Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Ryder Cup’s ‘Captain America’ Reed loses all his superpower­s

- John Leicester AP Sports Columnist

SAINT-QUENTIN-EN-YVELINES, FRANCE >> Forget Captain America. Because, as wits on social media were quick to point out, Patrick Reed spent so much time in the water on Day 2 of the Ryder Cup that a better nickname for him would be Aquaman.

The lesson brutally delivered to the Masters champion by Le Golf National’s unforgivin­g Albatross course is that Reed needs to drop the superhero nickname, at least until he grows superpower­s to go with it.

The beating that Francesco Molinari and Tommy Fleetwood delivered to Reed and partner Tiger Woods in fourballs on Saturday was so comprehens­ive Molinari’s elder brother couldn’t help but give Reed a roasting.

“Captain America must have no passport! No sights of him in Paris!” Edoardo Molinari, also a golfer, tweeted.

Reed went off the boil even before he got to France. His Masters victory in April and fourth place at the U.S. Open in June were followed by three ho-hum months.

Still, Reed wasn’t the only player struggling before the Ryder Cup. Sergio Garcia had a terrible run of missed cuts and forgettabl­e results before Europe captain Thomas Bjorn picked the Spaniard to join his team because he knew the honor of playing again for the yellow-starred blue flag would get Garcia’s juices flowing.

Garcia repaid that trust by winning both of his opening matches.

Reed, on the other hand, has yet to rise to the occasion. Two losses in fourballs, both with Woods, have punctured the “Captain America” aura earned from high-energy performanc­es in 2014 and 2016 where Reed won six of nine matches and lost just once.

Reed was in the rough so often he should have packed a lawnmower in his golf bag. He found water on Nos. 3, 13 and finally 15. There, Woods mercifully put the match out of its misery by missing a must-make putt. That sealed a 4-and-3 victory for the European super duo of Molinari and Fleetwood, who have won all four of their matches.

So rarely did Woods and Reed both find the fairway together — the number of times could be counted on one hand — that they had fewer opportunit­ies than Molinari and Fleetwood to be all buddy-buddy and fewer reasons to celebrate together.

Reed tried to keep his spirits up. Back in rough on No. 6, he pulled up a clump of grass, throwing some of it into the air to test the stiffness of the breeze and tossing the remainder in the face of his caddie. Reed, at least, thought himself funny, breaking into a grin.

But he then turned the air blue when his tee-shot sheered right into reeds on No. 13.

The only whiff of anything Captain Americalik­e was when Reed sank an 8-foot putt on No. 9, his only birdie. When the crowd booed, he responded by playing the pantomime villain, with a finger in front of his lips: Shush!

At the end, Woods threw an arm over Reed’s shoulder and hugged him tight. The 14-time major winner back from four back surgeries knows all about fighting another day. Reed has a chance of redemption Sunday in singles, where he was unbeaten in 2014 and 2016.

But Captain America? Well, he’s done.

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