9/25/2012

Irish Open Winner Ryder Cup Ready


Sergio Garcia has admitted thoughts of helping Europe to Ryder Cup glory hampered his form at the Tour Championship.

The 32-year-old, who failed to make the European team in 2010 but worked as one of Colin Montgomerie's assistants, finished joint 15th in the final event before the tournament.

And with his level of excitement at being back playing in the Ryder Cup in Chicago "probably a 12" out of 10, Garcia claims he perhaps lost his focus at Tour Championship.

"I had so many things in my head right now - I was probably thinking too much about the Ryder Cup," he said.

"I played every round with one of the American team and couldn't stop myself thinking: 'Right, I'm one up now' or whatever.

"I've always enjoyed the match and I just hope my game gets back to where it was. Hopefully I'll get some nice practice in and get going.

"I want to play as well as I can to help my team, although I've always said that I'd rather lose all my five games and Europe wins than win all five and we lose."

It is four years since Garcia last played for Europe and that ended not only in an American victory, but also him losing the top singles 5&4 to an inspired Anthony Kim.

He did not win a game during the week and was even left out of the second day foursomes - like Lee Westwood the first time he had ever been omitted from a session.

Westwood has since had things to say about captain Nick Faldo's decision then, but Garcia recalls: "I asked to be dropped - the week before I was sick all week and was on antibiotics.

"I didn't have enough energy and said to the captain and vice-captains that I'd love to keep going, but I don't feel like I should and hopefully somebody else will be able to do a better job."

His overall record is still a fine one - 14 wins and four halves in 24 games - and he has gone nine foursomes unbeaten, four of them with Luke Donald.

What European captain Jose Maria Olazabal had planned for him was probably going to become a little clearer today as the countdown to the match intensifies.



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McIlroy Proves Worthy FedEx Loser

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Rory McIlroy. showed he knows how to lose with good grace and extended congratulations to Brandt Snedeker, saying he "really deserved to win" the Tour Championship and the FedEx Cup. 

However he did chide himself for hitting only 23 of 56 fairways all week at East Lake, including just three on Sunday, then joked: "So I'm glad Davis Love has told them to cut the rough at Medinah."

Yet McIlroy's magnanimity should not obscure a flaw with the FedEx Cup points system, which failed to give him full credit due for brilliant back-to-back wins at the Deutsche Bank and BMW Championships.

Snedeker (31) performed brilliantly in Atlanta to claim the $1.44m first prize at the Tour Championship.

Should we not be disturbed, however, to see a guy who won twice and posted five top-10s claim the PGA Tour's top honour and a $10m bonus cheque when the man in second, McIlroy, registered four victories - including two in the FedEx Cup play-offs - and nine other top-10s?

Under a system devised to keep the FedEx Cup race alive through the Tour Championship, the points were recast before Atlanta, cutting McIlroy's unassailable lead to a mere trifle entering the season finale.

It all harks back to 2008 when Vijay Singh won two FedEx Cup play-offs and just had to turn up in Atlanta, pop the FedEx Cup in the trunk and drive home. The new system is a marketing man's dream but sporting lunacy.

Forget about points for a minute and look at a more accurate arbiter of performance on Tour: scores against par. McIlroy was 42-under for his 16 rounds in the four season-ending play-offs. He finished five clear of Dustin Johnson (-37), six ahead of Tiger Woods (-36), while Snedeker was fourth (-35). No question, Snedeker won fair and square last Sunday under the current rules and adroitly dismissed a question about McIlroy winning two play-offs to his one by saying: "Life is all about timing!"

Yet one has to question a points system so much at odds with reality.

Still, McIlroy was well paid for his trouble, earning $3m for second place in the FedEx bonus pool and $200,000 in a tie for 10th in the Tour Championship. This boosted this year's earnings on the golf course to just over $11.4m and his career prize money worldwide in five years as a pro to nearly $25m.

To his credit, Snedeker found it mind-boggling to win $11.4m in just one weekend. "I'm not by any means a flashy guy. Of anybody, I know I do not need $11.4m. It's unbelievable, crazy like winning the lottery," said the Tennessee native, who won't even buy himself a new car.

"I've had a car four and a half years and it's got just 24,000 miles on it. So why do I need a new car? Mine is new. I never drive it." Instead, he looks forward to "seeing if we can make a difference and help out people in Nashville and Tennessee", and the birth next month of his second child.

Filling the horizon, however, is his first Ryder Cup. He endorsed his reputation as America's best putter in Atlanta and, more importantly, proved that he can win on the big stage.

McIlroy was one of the first to check in at Medinah, travelling to Chicago on Sunday night with his coach Michael Bannon. 

Captain Jose Maria Olazabal and three members of his team -- Paul Lawie, Francesco Molinari and rookie Nicolas Colsaerts -- arrived on the official flight from London on Monday, while the remainder of Europe's Ryder Cup clan travelled independently.

Medinah will suit McIlroy to a tee, or should we say off it. The deep Bermuda grass at East Lake was like steel wool alongside the one-and-a-quarter inch rough in Chicago.

And he can rely on the adrenalin which swills around every team room at the Ryder Cup to restore his stamina after six highly charged weeks since his win at the US PGA Championship.

Source Belfast Telegraph




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