November 24, 2003 • Volume 5, No. 103
a publication
of the Golf Press Association
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Today's News
Jet Golf president Tim Ummel will speak on a three-person panel
December 3 at the Luxury Travel Expo in Las Vegas' Venetian Hotel titled
"Driving Your Golf Sales: Capturing a Piece of this Billion Dollar
Business." ...
Tournament officials of the PGA Tour's Champions Tour event on Long Island announces that Commerce Bank is the new title sponsor of the event and it has been named the Commerce Bank Long Island Classic. The Classic, now in its 18th year, will return to Nassau County's Red Course at Eisenhower Park (East Meadow), on a new date, June 28 - July 4, 2004. ... Jim Deaton, the former director of golf at The Bay Hill Club and Lodge in Orlando, Fla., is named head golf professional for The ACE Club, a corporate-oriented private golf club outside of Philadelphia that opened this fall. ... Larry Ruttenberg recorded the first-ever hole-in-one on the par-3 12th hole at the new Gary Player-designed The ACE Club located in Lafayette Hill, Pa. ... In November, the Guthrie Castle golf course in Scotland opened its doors to the public for the first time in its 535-year history.
IN THEIR OWN WORDS: Presidents Cup Teams
JACK NICKLAUS: Well, I thought you saw some unbelievable golf by both teams. Where have you had a team match where one team leads the first day, the next team leads the second day, the other team leads a third day, going to the last hole, the other team is leading. And then we had a tie.
And when the tie occurred, both Gary and I, as we were walking to the extra hole, we both felt like both teams have played too well to lose this match. We really had two winners out here. But, the captains' agreement said that we played, and so Gary and I said, well, that's what we do. But we felt like it was a team event, not an individual event. But that's what the rules of the event were, so Tiger and Ernie were selected. Then once they played one hole and they played another hole, and a fantastic save by both of them, then the third hole, the second hole, the putt that Tiger holed and then Ernie to hole a putt like he holed on top of it. We just felt like there just should not in any way, shape or form not have everybody a winner. So Gary and I stepped in and at that point, we felt it was too dark to play anyway because they really could line up the putts at No. 2 when they hit it. We may maybe supposedly violated the captains' agreement which was written up for us to sign. Something that Gary and I didn't start to start with. I thought the matches were fantastic, I thought that the hospitality was unbelievable, I thought the galleries were unbelievable, the display of sportsmanship amongst the team, the camaraderie that was there and the closeness of the things we had behind closed doors, which you guys don't know anything about, the team meetings we had, the dinners we had. It was just an unbelievable week. I'm just proud to have been associated with our group of guys. Gary is proud to be associated with his group of guys. I'm actually quite proud to be associated with both teams. GARY PLAYER: I would like to obviously endorse everything that Jack said there. We are both getting older in our lives, and this was just a fantastic thing in our lives at our age, to be with such wonderful young men and see them playing such wonderful golf and to see golf the great benefactor in this country. This country really needed something like this very, very badly and to have all of our ministers and presidents and dignitaries of government and former presidents and your President Bush of America, not to mention golf unions and PGA officials, all be in attendance here. And to witness something that I think, I don't think it's possible to have a greater event any time in your life. The great benefactor was definitely charity, the game of golf, when I think that 50 million rand will go to charity in our country through this game of golf this week makes me feel very happy. And I'd just like to say to Jack and his team, because I was meeting with my team on what we should be doing. Jack made such a magnanimous, gracious - magnanimous is good , suggestion that if we did tie, that we would hold the Cup jointly. Now that's something that was really something very special for Jack and his team to do because if that didn't happen, we wanted to go in the dark. (Laughter.) And I thought that was absolutely, that was fantastic, and we really ended in the way it should do. You'd think - we played for four days in wind and heat, and to end up with the exact same score is a miracle. Q.: Tiger, as competitive you are, where do you stand with the tie? TIGER WOODS: I think it's the perfect decision. The way the week has gone, it's the right decision for the game of golf. There is no decision because of the way the matches were played this week, the sportsmanship and the quality of play. As you all saw, the ebbs and flow of the matches, the entire week. And also to have two guys decide the fate of the whole team in extra holes like that, I don't think any of the sides felt comfortable with that to begin with. It's just part of the captains' agreement and part of the rules of the competition. But we didn't like it. It's a team event, not an individual event. We're here