Tag Archives: corey pavin

Golf’s Power Shifting From U.S. to Europe; PGA Tour Feeling the Heat

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The Europeans’ recent domination of men’s professional golf in 2010 is going be an ongoing topic heading into next season.

You know the reasons. England’s Lee Westwood is the world’s new No. 1. The Europeans have seven of the world’s top 11 players compared to four Americans. Europe won the Ryder Cup. Young stars Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland and Martin Kaymer of Germany are declining to play full time in the U.S. next year, committing to the European Tour.

More and more Americans are making appearances overseas — at the expense of PGA Tour events.

“The golf courses and the tournaments and the players on the European Tour are definitely catching up to us,” admitted PGA Tour veteran Billy Mayfair.

In golf’s big picture, could that be a good thing?

Hall of Famer Greg Norman, who has proven to know a lot about business success, believes it.

“I think it’s great for golf, to tell you the truth,” Norman said. “When I was overseas and all this was taking place with the change in the No. 1 player in the world and the Europeans winning the Ryder Cup, I thought, you know, this is just the shot in the arm that the game of golf needs.”

Golf has seen similar shifts before. The Americans owned the world game with Jack Nicklaus, Tom Watson and Lee Trevino. Europe followed with Nick Faldo, Seve Ballesteros and Ian Woosnam, to hold an upper hand in the 1980s and early ’90s. Then the American regained control.

“Now it’s swinging back again,” Norman said.

What’s interesting, however, is how many of the young Americans see the power shift.

Or, actually, how they do not see it.

“I can’t speak for anybody else, but for me personally, I see them as people,” Bubba Watson said. “I don’t see them as Europeans or from other countries. I just see them as golfers.

“Some guys beat me, who cares where they’re from. I’m from Baghad, Fla,. Nobody is around going, ‘You’re from a weird place,’ you know. So I just see it as some great golfers beat me no matter where they come from.”

If Norman’s predictions are true, Watson might be wise to pay just a bit more attention.

While visiting China recently, Norman was asked to address the Tourism and Golf Forum.

“They want 30 million golfers in China in the next years, and there’s three million now,” Norman said. “When you think there’s 24, 25 million golfers in the United States and it’s been that number for decades and decades, imagine when China comes online in 20 years down the line.

“And then when China comes online, you’ve already got the Koreans doing extremely well. The development of the game of golf in Malaysia and Indonesia and Vietnam and Cambodia, to a degree, is just starting to skyrocket. And then you bring in India.

“So you got pretty much 50 percent of the world’s population just starting to get into the game of golf. So when you start looking out into the future, it’s extremely healthy. “

 

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Lee Westwood Waltzes to No. 1 Ranking

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Lee WestwoodHow perfect is this?

After what will be 282 consecutive weeks ranked as the world’s No. 1 golfer, beleaguered Tiger Woods will finally lose the top ranking at the end of this month, in part because he is not competing again until November. Woods will be replaced by England’s Lee Westwood (right), who has played only one tournament since early August because of injury and is again taking a break.

So the biggest shift in Golf’s World Rankings in almost six years comes while neither of the featured participants are playing golf — and when Westwood arguably isn’t even golf’s best European.

Germany’s Martin Kaymer just won his third straight tournament, dating back to the PGA Championship.

“We have always bowed to America’s dominance of the world rankings, with Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson one and two respectively,” said winning European Ryder Cup captain Colin Montgomerie. “But now we don’t just have Lee Westwood but also Martin Kaymer coming up as well.

“There is a changing of the guard towards Europe and also the European Tour.”

A lot of things about the PGA Tour changed this year.

Consider Matt Kuchar. Sunday’s 7-under back-in-the-pack finish in the McGladrey Classic is his last planned PGA Tour appearance of the year. Even so, Kuchar, with just over $4.9 million, is likely to win the PGA Tour money title. If he does, it will be the lowest amount to claim the title since David Duval ($2.5 million) in 1998, the year before the tour’s series of big TV contracts began.

 

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Rickie Fowler Came of Age in Ryder Cup

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NEWPORT, Wales — Next to the Europeans, who may still be swigging champagne from golf shoes following their 14 ½-13 ½ victory over the United States on Monday at Celtic Manor, the week’s biggest winner was American youngster Rickie Fowler.

