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Presidents Cup debate still strong on number of matches
Published in The Saudi Gazette on 07 - 10 - 2015

International team captain Nick Price (L top), Jason Day (L bottom), Bae Sang-moon (R bottom) and K.J. Choi look at the Presidents Cup as they get ready to pose for a group photo before the 2015 Presidents Cup golf tournament at The Jack Nicklaus Golf Club in Incheon, South Korea, Tuesday. — Reuters

INCHEON, South Korea — The battle at the Presidents Cup began Tuesday even before the first match.
US captain Jay Haas still doesn't understand why the number of matches was reduced from 34 to 30 for this year's event, meaning he has to sit eight players over three days of team matches.
“You look at our lineup, and it's hard to sit guys,” Haas said. He has another powerful squad at the Jack Nicklaus Golf Club Korea with his son, Bill, having the worst world ranking at No. 29. That's still higher than seven players on the International team.
International captain Nick Price remains disappointed that PGA Tour commissioner Tim Finchem only reduced the number of matches to 30. He said his players lobbied strongly this summer to make it 28 matches, just as it is at the Ryder Cup and the Solheim Cup.
“The Presidents Cup should be on an apples-to-apples basis,” Price said. “We seem to think looking at the past that the most excitement there is in an event is when you have a 28-point format. I think the Solheim Cup showed that two weeks ago. So that's something that I think the guys who are going to play ... will continue to push for that.”
Americans have believed for years that fewer matches allow a weaker team to hide players. They used to say that about the Ryder Cup, which for years was close even when it appeared the Americans had the stronger team. Price said fewer matches allowed for more strategy in team play, and it kept the competition from getting out of hand.
He could easily have been speaking of his own experience in the Presidents Cup, because it hasn't been close for a decade. Ever since a tie in South Africa in 2003, the Americans not only have won the last five times, they have won by an average score of 19-15.
Going back to the inaugural event in 1994, only once has the International team won. That was in Australia in 1998, which was played two weeks before Christmas.
“I think we've seen in the past that the Presidents Cup needs more excitement,” Price said. “It needs to be more closely contested. Certainly most of us on the International team feel that hasn't been the case the last five or six Presidents Cups.”
It could use some tension in the final hour Sunday, so maybe this argument will spark even a smidgen of acrimony.
The Presidents Cup begins Thursday with five matches of foursomes (alternate shot), meaning two players from each team won't compete on the opening day. Five matches of fourballs (better ball) follow Friday, with two more players having to sit.
On Saturday, there will be four matches of foursomes in the morning and four matches of fourballs in the afternoon, leading to the 12 singles matches.
Previously, everyone played Thursday and Friday, and only two players sat out the morning and afternoon sessions Saturday.
“There's a lot more strategy involved when you have to sit guys out,” Price said. “And some people think that you're hiding the weakest players, but in actual fact, what you're doing is putting your strongest team forward. It's a glass half-full or glass half-empty, depends which way you look at it.”
All Haas sees are 12 players who flew halfway around the world and will have to sit out a match or two. The new rule requires everyone play at least three times by the end of the week.
The Americans only have one player — Chris Kirk — who has never competed in a Presidents Cup or Ryder Cup. The International side has five rookies, which might not be the worst thing for Price. A year ago, the US sailed to an 18-1/2-15-1/2 victory at Muirfield Village. — AP


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