as a team together and we'd like to decide as a team together and not on an individual basis. Q.: When did the prospect of a tie first come up, when was it first mentioned to you and did you want to come back and play tomorrow? TIGER WOODS: I didn't want to come back to play tomorrow. It's not right. It's just not the right thing to do. After I had made the putt, I was on the front left part of the green on 2 and Jack came up to me, as well as Gary, and mentioned to me, if Ernie makes a putt, why don't we just call it a tie and move on. Then Commissioner Finchem was on the phone with Jack and he mentioned that if there's a tie, then the Americans would retain the Cup and that's not something that obviously the International Team would want to have happen. So, Jack decided to propose the idea of having a shared cup to Gary at the time, and both of the captains agreed. Gary went back to his team, his team agreed, and it was the right thing to do for the game of golf. Q.: Wonder if you and Ernie can both speak to the pressure you felt from the 18th tee onward, if you can compare to anything else you've been through. Start with you, big fella. ERNIE ELS: I'd like to hear what Tiger says first. (Laughter.) JACK NICKLAUS: We couldn't even see the hole, let alone try to putt. The putt that Tiger had at 2 - well Ernie holed a great putt at 1. And then the putt that Tiger had at 2, I'm sitting there saying, (covering eyes with hand) "oh, man, I don't want this match to end on this putt." It was up and over, down, sliding away. Couldn't have a tougher putt, because not only do you have to play the right break, you have to have dead the right speed and just the right strength otherwise it's not going to stay in the cup. He just played it perfectly. Then, you know, when that went in, all of a sudden it shifted it to Ernie. And, you know, the last thing I wanted to see happen was Ernie miss that putt. You know, yes, the Americans would have won if Ernie missed the putt. That's the last thing I wanted to see happen. When Ernie made that putt, I thought it was absolutely perfect, and I don't think there was a player on either side that wanted to see either person miss their put. And that is really the way the spirit of these matches has been played all week, and I think we'll carry that spirit away from here and I think it will enrich the lives of all of our guys forever. Q.: You and Gary both talked on Tuesday, I think it was when you first came in here and you clearly both said you didn't like the idea. Did you have any thought as all to the captains' agreement? JACK NICKLAUS: It wasn't our decision. The chances of ending in a tie are fairly remote. You know, we both - obviously we both wanted to win. We felt like that was the way it was. As soon as the match ended in a tie, we both started talking that we did not want to have this - we walk to the first tee together. Or actually we walked back on 18. Because we knew there was going to be a first hole. There was nothing happening there. We came up the first hole, the 18th hole, and we start talking about it. We walk over to the first tee, and that's when we both said we would both like to stop it right there, but it wasn't our place at that point in time. They till had daylight. It was still within the agreement. It was still, you know, was what the game was defined on paper as being done. When they got to the second hole, the lights started to drop, and once the light dropped, to play another shot, the last two shots shouldn't have been played. But to play another shot beyond that would have been criminal for the game and for these two teams. Q.: If you can compare the pressure of playing -- ERNIE ELS: You were calm. (To Tiger). You were very calm, weren't you? TIGER WOODS: Man - that was actually one of the most nerve-wracking moments I've ever had in golf. It was tough, not only the fact that if he missed his putt, you let the teammates down, your captain the assistant captain, all of the wives, girlfriends and everybody that's part of the team. You let everyone down with one putt. That's a lot of pressure. But then I was getting over the putt, I kept reminding myself: Just a little slow, I had to start focusing on the putt. When I was reading the putt I was kind of just trying to block out the front part of the green over there. I saw all this red and I was just tying to just block that out. Okay, just focus on your putt here. You've got to make this putt. I just got into my little world and made the putt. ERNIE ELS: I'll say there's a lot of similarities there. I mean, actually Ricci also said it to me: "You know, you stay on the green, you look over and you see your team." You're like - I can't look at them. I've got to look away. No, it's unbelievable pressure. Probably the first I've ever felt my legs shaking a little bit. (Laughs). It was tough. You just try and go back to the simple things in life. And, you know, it's only a game, isn't it, at the end. It's a game you don't want to lose, but it's a game. (Laughter.) You know, Tiger kicked my behind this afternoon fair and square. I said to him before we went for the playoff, "I'm going to try and get revenge." I didn't quite hit the golf shots that I wanted to, but at the end, I think what happened was fair. I think fair to both teams. These guys have to fly back home. You know, I