Ryder Cup stuff(ed). Worst team says Miller

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Miller rips U.S. Ryder Cup team
by Chadd Cripe, McClatchy-Tribune Business News

Sep. 12--NBC golf analyst Johnny Miller was in Boise on Monday and he ripped the U.S. team that will try to win back the Ryder Cup from Europe next week in Ireland.

"This is probably on paper the worst Ryder Cup team we've ever fielded," Miller said during the press conference for the Kraft/Nabisco Shoot-Out at Hillcrest Country Club.

Miller also expressed reservations about captain Tom Lehman, who will decide how to use his 12 players. He will create four two-man teams for each of the first four rounds.

Miller says it's imperative that Lehman pair Tiger Woods with Jim Furyk, and Phil Mickelson with Chris DiMarco, because those pairings have worked in the past.

That could leave the team's inexperienced players, including four Ryder Cup rookies, paired together.

"I believe if he divides those up we're going to get creamed," Miller said of the Woods-Furyk and Mickelson-DiMarco teams. "I'm really concerned that Lehman uses the theory that we've got to use a good player with a not-so-experienced player."

The U.S. enters this Ryder Cup, which is Sept. 22-24, as an underdog. The team includes unheralded rookies J.J. Henry, Vaughn Taylor, Zach Johnson and Brett Wetterich.

The eight veterans are Woods, Mickelson, Furyk, DiMarco, Scott Verplank, Stewart Cink, Chad Campbell and David Toms.

Nine of the 12 played on the Nationwide Tour, as did Lehman.

Miller, a former Ryder Cup player, will call the action for NBC.

"It's going to be tough to win with the team (Europe has) got," he said.

-----

Copyright (c) 2006, The Idaho Statesman, Boise

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Business News.
 
Weve got Robert Karlsson, haha what a player! Serious that man makes more birdies in a round than anyone which will be good for match play!
 
Good job they aint playin' on paper !.

I sometimes wonder why Miller makes comments like that. He may be trying to get them riled up to perform, but that sort of comment could have the opposite effect.

I think Lehman is/ will be a great captain, a lot better than the last US one. :D

The Europeans will have their hands full and they know it, and maybe like them in the past, being the "underdog" will help more than hinder the US team.
 
Rob K

Ricky1990 said:
Weve got Robert Karlsson, haha what a player! Serious that man makes more birdies in a round than anyone which will be good for match play!

Yep. GREAT RC warmup for Karlsson today. Being a RC rookie & fresh from beating world #2 is a confidence builder for him and the Euro team.

I've seen him close up since over 10 years back. He can flat out play. Back then he was something of an "Old Mickelson"-style striky player, but seems to have managed to tune that part down a bit. He used to have issues with his mental game, so I am sure this did him an awful lot of good.

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Yeah I watched him at celtic manor wales open when he won this year! GREAT GOLF SWING and a very attacking player! Full of birdies that man!
 
As a European i really wish people could stop slagging off the American team, the more they do so the better i think they'll play.

On a side note would people say Robert Karlsson is a good example of pivot contolled hands?
 
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Brian Manzella

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I have a feeling....

Unless the "veterans" tell the young guys all the wrong things, maybe THEY will play UP to their level or OVER their level like the Euros.

The US Team also has to fight the EURO's gamesmanship with BETTER gamesmanship of their own.

It also helps to hit better shots and make more putts.
 
Gamesmanship? Such as?

...

Faldo said something about the Euros having some kind of secret strategy that gives them an advantage...

I have a feeling it's BS....you guys got any ideas?

It was in an interview (Faldo interview) in a mag.
 
I think on paper the Europeans are stronger this time, even though they have far from their strongest side, but same could be said for the US I guess.
Anyway, so much for paper.
As for gamesmanship.... maybe in the Seve' times, but even then it was both ways in my view.. the Americans were always 'noisy' back then.
I think the US are gonna stuff the Euro's this time!
 
Woods signs recording contract! Say it ain't so!

ok, it ain't so...


Notebook: Woods needs to stick to his day job
by DOUG FERGUSON), Associated Press

STRAFFAN, Ireland - The U.S. team room at the Ryder Cup must have looked like rookie orientation in the NFL, especially when captain Tom Lehman asked all of his players to sing their university fight song.

The scouting report: Tiger Woods needs to stick to golf.

"He wasn't good," Scott Verplank said. "And he didn't like doing it. I wouldn't recommend he go to a recording studio or anything. Tom got him a little embarrassed, which was good, and everybody had a good laugh."

Lehman was asked the name of the song for Woods, who spent two years at Stanford University.

"I've never heard it before, and I couldn't recognize it when he was singing it, either," Lehman said. "I'm totally lost."

Woods wasn't the only one who took it on the chin.

"Some of us, including myself, didn't really know all the words," said Verplank, an Oklahoma State University alum. "You kind of exposed a few guys. They think they are pretty good fans, and they don't even know the words to the fight song at their school."

It was another example of an American team that appears to be enjoying this Ryder Cup.

Jim Furyk recently told Golf World magazine that the Americans look like they are "constipated" when they're at the Ryder Cup. Lehman has stressed that he wants his team to have more fun.

