The Herald (South Africa)

US Open champ lauds Langer

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US Open golf champion Martin Kaymer has added his name to a growing list calling for Europe captain Paul McGinley to consider 56-year-old Bernhard Langer as one of his three Ryder Cup wildcard choices.

Former skippers Colin Montgomeri­e and Tony Jacklin have already outlined their support for the German veteran while McGinley’s opposite number, Tom Watson, also said last week’s runaway Senior British Open champion “might be worth a pick”.

Langer, who romped to a 13-shot victory at Royal Porthcawl in Wales on Sunday, would become the oldest player in Ryder Cup history if he featured in the team that will meet the US in Scotland in September. American Ray Floyd holds that distinctio­n after appearing in the 1993 edition at the age of 51.

“I hope Paul was watching what Bernhard did in the Senior British Open,” Kaymer said from Akron, Ohio where he is warming up for next week’s US PGA Championsh­ip by competing in the WGC-Bridgeston­e Invitation­al.

“Shooting 18-under-par for four rounds at a difficult links course like Porthcawl is an outstandin­g effort. Don’t forget either what Bernhard did by finishing eighth in this year’s US Masters at Augusta.”

Kaymer, who prompted wild scenes of jubilation when he holed the putt that made sure Europe retained the trophy in Illinois two years ago, said he would love the chance to play alongside his fellow German at Gleneagles in September.

“Bernhard is a special player and it would be great to be able to partner him,” said the twice major winner.

“He has done so much for German golf and for European golf and he would not let the team down if Paul picked him to play against the Americans,” added Kaymer, who won the Players Championsh­ip in Florida in May before landing the US Open title in North Carolina a month later.

Langer, who turns 57 on August 27, also won the Senior Players Championsh­ip in Pittsburgh in June and finished in the top-10 in the other three over-50 majors.

He has been a dominant force on the over-50s circuit and achieved a notable double in 2010 when he won back-to-back senior majors in Britain and the US

“Bernhard and I have a good relationsh­ip,” said the 29-year-old Kaymer, who is an internatio­nal brand ambassador for Mercedes-Benz.

The calm, phlegmatic German is normally the epitome of cool on the golf course but that all went out of the window at the Medinah Country Club when he leapt around like a schoolboy after holing a six-foot putt to retain the Ryder Cup for Europe.

“That was an unforgetta­ble moment,” said Kaymer. “What happened at Medinah was huge for me. There is no goal in my life where there will be more pressure or more excitement than at Medinah where I had that six-footer.” Kaymer is almost certain to claim one of the nine automatic spots in Europe’s 12-man team at Gleneagles. – Reuters

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