a pro, chased after Berger and sprayed him with
champagne, and then Berger grabbed the bottle for a sip before he passed it to
U.S. captain Steve Stricker.
The final score was 19-11, and it was the seventh straight
victory for the Americans. They extended their dominance to 10-1-1 in this
contest, if it can even be called that.
"This is a juggernaut of a U.S. team," said Nick
Price in his third and final stint as the International captain, all of them
losses. "They're an overpowering team that played some phenomenal golf. It
was tough to watch, especially being on the receiving end."
The only consolation was keeping the Americans from a record
rout.
Charl Schwartzel, Adam Scott and Jhonattan Vegas each won
his first point of the week as the International team won the singles session.
That kept the Americans from becoming the first team to win every session in
the Presidents Cup.
No matter. All they really wanted was the cup, and the only
difference this year was who gave it to them. Trump became the first sitting
president to attend the final day of the Presidents Cup and the first to present
the team with the trophy.
"They came in here riding a ton of momentum and a ton
of confidence," Stricker said. "It was about getting out of their
way."
So thorough was this beating that Hoffman and Kevin Chappell
could have clinched the cup Saturday evening if they had won their fourballs
match. Stricker sent them out at the top of his lineup to give them a chance to
finish the job. Chappell nearly did, doubling over when he missed a 20-foot
birdie putt and halved his match with Marc Leishman. Hoffman was beaten by
Jason Day, a former world No. 1 who had gone nine straight matches without winning
until a 2-and-1 victory.
Instead, the clinching match fell to Berger, who had told Sky Sports in an interview Saturday, "Our goal from the minute we got here was to crush them as bad as we can. I hope that we close them out today and we go out there tomorrow and beat them even worse."
After each session, as the margin kept getting larger, the
talk was whether this U.S. team was as good as any. Stricker simply had 12
players who were on top of their games. Phil Mickelson at No. 30 had the lowest
world ranking on this team and was the only player who didn't make it to the
Tour Championship.
He also gets credit as an architect behind a new American
model of developing continuity and familiarity as they move from the Ryder Cup
to the Presidents Cup each year. It helps that the young core of this team has
a blast with one another.
"I've seen it, how talented these guys are, and for
them to bring out the best in each other is just impressive," Mickelson
said. "You don't get a performance like we had this week without that
little something extra, that little special something, and these guys brought
it out in each other."
Mickelson did his part by going 3-0-1 for the week. This was
his 23rd consecutive team, including every Presidents Cup, and Sunday was his
100th career match. He won it on the 17th hole against Adam Hadwin.
"It was weird to have a stress-free Sunday
singles," Mickelson said.
It was a familiar outcome for Jordan Spieth, who still
hasn't won a singles match in his five Presidents Cup and Ryder Cup appearances
combined. That didn't dampen his mood. So lopsided were these matches that
Patrick Reed said the Americans could have sent out three players on Sunday and
figured out how to get one point.
"Not if I was one of them," Spieth cracked.
The International team has not won since 1998 at Royal
Melbourne. It looked as though it was turning the corner two years ago in South
Korea when the Presidents Cup came down to the final two matches in a thriller.
But this one was a snoozer.
"It was a bit of a slaughtering this week," Scott
said. "We've got to stand up and take our ass-whipping like men and walk
out of here with our heads high."
Americans' Dominance Leads To Presidents Cup Victory
Reviewed by Show
on
October 02, 2017
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