Day: December 13, 2019

International Team maintains healthy lead at Presidents CupInternational Team maintains healthy lead at Presidents Cup

MELBOURNE, Australia – Ernie Els was quick to act. The captain of the International team at the Presidents Cup sensed a flatness in the attitude of his squad for a brief moment or two after they allowed a minor fightback from the U.S. late Friday at Royal Melbourne. RELATED: Two winning putts – and a T.O. celebration – keeps U.S. close | Day 2 match recaps | Day 3 morning match previews At one point the Internationals were well on track to win their first Foursomes session since 2005, leading in all five matches on the back nine. But some clutch putts from the U.S. allowed a late reprieve as the two teams shared the session 2.5-2.5. Despite the momentum shift Els rallied his troops and reminded them of the overall score. A 6.5-3.5 lead is their first through two sessions since 2005 and their biggest through the same period since a four point advantage in 1998. This was no time for negativity. This was a time to embrace their strong position. “This (U.S. team) is the best. Sometimes it bites you. But you put a spear in it and bite back,â€� Els said. “It’s perspective, isn’t it. I’ve got to look at where we are. It’s easy to just look at where we could have been, because it was looking really unbelievable. But we’re in a very good position.â€� Els rammed home the message to his men. And in the end the flip might have been a timely reminder that when you count your chickens before they hatch you are asking for trouble. “My guys learnt a lot from this afternoon. We won’t make this happen again,â€� Els said. “I want my guys to play as good as they can and get as good a result as they can. They have put a lot of work into this and it’s been quite a week already. This was probably good for them, showing what can happen the last couple holes.â€� If Els sounds intense it is because he is. ‘The Big Easy’ as he is commonly known has put countless months and hours into this captaincy as he tries to produce the first International win since 1998. With 20 of the points still up for grabs his side needs nine more. Eight of them go on the line on Saturday with four morning Four-Ball matches and then four afternoon Foursomes battles. Els has continued to lean on his secret analytics and data when it comes to his pairings. Three of his victorious Four-Ball teams from Thursday reunite after being split on Friday. The only change is Haotong Li coming in to play for the first time this week – possibly a product of the rule where a player must play at least one team session before Sunday Singles. To those in the team, his steadfastness on his pre-tournament plan is not surprising. “It almost looks like he wants this more than when he’s out there playing,â€� fellow South African and team member Louis Oosthuizen says of Els. “You could see him; I love the passion. I think if you give him a club in his hand, he’ll hit the shot for you. He’s so into this week and he’s been a real good captain. “He’s been an unbelievable player, as well, but this means a lot for me seeing how he is as a captain and how involved he is. He’s brilliant.â€� For U.S. captain Tiger Woods the final hour or so is something he and his side are grasping with two hands. Staring down the barrel of a potential 9-1 deficit they now have the ability to wrestle the lead before the Saturday afternoon Foursomes should they come out hot in Four-Ball. Woods has sat himself out for the first time Saturday morning after going 2-0 with Justin Thomas over the first two sessions. The other 10 Americans have combined for just 1.5 points so far and will need to shoulder more of the load. As their best performer Woods could have once again sent himself out but the 82-time PGA TOUR winner is perhaps mindful of burnout before the Singles. Whether he plays Foursomes in the afternoon remains to be seen. He has replaced himself with Rickie Fowler who is 2-0-1 with Thomas as a partner having played together at the 2017 Presidents Cup. Thomas provided the big putt on Friday, making a 17-foot birdie on the final hole to win the match. “That was kind of the game plan. It would be hard for me to go all the sessions,â€� Woods said. “I’ve been fortunate enough to go out there with J.T. and we’ve gotten two points. J.T. played great and Rickie played awesome this afternoon. They have been looking forward to playing with one another. They have had success before and so I sent them back out.â€� The other American win Friday came in similar fashion as Patrick Cantlay came up clutch on the final hole to provide victory with Xander Schauffele over Adam Hadwin and Joaquin Niemann. Fowler and Gary Woodland also won two of the last three holes to steal a half point against Sungjae Im and Cameron Smith. “At one point … it looked pretty bleak, but the guys turned it around,â€� Woods said. “They played phenomenal coming in. It was important for us to end the way we did and it totally changed the last hour.â€� Marc Leishman, who combined with Oosthuizen for a 3 and 2 win over Dustin Johnson and Matt Kuchar, felt the jetlag and rust was wearing off the U.S. side who arrived on Monday from the Hero World Challenge in the Bahamas. Woods said it was more about the conditions of Royal Melbourne – whose hard and fast greens are a stark contrast to most PGA TOUR events. “The energy has been there. These guys are all young and extremely excited about being a part of this team,â€� Woods said. “More than anything, it’s just getting a feel for this golf course. It is fast. It was faster today than it was yesterday. The guys have been able to go out there and get a feel for it. It’s amazing, I was telling the guys, the acceptance of a wedge shot to 20, 30, 40, feet is a good shot. That’s normally not the case, but it is this week.â€� Saturday becomes somewhat critical if history is a guide. The U.S. team has trailed only twice going to Singles in the history of the Presidents Cup. On those occasions they lost in 1998 and tied in 2003. The Internationals want to ensure they keep pace out front. “We are trying to not get ahead of ourselves at all. It’s a long way to go, but Ernie and his team of assistants have done a fantastic job of getting us prepared mentally and strategy-wise with the golf course,â€� International veteran Adam Scott said. “There’s a calmness, a calm confidence about our team here.â€�

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After two wins, Tiger will sit out Day 3’s Four-Balls sessionAfter two wins, Tiger will sit out Day 3’s Four-Balls session

MELBOURNE, Australia – After two successful sessions as a player, U.S. Team captain Tiger Woods will rest Saturday morning at the Presidents Cup. Woods did not insert himself into the lineup for the four morning Four-Balls matches at Royal Melbourne. Instead, he’ll stay 100 percent focused on captaining his team in hope of rallying from a three-point deficit. RELATED: Two winning putts – and a T.O. celebration – keeps U.S. close | Day 2 match recaps | Day 3 morning match previews | Quiz: Which team should you support? Even though he’s playing well – he’s been the best American player thus far, as he and partner Justin Thomas have two of the three U.S. match wins this week  – Woods said it was not a difficult decision to sit out. “That was kind of the game plan,â€� said Woods, who tied Phil Mickelson for most Presidents Cup match wins with 26 after he and Thomas won 1-up over Byeong Hun An and Hideki Matsuyama. “It would be hard for me to go all the sessions. I’ve been fortunate enough to go out there with J.T. and we’ve gotten two points.â€� Woods has a good alternative for Thomas, partnering him with Rickie Fowler for Four-Balls. Thomas and Fowler played three matches together two years ago at Liberty National, winning 2.5 points. “They’ve been looking forward to playing with one another,â€� Woods said. With just four matches in each session on Saturday, Woods has to sit out four players at a time. It’s conceivable he comes back for the afternoon Foursomes session, especially if the Americans need a boost. Woods is 12-4-1 in Foursomes in his Presidents Cup career. All players, of course, must participate in Sunday Singles. Woods has leaned heavily on his three assistant captains – Steve Stricker, Fred Couples and Zach Johnson – to manage the team while he’s been playing. On Thursday, Woods’ match finished first, so he went into captain mode for the other four. On Friday, though, Woods’ match was the fourth to finish, so the only match he watched was Rickie Fowler and Gary Woodland rallying to tie Sungjae Im and Cameron Smith. “I’ve been very fortunate to have had three of the most amazing vice captains,â€� Woods said. “They have all been there, done that, have seen it, and their commitment to this, I couldn’t have done this without them. I wouldn’t have accepted this role without them.â€�

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Two winning putts â€" and a T.O. celebration â€" keeps the U.S. closeTwo winning putts â€" and a T.O. celebration â€" keeps the U.S. close

