The Hamilton Spectator

Americans take another early lead in Presidents Cup

‘First session is pretty critical,’ according to Fowler

- DOUG FERGUSON JERSEY CITY, N.J. —

The opening ceremony at the Presidents Cup was unlike any other in golf with former U.S. presidents Barack Obama, George W. Bush and Bill Clinton on the first tee. The results were all too familiar. The Americans led at some point in all five of the foursomes matches Thursday at Liberty National. They won the first three. And when they jumped on a ferry to take them across the New York Harbour to their Manhattan hotel, they had the lead.

Behind a new tandem of Rickie Fowler and Justin Thomas, and an old one of Jordan Spieth and Patrick Reed, the Americans jumped out to a 3½-1½ lead. It was the sixth consecutiv­e time they led after the opening session in an event they haven’t lost in two decades.

“Jordan mentioned that this first session is pretty critical and we need to go out there and take care of business,” Fowler said. “I feel like as a team, we did a really good job of that. If we can do the same thing tomorrow and win another session, it puts us in a great position.”

Thomas and Fowler lost only two holes in a 6-and-4 victory over Hideki Matsuyama and Charl Schwartzel. Spieth and Reed improved to 6-1-2 as a tandem in the Presidents Cup and Ryder Cup. Spieth holed a 35-foot putt on the 11th hole right when it looked as if Emiliano Grillo and Si Woo Kim might gain some momentum. Instead, the match was over three holes later, 5 and 4.

Dustin Johnson and Matt Kuchar remained unbeaten in four matches, not taking the lead until the 16th hole and making it stand in a 1up victory over Adam Scott and Jhonattan Vegas.

“We’ve been off to poor starts for a while on Thursdays,” Internatio­nal captain Nick Price said. “We have a resilient team. They have this ability to come back and bounce back, and they have done it. They did it last time in Korea.”

Indeed, the Americans had a 4-1 lead after the first session two years ago, and that Presidents Cup came down to the final match.

Phil Mickelson, playing in his 23rd consecutiv­e team competitio­n, ended the tough, windswept afternoon at Liberty National by missing an 8-foot par putt, or the U.S. lead would have been even greater. He and Kevin Kisner were 1 down with two holes remaining to Jason Day and Marc Leishman, so a halfpoint wasn’t bad.

Mickelson’s only complaint was that he botched his selfie with the presidents, with barely his head showing.

For the most part, everything else went the Americans’ way.

The Americans have a 9-1-1 lead in the series, their lone loss in 1998 at Royal Melbourne a few weeks before Christmas.

 ?? ROB CARR, GETTY IMAGES ?? Former U.S. presidents Barack Obama, George W. Bush and Bill Clinton attend the trophy presentati­on prior to Thursday’s foursome matches at the Presidents Cup in New Jersey.
ROB CARR, GETTY IMAGES Former U.S. presidents Barack Obama, George W. Bush and Bill Clinton attend the trophy presentati­on prior to Thursday’s foursome matches at the Presidents Cup in New Jersey.

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