International side needs a spark against rampant US
NEW YORK: The International team has little choice but to embrace the role of underdog as it takes on a formidable United States side at the Presidents Cup starting on Thursday.
On paper, the Americans should be far too strong at Liberty National in New Jersey for a global team lacking the depth of its opponent.
The American players have an average world ranking of 15.5, compared to 31.5 for the Internationals, a team comprised of players from outside of Europe and the US.
All 12 American players are ranked in the top 30 globally, led by world number one and two Dustin Johnson and Jordan Spieth.
The International team, an eclectic mix of players, has only two ranked in the top 10, Japanese number three Hideki Matsuyama and Australian number seven Jason Day.
“I think the International side needs a spark,” said former PGA Tour player Brandel Chamblee.
“They need to find something that makes them collectively better than they are individually.
“On paper the US side is so demonstrably better in every single facet. The world ranking, they’re more than twice as good. They’re twice the ball-strikers the International side is, and by far more than twice the putters.
“So they (the Internationals) have a lot of hurdles.”
Add the US advantage of being the host country and one can make the case for a potential blowout.
The Americans are 9-1-1 since the event was created in 1994, including a perfect 6-0-0 at home.
Only two of those six competitions were close, the Americans holding a cumulative 31-point advantage – 114½ - 83½.
So what can the Internationals do?
Captain Nick Price, who returns this year for his third time at the helm, made one step in the right direction when he successfully lobbied the PGA Tour two years ago to reduce the number of matches from 34 to 30 for the event in South Korea.
This allowed the Internationals to hide its weaker bench, and the move almost worked, with the Americans squeaking home by one point.
Australian and South Africans have traditionally comprised the backbone of the team, and this year will be no exception, with the two countries having three players each in the 12-man line-up, along with one player from Japan, South Korea, India, Canada, Argentina and Venezuela. – Reuters