New York Daily News

Uneasy Ryder: Tiger toothless

Woods falls to 0-3 in Cup play

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SAINT-QUENTIN-EN-YVELINES, France — Tiger Woods kept bending over in anguish, his shoulders sinking further and further, the energy ebbing as he made his way around Le Golf National for the second time Saturday.

It was the body language of a tired, defeated golfer.

Quite a contrast to the previous weekend, when he triumphant­ly strutted down the final fairway at East Lake, savoring his first victory in more than five years as thousands of fans stormed the course behind him.

Then again, this is the Ryder Cup — one of the few blemishes on Woods' brilliant record.

Nothing much has changed in France.

Woods dropped all three of his matches over the first two days, cut down each time by Europe's most dynamic combinatio­n, mullet-sporting Tommy Fleetwood and British Open champion Francesco Molinari.

Playing with two different partners, none of Woods' matches reached the 18th hole. In fact, he's only held the lead for a grand total of three holes the entire weekend.

It was hardly what was expected from his first Ryder Cup appearance since 2012.

“The three matches we played, they never missed a putt inside 10 to 12 feet,” Woods groaned. "That's hard to do. Playing against a team like that, that's putting that well, you're going to have to make a lot of birdies. We didn't.”

Woods teamed with Patrick Reed for a pair of fourball matches, then switched to Bryson DeChambeau for the Saturday afternoon foursomes. The new partnershi­p didn't fare any better than the first one.

The duo known as "Moliwood" led from the very first hole on the way to a 5-and-4 whipping, the match ending when DeChambeau missed a birdie putt at the par-5 14th hole, before it even reached a closing stretch that looks like something out of Waterworld.

The struggles of Woods & Co. are a big reason his starstudde­d team faces a daunting 10-6 deficit heading to Sunday singles. While certainly not impossible to pull off such a comeback — it was done in 1999 by the Americans at Brookline, and again in 2012 by the Europeans at Medinah — the U.S. hasn't won the Ryder Cup on this side of the Atlantic in a quarter-century.

“We've got some work to do,” Woods said. “Hopefully we can get off to a quick start and get up in some of these matches and turn the tide a little bit.”

Looking to get his career back on track after myriad physical problems and personal missteps, the 42-yearold Woods played in 19 events this season — roughly the number he used to take on in his prime. While his comeback from major back surgery has been nothing short of remarkable, it looks like the grind of the year and all the work he put in to get back on the course caught up with him at the worst possible time.

When you throw in the emotional drain of winning the Tour Championsh­ip for his 80th career triumph, Woods certainly looks like someone dealing with a severe letdown.

The Ryder Cup has always been a struggle for Woods. The team nature of the event has never seemed to fit with his lone-wolf approach and steely focus. He's played a total of 36 matches over eight appearance­s but won only 13. His record in fourballs and foursomes, when he goes out with a partner, is an ugly 9-19-1.

 ?? GETTY ?? Tiger Woods has another rough day at the Ryder Cup, losing both the matches he plays in as the U.S. trails 10-6.
GETTY Tiger Woods has another rough day at the Ryder Cup, losing both the matches he plays in as the U.S. trails 10-6.

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