Ewan Murray's Guardian game story reminds us the Europeans have only once come back from a Sunday deficit and that was when they trailed by two at Oak Hill in 1995. He also offered this on the crowds.
How a patriotic, noisy crowd have lapped it all up by cranking up the atmosphere with the confirmation of each US point. They are perfectly entitled to do so, even if some of the whooping reaction to poor European shots remains in bad taste.
The galleries revelled in it all yet the composition of spectators told a tale of their own. Study the crowds and you might easily conclude that America is populated exclusively by white people, with the solitary exception of Michael Jordan. Yesterday, they gave instinctive applause to the two ex-Presidents Bush as they toured the course in a buggy. George Dubya seemed vaguely alarmed by the rare compliment. The players they follow are cast in the same God-fearing, Romney-voting mould. The overall impression is of the Tea Party at play, and their delight in battering Europeans is unmistakeable.
Most of the time, Poulter’s feverish aggression renders him deeply irritating as a person. This is, after all, a man who has a section on his personal website devoted solely to his collection of sports cars. But for one week every two years, he becomes a continent’s hero: the fuel on which Team Europe runs, the conductor of its orchestra, a lightning rod for America’s scorn.
Gene Wojciechowski thinks the 10-6 trailing Europeans have a shot if Keegan Bradley is abducted, Michael Jordan, President Bush, Amy Mickelson and Rev. Jesse Jackson are in the singles lineup and Lee Westwood is made a U.S. citizen.
The bookmakers at William Hill would agree, offering 1/8 on the US to lift the Cup and 9/2 on Europe.
Heading into Sunday, John Huggan says that seen beside Ian Poulter, Rory McIlroy "appeared flat, done in and unlikely to be fully prepared -- either mentally or physically -- for yet another Ryder Cup match less than 24 hours later."
In future, Woods will perhaps no longer be considered a central fixture in the US team. He forfeited that long-held conviction over two of his roughest days in the Ryder Cup, when his old nemesis, Phil Mickelson, aided by young sidekick Keegan Bradley, whipped the densely populated galleries into a frenzy.
Even with a less suspenseful finish likely, Dave Kindred says we've already seen why the Ryder Cup is more fun to watch, more fun for (some) to play and more rewarding of those having fun.
It is not silly to say the Ryder Cup creates more pure fun than the Masters, the Opens, and the PGA Championship do combined. Those events are freighted with history, even burdened by history, and they demand payment in pain from any player who would make their history his. Next to those exercises in masochism, the Ryder Cup is a dawn-patrol tee time with your buddies.
Highlights from the Golf Channel's talking heads:
Brandel Chamblee: “If you don’t consider the score. If you just take away the fact that the crowds involvement late in the match, you can’t help but think that the fact that Keegan Bradley and Phil Mickelson were not out there in the afternoon were a big part of why, I think, Europe was able to stage some miraculous comebacks.”
Nick Faldo: “They now have a real important job of putting out the 12 players. This is a big moment. The European Team has got to be thinking how are we going to win this and where are we going to win this. And they’re going to have to start looking at the back end of the 12 where America is looking at the front end of the 12.”
David Feherty: “I don’t think, in the history of the Ryder Cup, there’s ever been a team that has gone into Sunday four points behind feeling any better than this European Team. They have the momentum. It feels like they’re tied up, six points to 10.”
Well everyone except Peter Hanson, who didn't hide his anger at being benched Saturday as reported by golf.se. I tried to translate it but I'll just take the Swedish publication's word for it.
For fun, here's what Google Translate gave me:
Peter Hanson poked also in Saturday's second round. It made him very disappointed. "It's just as well I did not say anything, because that would not be so beautiful anyway," he says to the Swedish Golf.
The announcement came just before noon, when the morning matches were about to run out.
Then Peter Hanson had long stood and warmed up, to help clean up the figures in afternoon tee time. But among the eight names like Captain José Maria Olazábal had chosen was not the Swede.
Following the publication Hanson sat long and hard in the Europe section of the law, but when all the fire-balls had been knocked out, he finally set out to run a ranking workouts with trainer Richard Lindberg and caddy Mark Sherwood. Though judging by the determined steps and clenched his face, it was probably more about turning off his anger.