On the practice range on Tuesday morning, the Americans huddled together before splitting up into their foursomes. They switched partners after nine holes and Lehman instructed everyone to put $100 in a pot for a skins game. Cink took home most of the money.

While on the Palmer Course, the Americans signed plenty of autographs, another change.

There is supposed to be a no-autograph policy on the course, but the Europeans violated that at Oakland Hills while trying to earn support from the American gallery, and Lehman said his team would do the same this year.

Told about the all the activities by the Americans, Colin Montgomerie was asked what he had been doing.

"We've actually been playing golf, believe it or not," he said with a smile. "That's why we're here."

TUESDAY PAIRINGS: U.S. captain Tom Lehman says he has had pairings in mind for a few weeks, and it was no surprise that Tiger Woods and Jim Furyk were in the same group with Phil Mickelson and Chris DiMarco, two successful teams from the Presidents Cup.

In other U.S. pairings during the practice round, David Toms played with Chad Campbell, and Scott Verplank was with Brett Wetterich; Zach Johnson and Stewart Cink played with Vaughn Taylor and J.J. Henry.

Asked if the public could read anything into the Woods-Furyk and Mickelson-DiMarco pairings, Lehman said, "I think we all know that there's a good chance those guys will play together."

As for Europe, captain Ian Woosnam put together his two Swedes (Henrik Stenson and Robert Karlsson) and two Spaniards (Jose Maria Olazabal and Sergio Garcia) in one group; Colin Montgomerie and three Englishman (David Howell, Paul Casey and Luke Donald); and three Irishmen (Padraig Harrington, Paul McGinley and Darren Clarke) with Lee Westwood.

"I think you can read a little bit into that," Woosnam said.

TAKING ON TIGER: Word at Oakland Hills two years ago was that Paul Casey had a hunch Tiger Woods would be first off in singles, and that the European rookie wanted a crack at him.

It was a good story, Casey concedes, but not entirely correct.

"Would you volunteer to play Tiger?" Casey said.

Casey said he was riding in a cart on Saturday with Europe captain Bernhard Langer and teammate Darren Clarke when Langer told them he had a few people in mind to send out first in singles, figuring Woods would lead off for the Americans.

"And he turned and looked at both of us," Casey said. "To which Darren leaned across to me, patted me on the back and said, 'Paul, you'll be fantastic!' It was just typical Clarkey. He was trying to give me confidence and he thought I was up for the task, I guess."

He was wrong. Woods breezed past Casey, winning 3 and 2.

"What can you do? Can't refuse either of those two guys," Casey said of his response to Clarke and Langer.

And would he do it again?

Casey smiled.

"Maybe not the same fashion as that," he said.

EUROPEAN BACKING: The Europeans are getting some respect from where it counts: The pockets of bettors who like the chances of the defending champions.

Bookmakers William Hill credited a patriotic surge for the money on Europe, which is a slight favorite in most betting lines.

"It now seems certain that Ian Woosnam's team will go into the opening hole of the event as odds-on favorites - the first time that has been the case," said William Hill spokesman Graham Sharpe.

Europe isn't much of a favorite, though. The betting line barely favors the Europeans at 10-11 odds, while the Americans are 11-10 underdogs.

To show how close oddsmakers think things will be, a tie is only a 9-1 pick.

CHIPS AHOY: Tom Lehman started getting a little worried himself when he noticed airport workers warily eyeing the massive amount of luggage the American team brought overseas.

With good reason - he had something to do with the added weight.

Lehman, who lives in Arizona, loves tortilla chips and salsa. He also knows from past experience that, while the Irish make a great stew, you can't find good chips and salsa in Ireland.

"So rather than try to find it, we decided we're going to bring our own corn tortillas, and you can make your own chips and salsa," Lehman said.

Lehman's wife, Melissa, ordered several large bags of the tortillas and Lehman packed them into his golf travel bag. Trouble was, when he tried to move it, he couldn't get it off the ground. Lehman said his golf bag must have weighed 500 pounds (225 kilograms) loaded down with the tortillas. He won't have that problem on the way home.

"A one-way trip, absolutely, because we're going to eat those babies," he said.

DIVOTS: Ryder Cup captain Tom Lehman will get to play his own team competition this year. Lehman will join Zach Johnson and Stewart Cink on the U.S. PGA Tour team at the Wendy's Three-Tour Challenge, to be held on Nov. 14 in Las Vegas. The silly season event matches three-player teams from the U.S. PGA Tour, U.S. LPGA Tour and Champions Tour. ... The forecast for Wednesday's practice round was 100 percent of rain and wind up to 30 mph. ... Ryder Cup officials issued a list of the players' wives or partners who have joined them at The K Club. Sergio Garcia is with Morgan Leigh Norman, the daughter of Greg Norman. They have been dating about two months.

STAT OF THE WEEK: U.S. captain Tom Lehman is higher in the world ranking (No. 39) than four of his Ryder Cup players.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 

dbl

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I'd like to think the US rookies will be better than people think they will be. If so, we'd have more than the usual chance.
 
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