Sun | Dec 22, 2024

Europeans hit back in Ryder Cup

Published:Friday | September 28, 2018 | 12:00 AM
Europe’s Sergio Garcia (right) and Alex Noren congratulate each other during their foursome match on the opening day of the 2018 Ryder Cup in Paris, France, yesterday.

PARIS, France (AP):

Three matches in the books, three red points on the board, and Tiger Woods was still on the golf course.

This was exactly the start the Americans wanted in the Ryder Cup.

And then Europe finished even better.

Four hours later, the cheers at Le Golf National ramped up to a feverish pitch as Europe swept all four matches yesterday afternoon for a lead. It was the first time Europe swept a session since 1989 and the first time ever at the Ryder Cup in foursomes.

"We didn't come here to win the foursomes," Francesco Molinari said. "We came here to win something else."

Molinari and Tommy Fleetwood were the only Europeans to play both matches, and they won them both. They combined for five birdies over their last seven holes to polish off Woods and Patrick Reed and salvage something from a morning that belonged to the Americans. They took down Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas in the afternoon.

The Americans walked tall and had reason to feel as though nothing could go wrong, especially Tony Finau. It was his amazing fortune that turned the tide in the morning. He and Brooks Koepka were 1 down to Justin Rose and Jon Rahm on the par-3 16th when Finau's 8-iron appeared headed for the water. Instead, it landed on the 12-inch-wide boards that frame the green, soared into the air as the gallery gasped, and plopped down three feet from the hole.

They wound up winning on the 18th when Rose hit into the water, the only time Finau and Koepka led all match.

In the afternoon, the mood changed in the mild air and freshening wind. Spieth was shaking his head after all those putts that dropped in the morning slid by the edge of the cup in the afternoon. Ian Poulter's eyes grew wider with each hole he won with Rory McIlroy in the afternoon.

The Americans are trying to end 25 years of losing the Ryder Cup in Europe, and for one morning, it looked as though this might be the time. By the end of the day, the Americans were seeing blue, and plenty of it.