Golf

U.S. team holds off International team rally to earn yet another Presidents Cup title

Xander Schauffele had some choice words for how he was feeling Saturday evening after falling in his afternoon four-ball match. Suffice it to say, he was upset.

“Wasn’t very pleased with myself personally,” he said “I can probably speak for my partner (Patrick Cantlay) as well, who is absent currently. Yeah, we didn’t get a point, and that one hurt us.”

How does Schauffele play when he’s upset?

“I don’t play very well,” he said. “I play like a toddler … So I play my best when I’m focused and, you know, very present.”

On Sunday, Schauffele was present and accounted for. In a Presidents Cup singles session rife with seeing and sawing, Schauffele proved to be the fulcrum, battling through momentum swings on both nines to earn the deciding point as the United States survived a comeback bid from the International team to retain the Presidents Cup at Quail Hollow by a score of 17½-12½.

“It’s an amazing feeling,” Schauffele said. “Winning is really hard. I put that on full display today. Needed some help along the way. It’s an incredible feeling.”

After a week dominated by headlines exalting the U.S. team as among the best ever assembled, and just days after it appeared the Americans may win by the end of the fourth session, the International team stood tall Sunday.

“This week, you know, we were in a tough spot on Friday,” International Captain Trevor Immelman said. “We showed a lot of guts to fight back. At some point, I don’t know about you guys, but at some point this afternoon, I thought there was still a chance. And when you consider that we were 8-2 down on Friday evening, this team is no joke, and I’m sick and tired of it being spoken of as a joke. We love this event, and we love our team, and we cannot wait to run this back and have another shot.”

It was the U.S. team, though, that had the final shot Sunday.

“Everybody came in here ready and fired up and really, really prepared,” U.S. Captain Davis Love III said. “We don’t have to do much except tell them what time to tee off. So extremely proud of them.”

Heavy at the top

Jordan Spieth knew Love placed him and Justin Thomas at the top of the singles lineup Sunday because Love wanted to establish a measure of momentum for the Americans as they looked to close out the event with a win.

Spieth promptly lost his first two holes to Australian Cam Davis — not the start anyone on the U.S. side was envisioning.

But the other reason Love had Spieth and Thomas at the top is the pair’s resolve.

Spieth gathered himself with a par for tie at the third hole, won the next two with birdies and then rattled off five wins in six holes from the ninth to the 14th to take control of his match.

“I had a great back nine,” Spieth said. “I hit a really good shot into 11 driving the hole. Hit it in the middle of the green there after winning the 9th and having a nice tie on the 10th. That’s where the game shifted was birdieing there. I rallied off three straight birdies on this nine and kept trying to hit greens.”

His win — 4-and-3 over Davis — was the first of the day for the U.S. team as it retained the Presidents Cup against a scrappy International squad.

“Trevor’s team did an incredible job of — we talked the other night about their shield,” Love said. “They’re doing an incredible job of trying to rally and build a team and get an identity, and they certainly came together and started making some putts.”

The final score was far closer than anyone envisioned as recently as Friday afternoon. After four-ball play in Session 2, the Americans held an 8-2 advantage, more than halfway to the total needed to win the Cup.

Immelman proved to be as prescient as he was charismatic this week. The International side earned a split with the Americans in Saturday morning foursomes, and then clawed back with a 3-1 win in the Saturday afternoon four-ball play to pull within four points with 12 singles matches to play Sunday.

“The vibe is — the vibe is hopeful,” Immelman said Saturday. “The vibe is hopeful. (Saturday) was a big step for a very young and inexperienced team.”

With Sunday’s result, the International team took another big step forward.

Nerves tested

Two hours into Sunday’s singles matches, Immelman was zipping around the grounds in his souped-up golf cart, trying desperately to keep track of the 12 pairings scattered across 10 different holes. His smile was as wide as it had been all week.

Immelman has purveyed hope at this year’s Presidents Cup, an event in which his International team was a massive underdog.

“I think it’s quite clear that we’re the underdogs,” Immelman said matter-of-factly during the opening news conference. “We generally have been in this competition over the years, so it’s a tag that we’re used to.”

Added Immelman: “But the exciting part for us really is I do think that it frees us up … because we have nothing to lose. If you look at our record in this tournament and you look at our World Rankings versus their World Rankings, we have absolutely nothing to lose.”

Love cruised around in his own red, white and blue cart Sunday, his face bearing an expression more of concern than jubilation.

On the 12-match scoreboard, black and gold occupied more space than red and white, signaling that, for a second consecutive session, the International side was rallying, threatening what had been an American stranglehold.

“We knew these guys were going to do something like that,” Love said. “We knew there was going to be a Tom Kim or Christiaan (Bezuidenhout) or just right on down the list. Guys just stepped up and played incredibly well. It happens in Ryder Cup. It happens in Presidents Cup.”

Cantlay, Schauffele and Collin Morikawa made things a little easier to handle for the American side for a while, each taking 3-up leads into the back nine. But even those weren’t airtight advantages.

Case in point: Schauffele lost three consecutive holes from 12-14 to fall into a tie with Corey Conners before righting the ship with a win at 15 to go 1-up, his eventual margin of victory.

“It’s always hard to win,” Schauffele said. “It’s not about me, you know. Everyone else got their points up on the board. It was close. It was stressful. Yeah, and what you saw there was a big sigh of relief.”

Closing it out

An unexpected result from Si Woo Kim — a birdie to win 1-up on 18 over Justin Thomas — raised eyebrows around the course. Cantlay calmed some American nerves moments later, though, with a 3-and-2 win over Adam Scott.

“I knew it was an important match,” Cantlay said. “They definitely front-loaded, and I knew it was really important for me to get my point today.”

Sam Burns eked out a half point with a tie against Hideki Matsuyama — a match Matsuyama nearly stole when he rattled the flagstick with a chip on the 18th. That pushed the U.S. total to 13½.

Sebastian Munoz upset world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, 2-and-1 to add another point to the International total. Through four matches the teams had evenly split points at 2½ each.

Tony Finau emphatically set the stage for Schauffele, draining a lengthy putt on 17 to close out Taylor Pendrith 3-and-1 to push the U.S. point total to 14½.

“We all know what’s on the line here this week,” Finau said. “It adds to the extra intensity, I think. I needed every bit of it. I played really nicely.”

Moments after Schauffele closed out the team victory, Sungjae Im started a parade of points for the International squad, closing out Cameron Young, 1-up. K.H. Lee also earned a win, closing out Billy Horschel, 3-and-1.

Max Homa and Morikawa finished with wins also for the U.S., and in the final match of the weekend, Bezuidehout took down Kevin Kisner in a final victory for the Internationals.

This story was originally published September 25, 2022 at 5:58 PM.

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Justin Pelletier
The News & Observer
Justin is a 25-year veteran sports journalist with stops in Lewiston, Maine (Sun Journal), and Boston (Boston Herald). A proud husband, and father of twin girls, Pelletier is a Boston University graduate and member of the esteemed Jack Falla sportswriting mafia. He has earned dozens of state and national sportswriting and editing awards covering preps, colleges and professional leagues.
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