Kuwait Times

Presidents Cup shows golf yet to become truly global sport

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NEW YORK: A quarter century after the Presidents Cup began with high hopes that it would one day rival the Ryder Cup as golf’s premier team event, it remains a relative minnow on the global calendar after a series of one-sided American victories.

Created by the US-based PGA Tour, the Presidents Cup largely copied the Ryder Cup format. Yet instead of the US playing Europe, the Americans were pitted against an Internatio­nal team comprised of players from the rest of the world.

The 13th staging of the biennial event will be held at Royal Melbourne starting exactly a year today and a glance at the respective world rankings of the likely players suggests that the Americans are poised to continue their dominance.

“I fear for the immediate future of the Presidents Cup,” New Zealander Frank Nobilo, who played on the first three Internatio­nal teams, told Reuters. The Americans have lost just once, at Royal Melbourne in 1998, while the 2003 event in South Africa was drawn.

That makes it seven losses in a row for the Internatio­nals, who for the most part have been outclassed by the US juggernaut. The inaugural Internatio­nal team in 1994 was comprised largely of players from Australia and southern Africa.

There was, however, an expectatio­n that over time golf would become more global, which would gradually improve the depth of the Internatio­nal team as more players emerged from various corners of the world.

That has not panned out. Moreover, Australia and South Africa have regressed, no longer turning out the large production line of world-class players of previous decades.

Zimbabwean Nick Price and Australian Greg Norman were ranked first and second in the world at the end of 1994, while there were five other Internatio­nal players in the top 20.

The current world rankings are dominated by Americans and Europeans. There are no Internatio­nals in the top 10 and only two in the top 20 as of Dec. 2 — Australian­s Jason Day (13th) and Marc Leishman (19th).

The US has 12 players ranked in the top 18, hardly a comforting thought for Internatio­nal captain Ernie Els. The emergence of Thailand’s Kiradech Aphibarnra­t and China’s Li Haotong as world class players is a promising sign, and Japan and South Korea sporadical­ly produce an occasional top player, but a steady production line of Asian talent has not yet materialis­ed.

SIGNS OF HOPE

The cupboard is even barer in South America, with only Argentine Emiliano Grillo in the top 100, though hopes are high that 20-year-old Chilean Joaquin Niemann, a former world amateur number one, will prove to be the real deal.

South Africa aside, golf remains inaccessib­le to most people in the rest of Africa. It is not all doom and gloom though. Some experts see signs of hope in Asia at long last. “China despite its aversion to golf has benefited by golf being in the Olympics so their golf programs are continuing and they are recruiting coaches from Down Under and it’s helping,” said Nobilo, who visits the region regularly in his role as a Golf Channel analyst.

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