think in the spirit of the Presidents Cup, the way we've been playing these matches over the years, I think this is a fitting finish to this one. We really beat each other up, and at the end of the day, I think we were so evenly matched, it would have been unfair to myself and Tiger to win or lose the Cup. It's a team event, and to play in the darkness, you bring luck into it, also. I think it was a fair decision and I think both teams played great. Q.: Is there any feelings of unfinished business at all? ERNIE ELS: You know, when the guys said no, we've got to stop play and it's going to be a tie, my team, the guys came to me and said, no, we can't do that because if it's a tie, they keep the Cup. And that's why we went to our respective corners. JACK NICKLAUS: I think if you heard the public and the people out there at the presentation, they were not unhappy that the International Team didn't win and they were not unhappy that the American team, or I should say - well, they were very happy that both teams won, is what I'm saying. They were happy with what the decision was. The people enjoyed it. It was a very popular decision amongst the people here. DAVIS LOVE III: Nick and I could add to that. From the - I didn't go down to 18 tee, but from when Mr. Player came backup to 18 green, he started asking every one of our players: "Do you think this is right? Don't you think this should be a tie. Don't you think it's too hard on Ernie and Tiger to have to do this?" And he went to David Toms and to myself and to Phil Mickelson and he went around and he didn't come once; he came two or three times. Every time somebody would have a pressure putt, he said, "This just isn't right." And Jack was in total agreement with him. They were walking arm-and-arm. In a Ryder Cup, that would never happen. I was sitting on the hill on the first hole with Vijay watching these two guys putt, and the whole rest of both teams were down by the green. That would have never happened in a Ryder Cup. And it shouldn't end with Tiger missing a putt or Ernie missing a putt in the dark. And I have to give a lot of credit to Mr. Player for coming to our team and asking. He started it. And he and Jack finished it the way it should be finished and they should go down just like they have done their whole careers, as gentlemen that represent the game of golf and it couldn't have had a better ending, I don't think. NICK PRICE: I'll tell you one thing. From my point of view, you have two of the greatest competitors, certainly, of my time in Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player, two guys who wanted to beat the pants off each other for three decades, just played unbelievable golf. Every one of us up here look up to these two men with respect. They both wanted to win very badly, I know that. And for them to reach the decision and to come and ask us as teams what they thought of that decision was something that I think is very special. I certainly will never forget that moment on the second green this evening when Jack and his team offered us to share the Cup, because that doesn't happen too often in sport. My sentiments on that, as Gary said, if it's 17-17 tie, each team get the Cup for a year. It's too much pressure for - I don't care if it's Tiger or Ernie or anyone else to have that burden of missing a putt or missing a shot when there's been 34 matches played and three extra holes. It's too much pressure. Q.: When you look back at it, the quality of the teams, the playoff, the way that ended, do you think this is what the Presidents Cup needed to get whatever credibility it might have been lacking? And do you think this could be looked back years from now as a turning point, much the same way as Kiawah was, without the animosity? DAVIS LOVE III: I think it did that because of where we had the event, because of, again, Jack and Gary and because of the spirit that they were played in. I think it showed that it is different than the Ryder Cup. The Ryder Cup has gotten a little over the top. We've seen that in the last few years. And this tournament, we've stressed, from presidents to captains on the stage and dignitaries on the stage, they all got up and said: We want these matches to be played fairly. That's the way it ended and that shows the world that we are going to play these matches for fun for the love of the game and we are not going to beat each other's brains out over it. GARY PLAYER: Why would you say that what the Presidents Cup was lacking? For a start, we've got a team here, there's a hell of a lot better than the Ryder Cup. If you just look at the world record, look at it on paper, not what I'm saying, black and white on paper, and our guys have a hell of a lot better records. I don't see how you could say it was lacking. Melbourne was a great championship. I think the Presidents Cup has been fantastic. (Applause).
Reader's Forum
After ending in a 17-17 tie, and having Ernie Els and Tiger Woods remain tied after three holes of a sudden death playoff, the captains of the Presidents Cup teams decided to share the cup. What do you think of this decision? Send your response to The Wire by 5 p.m. Thursday with the subject "Presidents Cup". Include your first initial and last name, city and state or country. Responses will be published in Friday Send your response to readersforum@gpagolf.com. |