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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Europeans ride roughshod over U.S. in Ryder


Americans Davis Love III, left, and Chad Campbell were closed out here on the 14th hole, 5 and 4. 
 (Asociated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Doug Ferguson Associated Press

BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP, Mich. – Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson and the rest of the Americans took a beating Friday in the Ryder Cup – first from Europe, then from their own captain.

Europe wound up with 6 1/2 of a possible 8 points, its largest opening-day lead ever and the worst deficit the United States has ever faced in the 77-year history of the biennial event.

It was enough to leave U.S. captain Hal Sutton perplexed, disgusted and searching for what to do about it.

He benched Mickelson for this morning’s matches after Lefty – already a target for changing equipment last week and then not playing the course the final two days of practice – hit one tee shot that nearly struck his wife and another on the 18th that almost went out of bounds, costing him and Woods a chance to earn points.

Sutton blistered the Americans for being too scared on the greens, where they failed to put any pressure on the Europeans while going 70 holes and 6 1/2 hours before they led in any match.

“If the Americans keep this up, it won’t be long before they are considered the underdogs,” Sutton said before heading to the hotel for a meeting that wasn’t likely to be warm and fuzzy.

Europe, meanwhile, was loving every minute of it.

Colin Montgomerie set a Ryder Cup record by playing in his 29th consecutive match, teaming with Padraig Harrington to whip Woods and Mickelson 2 and 1 in the morning better-ball match and having even an easier time, 4 and 2, in the afternoon alternate-shot match against Davis Love III and Fred Funk.

Montgomerie now is 13-2-3 in his last 18 matches, the best percentage among any European. Even more meaningful was beating Woods and Mickelson – the American Dream Team – to set the tone.

This might have been the quietest day at a Ryder Cup, as most of the 38,000 fans sat in stunned silence watching Europe steamroll through a team that has higher world rankings, more majors and bigger stars.

Lee Westwood, Sergio Garcia and Darren Clarke also won both their matches, with Clarke and Westwood finishing the job Monty and Harrington started. They beat Woods and Mickelson in alternate shot with a bogey on the final hole, rallying after the Americans went 3-up after four holes.

Woods and Mickelson carved out clutch pars to square the match on No. 17, and Mickelson pulled his new 3-wood for a crucial tee shot. It soared to the left, took one hop off the out-of-bounds fence and dropped a few feet away. Woods had to take a one-shot penalty drop from the fence.

Mickelson had a chance to make good, but his wedge from 91 yards spun back some 25 feet.

“I let it slide on 18 with a poor tee shot … and it basically cost us the match,” Mickelson said.

No one knows how Woods felt. Assistant captain Steve Jones drove him and Mickelson away in a cart straight to the locker room.

“There’s a lot of pressure in the Ryder Cup,” Westwood said. “Everybody is entitled to make a bad swing once in awhile. He just made it in a critical situation.”

Putting the U.S. on life support.