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The 19th Hole: How the Cup Was Won

Jim Furyk carries himself with a quiet intensity.  He is a driven, consistent, excellent player who has proven his meddle over the course of his career.  When he clinched the Ryder Cup for the United States on Sunday, though, Furyk became emotionally effusive.  In speaking with NBC Sports about what it meant to be the man to clinch the first USA victory in nine years and three tries, Furyk choked up with tears.  He said that he knew he would even after having several minutes to celebrate and appreciate the moment with his team and the fans.  After having been pasted in each of the last three cups – and being in the losing match in 2002 – Furyk was overwhelmed to regain the Ryder Cup.

The reaction of Furyk is an example of the kind of passion that the United States team had for this Ryder Cup.  From the moment the team was formed by Paul Azinger’s four Captain’s picks, the media and many fans were not wondering if the USA could win.  Rather, they doubted by how much the USA would lose.  With the last two results looming and Tiger Woods absent from the proceedings, that seems like a reasonable assertion.

The players, though, did not react that way whatsoever.  Instead, they embraced the team that they had.  Through extensive personality testing and plotting, Paul Azinger made the most experienced players on the team into captains of their own small teams.  These guys – Phil Mickelson, Jim Furyk, and Stewart Cink – managed their own team of four.  These pods then were used to form teams with the help of Azinger.  Knowing what they had, and didn’t, they took a page from the Europeans’ playbook and paired together guys with known chemistry.  While they did not have decades of playing experience together to verify this, they took a page from corporate America to figure it out quickly.  It worked.

With Woods out of the equation, the players had to find confidence and trust in each other.  That seemed to have happened by embracing the underdog role that they played entering the Ryder Cup.  Paul Azinger had a quiet confidence in his players and his method.  The players seemed excited to face the challenge but also very alive with belief that they could achieve the task at hand.  In their remarks to the media through the week, it was apparent that they were not only playing for themselves and this patriotic concept, but also for each other.  

After all, a team is only as good as the sum of its parts.  For all of the parts to come together into a cohesive unit, the team needs to believe that each person will play their part.  The six rookies did just that and contributed on a more than equal plane with the veterans.  The Captain’s Picks were brilliant for both sides, but the four US picks contributed to 7.5 points and were critical to the victory.  When the veterans struggled at times, the rookies picked things up to keep moving.  In the team matches, at least one player seemed on their game in every match.  The unit responded to its weaknesses and made them strengths.  

In the end, this team is going to appear brilliant and its captain genius.  Make no mistake, those adjectives are not that misplaced.  For the USA to accomplish this feat was quite remarkable given everything they faced.  

Still, though, this match was much closer than the five point margin of victory.  The quality of play by the Europeans was good enough to win the Cup for the fourth time in a row.  Though the biggest superstars for Europe – Harrington, Garcia, and Westwood – struggled and didn’t win a single match, the other nine Euros were strong.  

It all came down to timing.  Timely teams, timely shots, and timely putts determined the difference.  With so many team matches going to the 18th hole – 9 of 16 – it was a fraction of the shots played that were most critical.  Fortunately, this team and its captain were right for the situation and that’s why they’re probably still partying in Louisville.

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great post

I couldn’t agree more…it’s SO great to read all of the positive stories after weeks of seemingly not so positive articles about the state of golf in the U.S.

by red tees on Sep 22, 2008 2:50 PM EDT reply actions   0 recs

Tiger Woods

Tiger is the best player on the planet – bar none – but he’s been on more losing teams than winners. Ryder Cup is a team game and relying on one guy doesn’t get the job done. I don’t know if the other guys were intimidated being with him, or if they just thought that waving the Tiger flag in the Euro’s face would just make them run away – but teams with Tiger haven’t been that great.

These guys were relaxed and fired up like the US team hasn’t been in a very long time.

Good stuff RB !!!

"this ball will fit in that fairway"

by courtgolf on Sep 22, 2008 2:56 PM EDT reply actions   0 recs

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