MELBOURNE, Australia – “I love me some me.â€� Now you know what Justin Thomas kept yelling at Tiger Woods after rolling in a 17-foot birdie putt to win the 18th hole and their Foursomes match Friday against Hideki Matsuyama and Byeong Hun An at Royal Melbourne. RELATED: Scoring | Day 2 match recaps | Day 3 morning match previews| Quiz: Which team should you support? A half-hour earlier, Patrick Cantlay also produced some 18th hole heroics, his birdie from just inside 14 feet giving he and partner Xander Schauffele the win over Adam Hadwin and Byeong Hun An. Until those two putts dropped, the U.S. Team was headed for its first Foursomes session defeat in 14 years at the Presidents Cup. Even more relative, those putts jolted the Americans into life after a relatively listless afternoon in which they appeared headed for a massive deficit. At one point, the Internationals led in all five matches. Had Cantlay and Thomas not made their putts – and had Sungjae Im made his birdie putt from 13 feet on the 18th hole in the final match – the U.S. would be trailing 8-2. Instead, the Americans won two matches and tied the last one, making the deficit a more manageable 6.5-3.5 entering Saturday’s two sessions, followed by Sunday’s Singles. “I know one thing — if we don’t make those putts, this is a pretty deep deficit,â€� Thomas said. And if Thomas didn’t watch a YouTube video — featuring former NFL wide receiver Terrell Owens — on the long bus ride to the course Friday, who knows what he would’ve yelled at Woods after making his putt. Fellow TOUR pro and former Alabama teammate Bud Cauley sent the 11-second clip of Owens. Thomas had seen it before, but this time he also showed it to his U.S. teammates. “When you have an hour-long bus ride, you go into a deep hole on the Internet,â€� Thomas explained. “They had not seen it. It’s a really funny video. I said, ‘If I make a big putt today, I’m yelling it.’ “Today that was a pretty big putt, so I thought it was the appropriate time to yell it.â€� Indeed, when Thomas’ putt fell in, he dropped his putter and started yelling, “I love me some me.â€� Woods did the same thing before the two shared a huge hug. “Very familiar with it, yes,â€� Woods said when asked about the T.O. video. “We were looking at it and we had our moment on the last hole, and we both said it at the same time.â€� Thirty minutes earlier, Cantlay rolled in his winning putt to rally past Niemann and Hadwin, who were 1 up through 14. While his celebration wasn’t nearly as exuberant as Thomas, Cantlay’s fist pump was still pretty demonstrative by his standards. “It was nice to see my boy P. here with some emotion,â€� Schauffele said. “I think it just shows how much it means to us.â€� Said Cantlay: “There’s no place I’d rather be than on the 18th green with a putt to win. There’s nothing like the focus that it brings out and the attention to the moment that it brings out, and that’s exactly why I play the game and I think that’s why we all play. Making those putts on 18 were so big for the momentum shift.â€� Despite the Americans’ two wins on 18, the Internationals still had a chance to win the session. Im and partner Cameron Smith were 2 up with three holes to play against Gary Woodland and Rickie Fowler. But Fowler’s terrific approach at the 16th set up Woodland for an 8-foot birdie putt. Woodland then reciprocated with an approach at the 17th inside 5 feet for a Fowler birdie. Tied going into the 18th, Im had a birdie opportunity from 13 feet after Woodland rolled his 44-footer well past the pin. But Im missed and Fowler made the 5-footer to save par and secure the half-point. “Whether it’s for a half-point, or if it’s to win, that’s why we play,â€� Fowler said. “You know, that little adrenaline rush that you get when you do make those putts, they are confidence-boosters.â€� Although the U.S. still trails, Woods and his players are at least feeling better about their chances. And if the Americans rally this weekend to retain the Presidents Cup, they’ll look back at those two winning birdie putts on the 18th hole Friday as the catalyst. “I felt like all day out there, it was another beating and we were getting beat up,â€� Cantlay said. “I looked up on the board and we were down in almost all the matches all day. Being able to flip the whole deal; we’re going to go to bed tonight feeling great and we’re going to have the momentum going into tomorrow. We are still down but there are a lot of points up on the board for tomorrow, available points. “I really thought this afternoon was huge and I think it’s going to be a big paradigm shift going forward.â€�

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Welcome to the club: Jets can’t stop Ravens running gameWelcome to the club: Jets can’t stop Ravens running game

There haven’t been a whole lot of positives for the New York Jets this season, with the possible exception of their success against the run. New York entered Thursday night’s game against the Baltimore Ravens with the second-ranked rush defense in the NFL, and no team allowed fewer yards per

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Lamar Jackson says “it’s really cool†to surpass Michael Vick for QB rushing recordLamar Jackson says “it’s really cool†to surpass Michael Vick for QB rushing record

Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson is assaulting various record books in his first season as the team’s full-time starter. With 86 rushing yards on eight attempts on Thursday night against the New York Jets, Jackson surpassed Michael Vick’s 2006 record for most rushing yards by a quarterback

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Americans rally late to only trail by 3 in Presidents CupAmericans rally late to only trail by 3 in Presidents Cup

The International team is going so well at this Presidents Cup that it had to settle for a three-point lead after two sessions at Royal Melbourne. Justin Thomas and Patrick Cantlay were among those who made sure it was only that. Louis Oosthuizen and Adam Scott rallied from 2 down by winning five of

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Presidents Cup: Morning match previews for Day 3Presidents Cup: Morning match previews for Day 3

MELBOURNE, Australia – The International Team holds a three-point lead over the United States Team at 6 1/2 to 3 1/2. Clutch putts on No. 18 by Patrick Cantlay and Justin Thomas gave the U.S. two huge points heading into Saturday’s morning Four-ball session. PRESIDENTS CUP: Scoring | Day 2 match recaps | Quiz: Which team should you support? Here’s a look at each match. MATCH 11 MARC LEISHMAN/HAOTONG LI (INTERNATIONAL) vs. JUSTIN THOMAS/RICKIE FOWLER (USA) MATCH 12 SUNGJAE IM/ABRAHAM ANCER (INTERNATIONAL) vs. XANDER SCHAUFFELE/PATRICK CANTLAY (USA) MATCH 13 HIDEKI MATSUYAMA/C.T. PAN (INTERNATIONAL) vs. PATRICK REED/WEBB SIMPSON (USA) MATCH 14 ADAM SCOTT/BYEONG HUN AN (INTERNATIONAL) vs. MATT KUCHAR/TONY FINAU (USA)

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Presidents Cup, Day 3: Leaderboard, tee times, TV timesPresidents Cup, Day 3: Leaderboard, tee times, TV times

Day 3 of the Presidents Cup from Royal Melbourne in Australia begins today, with the International Team holding a 6.5-3.5 lead over the U.S. Team. Here’s everything you need to know to follow the action. Live scores Tee times HOW TO FOLLOW LIVE (All times ET) Television: Wednesday, 5:30 p.m.-12 a.m. ET (Golf Channel); Thursday, 7 p.m. – 12 a.m. ET (Golf Channel); Friday, 3 p.m. – 2 a.m. ET (Golf Channel); Saturday, 6 p.m. – 12 a.m. ET (Golf Channel). PGA TOUR LIVE: Wednesday, 5:30 p.m.-12 a.m. ET; Thursday, 7 p.m. – 12 a.m. ET.; Friday, 3 p.m. – 2 a.m. ET; Saturday, 6 p.m. – 12 a.m. ET. Twitter window: Wednesday, 5:30 p.m.-6 p.m. ET; Thursday, 7 p.m.-7:30 p.m. ET; Friday, 3 p.m.-3:30 p.m. ET; Saturday, 6 p.m.-6:30 p.m. ET Radio: Wednesday, 6 p.m.-12 a.m. ET; Thursday, 7 p.m.-12 a.m. ET; Friday, 5 p.m.-2 a.m. ET; Saturday, 6 p.m.-12 a.m. ET. (PGA TOUR Radio on SiriusXM and PGATOUR.COM) DAY 3 FOUR-BALL MATCHES/PAIRINGS (All times ET) MATCH 11 Marc Leishman/Haotong Li (INT) vs. Justin Thomas/Rickie Fowler (USA) 3:02 p.m. MATCH 12 Sungjae Im/Abraham Ancer (INT) vs. Xander Schauffele/Patrick Cantlay (USA) 3:16 p.m. MATCH 13 Hideki Matsuyama/C.T. Pan (INT) vs. Patrick Reed/Webb Simpson (USA) 3:30 p.m. MATCH 14 Adam Scott/Byeong Hun An (INT) vs. Matt Kuchar/Tony Finau (USA) 3:44 p.m. MUST READS Day 3 Four-Ball match previews Day 2 match recaps Quiz: Which team should you support? Ogilvy: Seven secrets to play Royal Melbourne Inside International Team’s win in 1998 Sign-up and play Fantasy Golf

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