PAUL McGINLEY NAMED EUROPEAN TEAM CAPTAIN
NEWS RELEASE
Paul McGinley has accepted an invitation from the
Tournament Committee of The European Tour to become Captain of The European
Team in The 2014 Ryder Cup at The Gleneagles Hotel, Perthshire, Scotland from
September 26 - 28, 2014.
Born in Dublin, Ireland, on December 16, 1966, McGinley
becomes the first Irishman to captain a Ryder Cup Team against the United
States. He will be the 24th different golfer to lead the European
(formerly Great Britain and Ireland) Team.
McGinley, a four time winner on The European Tour, made
three consecutive, and victorious, Ryder Cup appearances from 2002 – 2006 and
will always be remembered as the man who holed the winning putt during his
first appearance at the Belfry 11 years ago.
McGinley succeeds José María Olazábal with the aim of retaining
the Ryder Cup following the Spaniard’s brilliant stewardship of Europe’s
‘Miracle at Medinah’. The 46 year old was a Vice-Captain to Olazábal in Chicago
last year, the same role he fulfilled for Colin Montgomerie’s victorious 2010
Team at The Celtic Manor Resort in Wales.
Having suffered defeat to Stewart Cink and Jim Furyk
alongside Padraig Harrington in his first Ryder Cup match during day one at the
Belfry, McGinley came back to secure a vital half alongside Darren Clarke
against Furyk and Scott Hoch in the Saturday afternoon four-balls.
One down with two to play against Furyk in the Sunday
singles, McGinley was looking an unlikely hero standing on the 17th
tee but a brilliant birdie four squared the match just as Welshman Phillip
Price put the seal on a magnificent 3 and 2 victory over Phil Mickelson to take
the European Team’s points total to 14 with three matches left on the course.
Europe needed a half point to ensure Sam Torrance’s Team
could regain the trophy that had been so dramatically lost at Brookline three
years earlier.
Both men produced wayward approaches to the par four 18th,
with Furyk finding the greenside bunker and McGinley the left rough. The
Irishman chipped on to ten feet before Furyk almost spoiled the party by nearly
holing his bunker shot. But when the American’s ball came to rest above ground,
McGinley’s moment had arrived.
The rest, as they say, is history and moments after
making his putt, McGinley found himself swamped by his Captain and team-mates
as the celebrations began.
While no Ryder Cup experience can substitute holing the
winning putt, McGinley’s finest performance in the team event actually came two
years later, during Europe’s record-breaking 18 ½ - 9 ½ victory at Oakland
Hills.
The Irishman was undefeated in three matches in Detroit,
partnering Luke Donald to a half point against Chris Riley and Stewart Cink on
the first day before he and Harrington beat Davis Love III and Tiger Woods with
a 4 and 3 win in the Saturday foursomes. He then put the seal on a tremendous
week with an outstanding 3 and 2 singles victory over Cink to finish the week
undefeated.
McGinley’s captaincy credentials are there for all to
see. Not only has he played a crucial vice-captaincy role in Europe’s last two
Ryder Cup wins, he has also been Captain of two winning Great Britain and
Ireland Teams in the Vivendi Seve Trophy, defeating Continental Europe in both 2009
and 2011.
At The Gleneagles Hotel, McGinley will look to continue Europe’s
phenomenal recent record which shows them to have won seven of the last nine
biennial contests with the USA. Since the change from a Great Britain and
Ireland Team to that of Continental Europe in 1979, Europe have won nine and
tied one of the 17 matches contested.
Europe's victories were achieved under the captaincies of
Tony Jacklin (1985, 1987), Bernard Gallacher (1995), Seve Ballesteros (1997),
Sam Torrance (2002), Bernhard Langer (2004), Ian Woosnam (2006), Colin
Montgomerie (2010) and Olazábal (2012), while Jacklin presided over the halved
match in 1989.
Richard Hills, Europe’s Ryder Cup Director, said: “We are
delighted that Paul has accepted the invitation of the Tournament Committee to
take up the role as Captain for 2014. Having played in three Ryder Cups and
holed the winning putt at the Belfry in 2002, Paul has an innate understanding
of every attribute required to be a successful Captain.
“Paul’s meticulous nature and his passion for the
strategic aspects of the Captain’s role have been evident for many years,
through his role as a Ryder Cup Vice-Captain and as Captain of the Great
Britain and Ireland Team in the Vivendi Seve Trophy. We already know that he
will leave no stone unturned in his quest to retain The Ryder Cup at Gleneagles
in September 2014.”
Labels: RYDER CUP
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