Woods accepts responsibility for U.S Ryder Cup problems

Woods accepts responsibility for U.S Ryder Cup problems

MEDINAH, Illinois - Reuters

Although he has won 14 major titles, Tiger Woods has rarely been at his best at the Ryder Cup. The United States could win just twice in the last seven Ryder Cups. Woods leads a star-studded Team US at the Ryder Cup 2012. AFP photo

Tiger Woods may be the greatest golfer of his generation but at the Ryder Cup he has been Joe Average and on Sept. 25 accepted responsibility for the dismal U.S. showing for the past 15 years.

During a period where Woods reigned supreme over the golf world winning 74 PGA Tour titles, including 14 majors, he has been unable to extend his dominance to the biennial competition that pits the U.S. best against Europe’s best.

A mediocre 13-14-2 mark from six Ryder Cups does not enhance the brilliance resume of Woods,
who has been able to celebrate just one team win from six Ryder Cup appearances.

Woods’s struggles have coincided with lean times for the U.S. with Europe hoisting the Cup in six of the last eight events.

“Well, certainly I am responsible for that because I didn’t earn the points that I was put out there for,” Woods told reporters. “I believe I was out there, what, in five sessions each time and I didn’t go 5-0 on our side.

“So I certainly am a part of that and that’s part of being a team. I needed to go get my points for my team and I didn’t do that.

“Hopefully I can do that this week, and hopefully the other guys can do the same and we can get this thing rolling.” Medinah Country Club, which will serve as the scene for this week’s 39th U.S.-Europe showdown, represents a great chance for Woods to improve his record.

Medinah has been a happy hunting ground for the 36-year-old American, who picked up two of his 14 majors at the stately tree-lined layout with victories at the 1999 and 2006 PGA Championships.

Different theories
There have been differing theories behind why Woods has not been able to impose his will on the
Ryder Cup in the same fashion he has been able to in PGA Tour events.

Graeme McDowell, a U.S. Open winner and three-time member of the European team, believes that for much of Woods’s career he has played with a target on his back. The same bull’s-eye current world number one Rory McIlroy will have painted on his golf shirt this week.

“I kind of liken it to playing premiership football, the biggest teams, the Manchester Uniteds, the Liverpools, the Chelseas, the Arsenals,” explained McDowell.

“Any lesser team that comes to play these guys, they have a tendency to raise their game because it’s a huge game for an underdog to play a Tiger Woods.

“They get up for it. They are not expected to win.”

Right partner
Finding the right playing partner for Woods, who won three PGA Tour events this year, has always proven a bit of puzzle for U.S. captains. His singles record of 4-1-1 is impressive, but he does not play well with others as marks of 4-7-1 in foursomes and 5-6-0 in four ball suggest. Woods has been set up with just about everyone but has yet to find someone he truly clicks with.

This time it will be up to captain Davis Love III, who has partnered Woods as a player, to find the perfect match for the world number two.

“Tiger can play great and his partner not play well, or the other team play extremely well,” said Love. “Somebody has to play in Tiger’s bubble and I think that’s the challenge. Steve Stricker has found his way into that pairing because he can handle everything that’s going on around Tiger.

“It’s easier to play with Dustin Johnson probably or it’s easier to play with Jim Furyk than it is to pair a guy with Tiger because you get the extra attention and the extra pressure.”

Stars to meet in Belek for World Finals next month

ISTANBUL

Tiger Woods will lead the bill consisting some of the top golfers to compete in Turkey at the Turkish Airlines World Golf Finals next month.

Apart from Woods, the line-up of the tournament in Belek, Antalya, will include Rory McIlroy, Luke Donald, Lee Westwood, Justin Rose, Charl Schwartzel, Webb Simpson and Hunter Mahan.

The Turkish Airlines World Golf Finals is one of the world’s most lucrative tournaments, with a $5.3 million purse, of which the winner receives $1.5 million and $1 million goes to the runner-up.

The tournament is to be played from Oct. 9 to 12, ending on a Friday so that it won’t steal attention away from the weekend of the Portugal Masters on the European Tour and the Frys.com Open on the U.S. PGA Tour, the second event in the Fall Series.

Meanwhile, the World Amateur Golf Championships starts today with women’s competition in the Serik district of Antalya today.

Men’s Amateur Championships will also be played in Serik next week.