The 21-year-old PGA Tour rookie, still without his first pro victory, was under a lot of scrutiny after being added to the U.S. team as a captain’s pick by Corey Pavin. Now he’s all but a given for future stardom.

The first PGA Tour rookie to ever play Ryder Cup competed in three matches, losing one and halving two to score a modest single point for the U.S. But his homestretch performance Monday in singles play was stuff that launches careers.

Down four to Italy’s Edoardo Molinari early in the back nine, Fowler birdied the final four holes to tie the match and keep America’s hopes alive in the next-to-last group to finish.

“Rickie turning that match around, birdieing the last four, was awfully incredible and very impressive,” Tiger Woods praised.

 

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Captain Corey’s Formula Almost Paved Way to Magical Victory

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Corey Pavin and U.S. Ryder Cuppers

NEWPORT, Wales — The U.S. Ryder Cup team came to life on Monday. Somebody please wake up Corey Pavin and congratulate him.

It wasn’t altogether obvious the U.S. captain was with us the past few days. Pavin was so robotic, you’d have thought he was eating Ambien and chips for breakfast every morning.

That made him the perfect fall guy Monday, when the Yanks were supposed to get mud kicked in their face. A funny thing happened on the way to utter humiliation. They almost staged the greatest Ryder Cup comeback of the millennium.

So now how do we feel about Captain Corey?

As the English say, the guy did a lovely job. It’s hard to admit because Pavin has been so churlish and boring that I almost wanted his team to get stomped.

That would have made it easy to call Pavin the worst captain since Edward Smith, who guided the Titanic into that iceberg. But it seems there was a method to his robotic madness.



 

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After Dismal Day, US Ryder Cup Team Focused on Comeback

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Corey Pavin, Dustin Johnson, Steve Stricker, Tiger Woods

NEWPORT, Wales — After almost being shut out during the Ryder Cup’s third-session play, the United States will go into Monday’s rain-delayed singles matches trailing Europe by a lopsided 9 1/2-6 1/2, but fueled by one prevailing fact.

Bigger comebacks have been made before.

Well, at least once.

After taking a 5 1/2-1/2 beating Sunday on the way to having a two-point advantage turned into a three-point deficit, the Americans looked to history for motivation.

In 1999 at the Country Club in Brookline, Mass., the U.S. mounted a final-round rally to rebound from a 10-6 deficit, the largest comeback in Ryder Cup history, by winning 8 1/2 of the day’s possible 12 points.

U.S. captain Ben Crenshaw went into the final day that year insisting, “I just have a feeling.”

He was right. At Brookline, remembered for Justin Leonard‘s 45-foot birdie putt on the 17th hole and the celebration it ignited, the Americans won the day’s opening six matches, stunning Europe with a 14 1/2-13 1/2 victory.

“You know, Ben’s Ben and I’m me,” U.S. captain Corey Pavin said Sunday. “I’m going to put the guys out in the order that I think gives us best chance to win. They have to go out and perform and play, and if they do, I think we have a chance.”

Much of a chance?



 

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Ryder Cup Bringing Out the Worst of America’s Best

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Tiger Woods Ryder CupNEWPORT, Wales — In honor of the cream of the U.S. golfing crop, the soup special at the Ryder Cup cafeteria Sunday was leek and blue cheese.

You could smell it a kilometer away.

Europe tossed the Americans into a boiling pot and stirred up the biggest one-day rout in history. It won’t take a miracle for the U.S. to come back from a 9 1/2 to 6 1/2 deficit, but it will require the No. 1 and No. 2 players in the world to start acting like it.

Upon further review, that would be a miracle.

Is Tiger Woods the leek, or is Phil Mickelson the blue cheese? They’ve done everything at Celtic Manor except spill soup on their pastel sweaters.

Mickelson has established himself as the worst Ryder Cupper to ever wear red, white and blue. As for Woods, Steve Stricker carried him to two points earlier in the match. The sheep grazing on the nearby hillsides would have put up a better fight on Sunday.

Their 6 & 5 loss to Lee Westwood and Luke Donald was the worst match-play whacking of Woods’ career.




“It happens to the best of them,” Corey Pavin said.

Yeah, but why does it happen so often in the Ryder Cup?