Jose Maria Olazabal has been a low-profile captain, at times appearing invisible. Yet, behind closed doors after a ragged, unprofitable first day for the stars of the European game, he voiced his displeasure in a speech of controlled anger.
‘We got the hair dryer treatment,’ said Graeme McDowell. And McIlroy, a fervent Manchester United fan, added: ‘It was a roasting, real Sir Alex Ferguson stuff.’
On only the second day, he could be accused of myriad misjudgments. Why did he drop a buoyant Ian Poulter for first-day fourballs in which Europe were swatted 3-1? Why did he join up Justin Rose, Poulter’s first choice of partner, with a woefully out-of-sorts Martin Kaymer? More damningly, why was he not a more prominent presence on the course? Where Love was ubiquitous, haring between holes and discussing pairings with his son – called, in case you were curious, Davis Love IV – the ever-intense Olazábal preferred to hover backstage, leaving the on-course motivational speeches to his quartet of deputies.
We know that the Spaniard is capable of Churchillian flourishes, given that he famously reduced several members of the European team to tears with an address at Valhalla in 2008. But he ought to have done more to animate a side in danger of heavy defeat. The verdict of Colin Montgomerie, the victorious captain at Celtic Manor two years ago, was withering as he claimed the players were not nearly demonstrative enough in their body language.
“Even when they win a hole, there is no energy or momentum,” the Scot said.
Jim McCabe's notes include the career achievement for Tiger joining Phil Mickelson as the all time leader in Ryder Cup losses, with 17. Ed Sherman with birdies and bogies, doesn't seen NBC too happy with what will most likely be a suspense free final day.
Gary Van Sickle is already handing out awards, that's how over this thing is. He gives Medinah a big thumbs-up and based on the other awards, you realize we've already seen more wacky and nifty things in two days this week than we saw all of the "playoffs." Another reminder how much better Ryder Cup golf is than anything we see the rest of the year.
The opening Watson v. Donald match goes at 12:03 ET, 11:03 CT, with NBC starting at noon, but will be preceded by Golf Channel pre-game coverage starting at 8 am ET. William Hill's take on the singles matches.
And the prize goes to The Daily Mail's Malcolm Folley, who will receive an exclusive one-on-one with self-presumed 2014 Ryder Cup Captain Colin Montgomerie as long as he doesn't ask about, well that you know, that thing.
Olazabal failed to generate the response he had hoped for until the end of a momentous day. Yet Davis Love III’s men need just 4½ more points to reclaim the trophy.
Olazabal’s captaincy of the European team is unlikely to be regaled in tales of wonder. For when the story of the 39th Ryder Cup is retold, we will think of Americans Keegan Bradley, Bubba Watson, Webb Simpson, Zach Johnson and the ageless Phil Mickelson burying the reputations of the finest golfers from the other side of the Atlantic beneath the first fall of leaves at the Medinah Country Club.
We will struggle to understand how Olazabal had been unable to galvanise such renowned players as McIlroy, Donald, Lee Westwood, McDowell, Garcia and Justin Rose into offering greater resistance.
‘It’s a crisis now,’ said Colin Montgomerie, who proved a shrewd captain of Europe at Celtic Manor two years ago. ‘Our players haven’t performed to their ability and that’s why the gap has widened all the time.’
Bubba v Luke Webb v Poulter Keegan v Rory Phil v Rose Snedeker v Lawrie D Johnson v Colsaerts Zach Johnson v GMac Furyk v Sergio Dufner v Hanson Kuchar v Westwood Stricker v Kaymer Tiger v Molinari
The US takes a huge lead into the afternoon four-balls and Captain Davis Love appears to be pulling all of the right strings while Captain Olazabal's lack of depth has been a detriment to the Europeans.
But the commercial breaks have been sensational! And so many of them too.
Europe must pick up a point or two in the all-crucial Saturday morning foursomes, first tee time at 7:20 a.m. CT. NBC does not come until 8 a.m. but is promising "live look" (take that contract attorney!) coverage on Golf Channel during "Live From" coverage from 7-8 am CT.
