FROM THE DAILY TELEGRAPH WEBSITE
By JAMES CORRIGAN
There are lucky Ryder Cup captains and unlucky Ryder Cup captains. Of this Sir
Nick Faldo has no doubt. But he is not sure if there are good captains and
bad captains.
Many will believe Faldo (pictured) would think that, considering his standing as the only
Europe captain to lose this century.
That defeat in Kentucky dares to stand
out on a CV which features six majors and a longer successive spell at world
No 1 than all but Tiger Woods
With every passing blue and gold glory, the sole loss in six matches
inevitably gains more notoriety.
It is fair enough to say Faldo has endured
enough of the light swinging above his head.
“I do get sick about the ongoing inquisition,” he said. “It’s four years ago,
it’s gone. The bottom line is we went there and played and were outplayed
and got beaten. It was about professional golfers competing. But no, it was
all my fault.”
To Faldo it is fairly simple. His top three players did not perform.
“When
Sergio [Garcia] says to me after the first day, ‘Excuse me ladies, I’m
f----- , I don’t want to play any more,’ that’s a belter for a captain. ‘Uh,
you’re one of my main guys and you don’t want to play? Terrific, great,
thanks’.
"How do you deal with that one?
"Then I had [Padraig] Harrington exhausted and [Lee] Westwood, who was
in a different place. They were my top three players and gave me 1½ points.
It’s pretty tough to do anything with that. That’s the fact, but as a
captain you get walloped with other stuff.” So there was the lack of
assistant captains, the lack of inspirational speeches and poor
communication-management skills.
As one of British sport’s most self-driven of champions, Faldo plainly is
baffled by the criticisms from certain players on his team.
“As a golfer you
go there to compete and all that matters is playing the match,” he said. “So
it’s hard work for a captain when you get all sorts of things blamed on you
afterwards.
"But then I did pick [Poulter], which I also got slaughtered for when I
named him. And he went on to win four points out of five, which was then the
best return for any wild card. Hey, my claim to fame. The only decent thing
I did all week.”
Faldo does sarcasm well. It has helped him earn millions as one of American
TV’s premier golf analysts. He was there at Medinah six weeks ago when Jose
Maria Olazabal’s men pulled off the greatest comeback in the event’s
history. And he recognises the absurdity in the captain’s narrative.
In the
background, Peter Hanson was furious for playing only once, while Paul
Lawrie complained about the lack of information being handed down from
management.
“Look at Ollie on the Friday and Saturday,” said Faldo. “Ollie was p----- off and
told them they were not playing to their expectations. There was an awful
lot going on. America had totally outplayed us. They were 10-6 up and if
Poulter hadn’t have saved us it could have been a dreadful whitewash.
"Ollie would have been labelled a terrible captain and rightly he would
have said, ‘No I’m not taking all the blame’.
"To some things, you have to
put your hand up and say we could have done differently. But essentially it
comes down to moments from individuals on the course.”
And yes, Faldo does believe fortune plays a heavy hand in those three days
when golf enters the spotlight of the Premier League or NFL.
“Talk about
lucky. Imagine if Rory [McIlroy] hadn’t made it to the first tee in the
singles, if that police car he had to jump into hadn’t been there. It turned
into a joke when he got there with 10 minutes to go, but if he hadn’t and
everything had have unfolded the way it did, Rory would have cost Europe the Ryder Cup
"Just think of the outcry. Rory would have been scarred for life and the
finger would also have been pointed at the leadership and organisation. The
whole thing would have been a disaster.”
It turned out to be exactly that for America and for their captain, Davis
Love.
"But if Davis had put his arm around Phil Mickelson on the Saturday and
said, ‘I know we said you’d only play four matches but we’ve got them on the
ropes’ and persuaded him to play in the afternoon and they’d got a half then
it would have been all over. It’s easy to discuss that now with hindsight.
And it did help to make brilliant TV.”
Didn’t it just. Not only on the Sunday but on the Saturday, too. While Europe
slept on Poulter’s five finishing birdies which gave the visitors that most
alluring of sniffs, Faldo held court in entertaining fashion on the Golf
Channel.
“We had a great night discussing how the impossible had suddenly become
possible. David Feherty [Faldo’s former Ryder Cup team-mate who is also an
analyst] came up with a fantastic line saying that after Poulter’s win the
teams ‘were tied at 10-6’.
"We were sitting in a studio with a full moon behind us and during an ad
break I asked the stats man, ‘When’s the last time there was a full moon
during the Ryder Cup’? He looked it up and said, ‘You won’t believe this –
it was in 1999 at Brookline [when America came from 10-6 down to win]’. So I
went with this, saying,
‘There’s something going on, there’s something in
the air’. We could all feel it that night and we laid out what would have to
happen. And it all did, just as we said. Incredible.”
Faldo is never shy to put himself into the story. Why should he be? He has
appeared in more Ryder Cups than any other player (11), has won more Ryder
Cup points than any other player (25) and since the war (the first one, that
is) Faldo has won more majors than any other player from his continent.
And as the last player to win a major under the flag of St George he will
remain central to England’s golfing story until the likes of Westwood,
Poulter, Luke Donald or Justin Rose follow his example.
At least one of this quartet has sought him out for advice.
“Luke came to me
in the summer. He’d been torturing himself with his schedule and basically I
told him to spend more time at the major venues. Did Luke do as I advised?
No, he did he opposite. It was so funny,” said Faldo, with a laugh.
“1. I said don’t tell anyone you’ve been to see me – he did.
“2. You’re world No 1, don’t do 20 interviews saying you’re going to do this
and that – he did.
“3. Get to Olympic [Club, venue for the US Open] as soon as possible, go for
two days on a recce – he didn’t.
“4. With strategy on the golf course, par will be your friend, find a way to
make a par and don’t hit it at the flag – he misses the cut.
“Luke was just lost with it all. I think he realised his preparation wasn’t
right. He did a bit more at Lytham and I hope he does more again. He’s so
good.”
Certainly Faldo would be interested in talking more with Donald. He would be
happy to counsel any of the Europeans trying to break their major ducks.
“I’d love to do it. It’s more than just coaching. It’s not just bits of a
swing – it’s the walking bits in the middle. You can talk all very well on
the range, but unless you’ve stood there in a fairway you don’t know what
it’s like when your guts are churning, your head is spinning, you have no
saliva and you have to make a decision. I think I could help guys with that.
They’ve got my number.”
For the amateurs, there is his book A Swing For Life, first published
in 1995 but now updated. Faldo has knowledge to impart and clearly wants to,
whether it is in his TV role, through literature or as a mentor. The game
still fascinates him and although he is 55 he has not yet given up
completely.
“I’m playing in a father-and-son event with Matthew in December and some of my
academy coaches said can we train you properly. It’s been kind of fun. I’ve
been getting into some old positions and it’s like ‘oh blimey’. We’re
treating it seriously like real golfers and the competitive juices are
starting to flow again.”
Enough to make an emotional return at next year’s Open at Muirfield, venue for
his first major 25 years ago? “If this inspires me, you never know. But more
as a journey, not as a mission. For the love of the game, if you like.”
A Swing For Life by Nick Faldo is published by Simon and Schuster, £19.99
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