Theories have ranged from disinterest to being marked men to a lack of camaraderie. Their Celtic Collapse isn’t exactly surprising given recent developments. Mickelson became a vegetarian after developing arthritis. Woods reportedly had marriage difficulties.

 

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Americans’ Woes Continue After Suspended Third-Session Play

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NEWPORT, Wales — Welcome into a very bad dream. You know it as the 2010 Ryder Cup, but the biannual golf showdown between Europe and the United States on Sunday may already have been lost — the causality being American interest not to mention the team’s wet socks appeal.

With each and every raindrop that fell all night and into the early morning, and then sporadically during the afternoon, competition at Celtic Manor became less significant and more an obligation — at least for the U.S.

No longer championship-level golf, it was slash and splash for the U.S., after the already rain-delayed third session was postponed from morning to the afternoon, and singles matches pushed into a Monday finish. And if that wasn’t enough to make the soggy Americans appear to be having anything but a good time, adding to their unhappiness was the third-session butt-kicking also being absorbed.

“You know, they dominated us today,” American Bubba Watson said.



 

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Unlikely Pair of Bubba Watson, Jeff Overton Power US to Early Lead

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Bubba Watson, Jeff OvertonNEWPORT, Wales — The combined Ryder Cup experience of Americans Bubba Watson and Jeff Overton added up to zero matches played. If that weren’t enough to make them pucker upon arriving at Celtic Manor, American captain Corey Pavin turned to the first-timers to anchor his team’s opening session, slotting them for the fourth and final group.

And, finally, they drew Europe’s Luke Donald and Padraig Harrington, among the most decorated players on the home team.

Surprise.

On the United States’ way to grabbing an early 2 1/2-1 1/2, the Americans’ most lopsided victory of the opening session was produced by the Watson-Overton pairing.

Donald is ranked No. 8 in the world and came into the match with a 5-1-1 record in two previous Ryder Cup appearances. Harrington is a three-time major champion making his sixth Ryder Cup appearance.

Watson-Overton dusted the Euro pair 3 & 2.

Then they enjoyed a good laugh.

Did they express to Pavin a desire to be paired together?

“No,” Watson said. “I don’t even like him. Look at him, he’s ugly.

“You know, all of us guys are good. We have got 12 guys on the team, 11 other ones besides me, so I would play with anybody. And his putter was hot this morning, and I love him as a partner.”



 

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Fashion Before Function Haunts Pavin, US Ryder Cup Squad

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NEWPORT, Wales — Golf has a lot of silly rules, but there are two that nobody can argue with.

1) The Ryder Cup shouldn’t turn into a “Seinfeld” episode.

2) The U.S. team shouldn’t have to borrow rain gear from a sportswriter.

The first happened Friday and the second still might thanks to Corey Pavin. One of the captain’s duties is choosing the team’s attire. Pavin apparently thought he was in charge of the U.S. scuba diving team.

The boys showed up in rain gear that was literally all wet. After an hour in the Welsh monsoon, the U.S. team was sinking fast.

Then it got the biggest break in Ryder Cup weather history. Play was suspended, which allowed PGA officials to scurry over to the merchandise tent.

“They were grabbing everything,” James said.

 

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As Rain Changes Schedule, Pavin Digs for New Strategy

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NEWPORT, Wales — Strategies changed Friday at the Ryder Cup after a seven-plus hour rain delay scrambled the three-day schedule, leaving the opening best-ball incomplete and pushing the afternoon alternate-shot format into Saturday. And beyond?

In an attempt to at least hope to crown a winner on Sunday, U.S. captain Corey Pavin and European boss Colin Montgomerie agreed to alter the playing schedule.

Instead of a total of five session played over three days, there will be four. But to retain the total of 28 available points, the two remaining two-man team matches remaining before the singles competition, will be enlarged from four groups to six.

The second session — Saturday morning — will consist of six foursome matches while the third session — Saturday afternoon — will consist of two foursome and four four-ball matches.

The 12 singles matches will still take place as originally planned Sunday afternoon — weather permitting.

The result is that every member of each 12-man team will see duty, forcing captains to depend on performances from four players in each group that he would have sat out.




The alternate shot format is considered the most difficult for many players to play.

 

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