J. Rose / I. Poulter vs. B. Watson / W. Simpson L. Westwood / L. Donald vs. K. Bradley / P. Mickelson N. Colsaerts / S. Garcia vs. J. Dufner / Z. Johnson R. McIlroy / G. McDowell vs J. Furyk / B. Snedeker
A thrilling day of Ryder Cup golf that featured a bit of something for everyone, confirming the place of match play, team play and no rough as the best things in golf. The U.S.A. takes a 5-3 lead into Saturday's play.
Amy Mickelson shared that confidence. "At one point Jillian said, 'Oh, I'm sorry, Phil's in the trees.' I said, 'He's used to it, he'll be fine.'"
Adam Schupak of Golfweek--btw, it's so moving to see him back on the masthead!--has the money quote from Keegan's girlfriend on the bromance: “They look at each other like they are in love."
We saw the Dufner fist-bump. Then we saw Mickelson slap Keegan's ass and we loved it all because we've seen a zillion sweaty, dirty baseball players do it out of habit but here, in golf, where everything is manicured, it's the last thing we expect to see. Would Hogan slap Snead's ass? Nicklaus Watson's? Woods Mickelson's?
As for Tiger, Lee Trevino would have sat him down after the morning play. But Lee also reminds us he lost the one time he was captain. Bob Harig with the details.
"We just felt like we didn't want anybody to have to play five matches on this golf course," Love said. "It's a big, long golf course. It's tough. And exactly what we said was going to happen happened to one of our best teams. They played very well this afternoon, and just happened to get beat on the last hole."
Olazábal’s selection for the afternoon session was inevitably questioned as he dropped Ian Poulter after the Englishman, in partnership with Justin Rose, had beaten Woods and Steve Stricker in the morning foursomes 2&1. But nobody should deny America’s excellence in the fourballs.
The Guardian's Ewan Murray on Nicolas Colsaerts and the round of his life. Murray also notes the key decision by Captain Olazabal to pre-determine his afternoon lineup to get everyone on the course Friday.
With that in mind, it seemed curious that Olazábal omitted García, Luke Donald and, particularly, Ian Poulter from yesterday afternoon's play. Even more notable is the fact that call appeared to be premeditated, made before cognisance of the foursomes had been taken.
Michael Smith at Sports Business Journal on the PGA of America telling vendors to expect as many as 60,000 a day and also reports on monster merchandise sales. All for such a good cause, the PGA of America's coffers!
To be clear, the mostly NBC produced pictures, sound and announcing from Friday's Ryder Cup made the fantastic golf that much better.
Unfortunately, over the course of 11.5 hours, we were actually deprived of coverage.
We all know they have bills to pay, but showing a promo 18 times over the course of 11.5 hours? Obnoxious.
The primary atrocity committed by ESPN and the PGA of America was the call in three instances to leave live, thrilling Ryder Cup golf. Twice they showed a Scott Van Pelt narrated highlight package and most painful of all, an interview with PGA of America president Allen Wronowski that not a single person on the planet wanted or needed to hear.
Thankfully, the Sky Sports feed was online (thanks reader Tim) and showed twice as much golf with solid commentary from Butch Harmon and Colin Montgomerie, among others.
Too many times in the past decade the PGA of America has shown a complete lack of interest in requiring their partners to present a fluid telecast and instead allows networks like ESPN to run every promo imaginable without regard for the viewer. (Including on-air spots read by the announcers plugging broadcasts competing with Saturday's Ryder Cup telecast.)
The agony was compounded by the unwatchable RyderCup.com stream, which was avoiding competing with ESPN's telecast, leaning heavily on pre-packaged highlights and full screen graphics.
It's 2-2 after a wild morning and the Captains are already under fire for their afternoon pairings. More great golf to come...
The matches:
P. Lawrie / P. Hanson vs. B. Watson / W. Simpson
R. McIlroy / G. McDowell vs. P. Mickelson / K. Bradley
L. Westwood / N. Colsaerts vs. T. Woods / S. Stricker
J. Rose / M. Kaymer vs. D. Johnson / M. Kuchar
Geoff Shackelford
Geoff Shackelford is a Senior Writer for Golfweek magazine, a weekly contributor to Golf Channel's Morning Drive, is co-host of The Ringer's ShackHouse is the author of eleven books.