Patrick Reed Opens Up On USA's "Buddy System" And Says He Wanted To Light Up The Press Conference Like Phil In '14

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The New York Times’ Karen Crouse interviewed Patrick Reed about an hour after the final 2018 Ryder Cup press conference and heard the Masters champ complain about his pairing breakup with Jordan Spieth along with other strong views on the USA team management side.

Furyk said the decision to split Spieth and Reed had been his call. As Reed silently seethed, the news conference ended. In a telephone interview less than an hour later, Reed expressed his frustrations with how the pairings were handled.

Now we have something this Ryder Cup lacked. A good old fashioned cat fight!

Reed described the decision-making process as “a buddy system” that ignores the input of all but a few select players.

“The issue’s obviously with Jordan not wanting to play with me,” Reed said, adding, “I don’t have any issue with Jordan. When it comes right down to it, I don’t care if I like the person I’m paired with or if the person likes me as long as it works and it sets up the team for success. He and I know how to make each other better. We know how to get the job done.”

While that was apparent at the last few matches, the Thomas-Spieth replacement far outperformed (3-1) and lifted the American team when the Reed-Woods duo went 0-2.

“For somebody as successful in the Ryder Cup as I am, I don’t think it’s smart to sit me twice,” Reed said.

That trademark humility strikes again!

He’s apparently forgotten the tee shot hit into the 7th hole chalets already.

And this about the press conference…

When Reed and Spieth were asked about their split-up in the interview room, “I was looking at him like I was about to light the room up like Phil in ’14,” Reed said.

Woulda made the flight home fun!

Justine! Patrick's Wife Takes To Twitter To Defend Her Man

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After mostly automated social posts, Justine Reed—she can’t confirm or deny—took to social media to defend her man after husband Patrick struggled in foursomes and four-ball play at the 2018 Ryder Cup.

G.C. Digital with the details of Reed’s defense of her husband’s play and suggestion that Jordan Spieth be asked why the vaunted Spieth-Reed partnership has ended.

Golf.com’s Dylan Dethier got a strange non-denial denial from Mrs. Reed regarding the legitimacy of the account and Tweets.

2018 Ryder Cup Europe Defeats United States 17 1/2 To 10 1/2: Let The Excessive Celebrations And Second Guessing Begin

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Here we go! By week’s end Thomas Bjorn will be named to head the fix Brexit movement and Jim Furyk will have been detained by U.S. customs for having not made putts on an American team that succumbed to an energized European squad.

Beth Ann Nichols’ game story for Golfweek.

Either way, the 42nd Ryder Cup featured everything we could hope for—well maybe a little more controversy—but plenty of great golf, at a 4K friendly venue in the glorious country of France and happy Europeans for the next two years. Until you mention Brexit.

We have full coverage over at Golfweek. I filed this assessment of the venue, which I’m conflicted about given that the architecture is wretched in spots and the setup artificially infused. Still, it did what the Europeans promised it would do as far as raising the bar for Ryder Cup venues.

I also offered this take on the state of the USA Task Force, which isn’t looking so hot these days given this week’s performance by leaders of the Task Force.

Eamon Lynch also opines on the state of the USA buddy effort and like me, wonders if Jim Furyk was hampered by the buddy system that put him in the job.

Speaking of all this, we may have just seen Phil Mickelson’s Ryder Cup career wrap up in less than pretty fashion, writes Gerry Ahern.

Tiger had an 0-4 week and was barely awake in the post round presser. Dan Kilbridge wraps up his week. Let’s hope the man gets a nice vacation!

His post-round press conference answers:

It was not a good week for the USA Captain’s week according to Justin Ray.

Ian Poulter delivered…make room for another Ferrari!

The Singles Are Underway! Will This Be An Epic Comeback Or An Epic Rout?

Or somewhere right in between? That seemed to be the prevailing view for our Golfweek Sunday singles predictions.

As I wrote for Golfweek, these 10-6 days are pretty ho-hum at this point. This is our fifth since 1999 and the setup would seem to set up nicely for America early, with some questions late.

Tiger, for his part, sounds very tired after the playoff run and quick turnaround to this event. His post-match interview with Todd Lewis:

The Europeans are feeling pretty frisky! They’ve got Molliwood graphics already.

This impromptu celebration broke out at a fan center Saturday night:


Poll: United States Trails 10-6, What Chance Do You Give Them To Come Back?

We’ve seen four 10-6 scores since 1999, to have seen a team overcome the deficit (USA in 1999, Europe in 2012).

The 2018 USA Ryder Cup team trails Europe 10-6 heading into Sunday’s singles at Le Golf National. What do you think?

What chance do you give the 2018 U.S. Ryder Cup team to stage a comeback from 10-6?
 
pollcode.com free polls


Historic: The Numbers Say Europe Registered The Most Lopsided Session Win In The 18-Hole Era

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Session one of the 2018 Ryder Cup proved sensational even after all the hype, and Europe’s 5-3 lead came on the heels of an afternoon 4-0 foursomes session that will go down in history for its efficiency.

As Golfweek’s Rich Skyzinski figured out, it was the most lopsided session in the 18 hole era. Check out the numbers. It wasn’t even close!

Tactically, Thomas Bjorn was seen as having pulled all the right levers (Tait/Golfweek) while I defend Jim Furyk in this Golfweek column for getting everyone in the first day action. But going forward, he needs to tighten up the lineup, even if it means upsetting some big names. Phil Mickelson, that’s you, writes Beth Ann Nichols.

