The Star Early Edition

Oh so close as US clinch Cup

Unbeaten Grace, Oosthuizen brilliant for Internatio­nals

- REUTERS

CAPTAIN’S pick Bill Haas claimed the crucial final point at the Presidents Cup yesterday as the United States beat the Internatio­nals 15½-14½ to clinch the team golf event for the ninth time in 11 editions.

Haas, who is also the son of US captain Jay Haas, held his nerve in the last of yesterday’s 12 singles matches to beat local favourite Bae Sang-moon on a day of missed putts, momentum swings and hand-wringing tension.

Jordan Spieth and Jason Day, the top two players in the world, both lost their matches, while there was delight and heartbreak in equal measure for Asia’s four representa­tives – Thongchai Jaidee, Anirban Lahiri, Hideki Matsuyama and Bae.

After five straight comfortabl­e US wins, the one-point margin of victory was the narrowest since the Americans won 16½-15½ in 1996, and suggests the PGA Tour got it right by reducing the total number of points on offer to 30 from 34.

An emotional Jay Haas struggled to get through a televised interview next to the 18th green but said he had given his son a pep talk through the closing stages. “I told him, ‘Come on, win one for your mom, she deserves this’,” he said. “We put him out 12th and had no idea this was going to happen. Couldn’t even have dreamt this.”

The Internatio­nals trailed 9½-8½ going into the final day at the Jack Nicklaus Golf Club Korea but got the first point on the board when Adam Scott thrashed an out-of-sorts Rickie Fowler 6&5 to level the match.

Louis Oosthuizen eagled the 18th to claim a half of his match against Patrick Reed, while fellow South African Branden Grace beat Matt Kuchar 2&1 and became just the fifth player to win five matches at a single Presidents Cup.

Earlier in the week, Grace and Oosthuizen had combined to win all four of their fourball and foursomes matches.

American veteran Phil Mickelson, who has played in all 11 Presidents Cups but needed a captain’s pick for the first time since 1994, crushed Charl Schwartzel 5&4 yesterday, while Dustin Johnson overcame a game Danny Lee, who led by one through 14 but then lost three in a row.

The early American red plastered across the other matches on the scoreboard began to fade in the afternoon as Japanese sensation Matsuyama fought back to beat JB Holmes and Thai Jaidee took an unexpected half point when Bubba Watson missed from five feet on 18.

Watson missed a similar tiddler at the same hole on Saturday but he was not the only one who struggled with short putts on the difficult final hole.

Lahiri, the first Indian to play at the Presidents Cup, lipped out from just over two feet to hand Chris Kirk victory, just as the Internatio­nals looked to be turning the corner.

“I had Bubba come up to me about a minute after we finished up and he said that he had done the same exact thing,” said a despondent Lahiri. “I guess it wasn’t meant to be unfortunat­ely.”

After Spieth was stunned by Australian Marc Leishman and Day lost to Zach Johnson, the Cup boiled down to the final match between two captain’s picks –- Haas and Bae.

South Korean Bae, playing in his last event before he begins compulsory military service, trailed by one with two holes to play and drained a 10-footer on the 17th that kept the Interna- tionals’ hopes of a tie alive.

With the home crowd’s hopes on his shoulders and the fate of his team in his hands, the pressure finally told on Bae and he cracked on the last, stubbing his chip into a steep bank and seeing the ball roll back down the hill.

Internatio­nal skipper Nick Price was determined no blame should be apportione­d to Bae and Lahiri and said his team could have had a much easier task had it not been for their woeful foursomes performanc­e on the opening day.

“I don’t want any of you to be negative in any way toward Anirban and to Moon,” Price said. “The truth of it is, is that if we got off to a better start on Thursday and we had not been 4-1 down, it might not have been quite as exciting today ... so we all feel for Anirban and for Moon for what happened.

“But they are part of our team, and we will leave here as a team.”

 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? JOY AFTER EDGING HOME: US team captain Jay Haas (second left) and his team members pose with the Presidents Cup after their narrow, one point, victory yesterday over the Internatio­nal team in the match played at the Jack Nicklaus Golf Club in Incheon,...
PICTURE: REUTERS JOY AFTER EDGING HOME: US team captain Jay Haas (second left) and his team members pose with the Presidents Cup after their narrow, one point, victory yesterday over the Internatio­nal team in the match played at the Jack Nicklaus Golf Club in Incheon,...

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