9/29/2012

Bit Up and Down for Two Mac's

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Rory McIlroy and Graeme McDowell gave Europe their first point of the 39th Ryder Cup on Friday only to fall to Phil Mickelson and Keegan Bradley in the fourballs as the U.S. took a 5-3 opening day lead.

The Northern Irish duo, sent out first by Europe captain Jose Maria Olazabal, had lost a three-hole lead in the foursomes before snatching a victory for Europe at the 18th hole as the teams finished the morning tied 2-2 at Medinah.

The European tandem claimed their point from Americans Jim Furyk and Brandt Snedeker when McIlroy blasted out of a bunker to five feet and McDowell sank the par putt for a 1-up victory.

"It was a great game of golf, it really personified the Ryder Cup this morning," McDowell said.

"We played some great golf to be three-up and two very gutsy players come back at us with a few birdies and we're playing these last two holes all square and having to hit some quality shots down the stretch."

The U.S. partnership of Mickelson and 2010 PGA Championship winner Bradley, who trounced the previously unbeaten duo of Luke Donald and Sergio Garcia in the morning, held off the leading European pair with a birdie barrage in the afternoon.

The Americans combined for nine birdies, with Mickelson capping the onslaught by knocking his tee shot tight to the pin on the par-three 17th for the clincher.

"They got off to a very fast start, and at the end of the day we just gave ourselves too much to do," said McIlroy, who were four holes down at the eighth.

McIlroy had put his tee shot at 17 in birdie range but had to concede after Mickelson's brilliant tee ball.

"It was a fantastic shot, especially when he had to," the mop-haired Irishman said. "We thought a couple of birdies the last two holes might pull off a half, but Phil was obviously thinking otherwise."

In the morning, a run of six birdies in seven holes from the fourth boosted the Northern Irishmen, who led by three holes through the 12th.

That streak was started by a chip-in by McIlroy from behind the green at the fourth.

The Americans, however, fought back and ran off a string of three successive birdies from the 14th to level the match, setting up the dramatic finish at 18.

"It was a great match," said 23-year-old McIlroy. "They came back at us."

McDowell praised his playing partner.

"My job is easy. I'm playing alongside the greatest player on the planet right now," said the 2010 U.S. Open champion.


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USA Furyk About GMAC Ruling

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Rory McIlroy and Graeme McDowell were involved in a lengthy rules debate in the early stages of their foursomes win over Jim Furyk and Brandt Snedeker at the Ryder Cup.

After McIlroy's tee-shot to the par-three second ran through the green, the European pair claimed they were entitled to a free drop as their ball came to rest near a sprinkler head.

But Furyk argued against the claim, and after the match referee agreed, a second opinion was called for.

As the quartet waited for PGA Tour senior referee David Price to arrive, Furyk appeared to try to take the tension out of the situation by saying to McDowell: "We've been friends for a long time".

Price upheld the initial decision, and McDowell chipped to four feet after Furyk, to his credit, called for calm in the galleries as a smattering of boos rang out.

The home pair won the hole when McIlroy missed the par putt, but the Northern Irishmen claimed three in a row around the turn as Furyk called a penalty on himself at the 10th when his ball moved after he took a practice swing.

The Americans hit back from three down to take the match to the 18th, where Snedeker carved his drive into the trees and McDowell nailed a clutch six-foot par putt to secure a one-up victory.


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