The Americans have played better in foursomes over the last five Ryder Cups, only trailing Europe by a point until Friday’s sweep. As Justin Ray noted, the alternate shot dominance on home soil has been stout.

We Have Session One Matches For The Ryder Cup And...Some Surprises

The speculation is over! No more guessing who likes who most. We have Day One’s Four-ball matches set at the 2018 Ryder Cup!

The crew at Golfweek made their picks and I’m the only one who likes Europe’s chances, though in my Golfweek grades I was a tad harsh on Thomas Bjorn’s McIlroy/Olesen decision, not overly thrilled about the Koepka/Finau leadoff choice, but otherwise impressed at the curveballs the captains and their shuttle drivers threw our way.

Jeff Sherman’s evaluation, Las Vegas style:

My Golfweek assessment on video:

Americans: Figuring Out How To Follow The 2018 Ryder Cup On TV And Radio

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With the six-hour time difference for the East and nine-hours out west, too much of this spectacular Ryder Cup will be played in the wee hours.

Golf Channel handles Friday’s opening ceremony at 11 am ET, 8 am PT.

Television for the matches? That’s easy. Bill Speros at Golfweek with all of the Golf Channel (Friday) and NBC (Saturday/Sunday) air times, including match times.

For those unable to watch, PGA Tour Radio on Sirius/XM will have live coverage of the Ryder Cup radio broadcast. You can also listen to that broadcast here online.

For those of us onsite, radios are being sold to hear that broadcast. Miracles do still happen (take note other major events!).

Le Golf National Is Ready To Give Us Something Special

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Louis XIV would be jealous of the course conditioning at Le Golf National and while the style of design—American 80s faux links meets Stadium Golf—isn’t my cup of tea, nor is the silly hack-out rough setup, this will be the best Ryder Cup venue of our lifetimes.

Granted, the bar is not high here in Europe with venues chosen for financial reasons and American locations largely chosen based on vast scale. But the combination of risk-reward holes, routing and a reasonable scale should give us scenes we haven’t had before, or will have again except around the closing holes at Bethpage Black (2024).

Anyway, here is my case for Le Golf National as the high point until someone finally takes a Ryder Cup to Pebble Beach or the Old Course at St. Andrews.

(Almost) All Smiles At The Ryder Cup Gala Dinner!

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Looks like a mostly happy and dapper group of Americans at the Ryder Cup gala dinner last night.

The Palace of Versailles hosted the proceedings. Paulina is present too!

As Jason Crook notes, Dustin Johnson was relegated to Paulina photographer duties.

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"How a TV argument led to David Duval’s new leadership role with Team USA"

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Good read here from Golf World’s Dave Shedloski on how David Duval is trading in his pancake for a cart this week at the Ryder Cup. Good news, his IFB will come in handy for the Vice Captain channel this week in France.

Duval’s late addition to the vast coaching squad stems from his on-air debate with Brandel Chamblee during the 2016 Ryder Cup. Chamblee questioned the effectiveness and play of Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson, and Captain Davis Love’s players took heart back at the team hotel.

“He comes in, tie untied, hanging around his neck, carrying his briefcase from the set,” Love said. “He launched into this very passionate speech, how playing in the Ryder Cup was one of the biggest accomplishments of his career. But it was more [about the fact that] the David Duval that they just saw defending them on TV had walked into the room and was still fired up. We asked him to come back and hang out with us every night.”

Also worth a chuckle is Shedloski’s review of Duval’s place in Ryder Cup history as one of the players wanting to see some form of compensation for players. He calls it an initiative now.

“I don’t know the exact numbers, but it’s probably over $20 million now going to designated charities. It’s made a difference,” Duval said by telephone from his home in Denver. “I’m happy to have been a part of that initiative. I don’t know if this is me coming full circle, if you will, but I can see how you might think that. There’s no doubt that there’s a different environment now, that players have a much greater role in the direction of the U.S. team.”

Sam Snead On Golf's Mount Rushmore? Tiger Says So

I noticed a few were surprised at Tiger putting himself on golf’s Mount Rushmore but with 14 majors and the all-time PGA Tour wins mark in sight, I’m confident he’s safe.

But Sam Snead over Palmer, Hogan and Hagen?



ShackHouse 78: Tiger Mania And The 2018 Ryder Cup Preview

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Bonjour from France as ShackHouse reviews Tiger’s 80th win, the world reaction to his comeback and then dives deep…deep into the 2018 Ryder Cup with some reflections on the venue, where the teams stand and a look at some fo the fun prop bets offered up.

As always, you can listen wherever podcasts are streamed or via your ShackHouse free subscription.

Or below:

Le Golf National Has No Shortage Of Water And Rough!

The course setup for Le Golf National is distinctly retro.

As in, the loathsome injury-thick rough of the 70s, 80s and 90s that no one misses. Yes, the landing areas are generous enough at their widest spots—35 yards—but many of the holes feature water down one side, hack-out rough on the other side. The Forecaddie with details and photos.

Philosophically, I’m not sure how intentional the effect is to offset the Americans’ distance advantage off the tee, but like most, have my doubts. The strategy could backfire for Europe with players like Jon Rahm and Rory McIlroy, who thrive off hitting driver.

As a spectacle, the rough off the fairways is trimmed enough that we should see some strategic dilemmas, but any more than 10 yards off the fairway will force automatic layups and take away some of risk-reward intrigue posed by Le Golf National’s plethora of water hazards.