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Europe Ryder Cup team
Sitting uncomfortably: Captain Nick Faldo (left), Paul Casey and Sergio Garcia reflect on what might have been following Europe's Ryder Cup defeat at the hands of America

Blame us, not Nick, say defeated stars

Ian Chadband, Evening Standard
22 Sep 2008


Sergio Garcia today led a chorus of support from the European team for beleaguered captain Nick Faldo as the players shouldered the blame for America's biggest Ryder Cup triumph for 27 years.

Faldo's captaincy has been criticised widely outside the team room, including his decision to rest Garcia and Lee Westwood from the Saturday morning foursomes and to 'backload' the team in the singles with four key players whose matches became redundant as the Cup was lost 16½ to 11½.

"If I'd have played better and I would have won my match, maybe we would be talking and writing a different story," said Garcia, who lost the opening game against Anthony Kim. "It has nothing to do with Nick.

"We are the guys that need to perform well on the course and we needed to do better. It's not his fault."

Westwood added: "The session where me and Sergio were rested was a session we won, so Nick was right to do that. So you tell me whether Nick was right or wrong?" Faldo admitted he was unlikely to seek another chance to lead the side in 2010, saying: "I doubt it. I believe it was a one-stop shot."

But Bernard Gallacher believes he deserves a second chance and should be re-appointed captain of the team for the match at Celtic Manor in Wales.

Former skipper Gallacher, who himself-only triumphed at the third attempt at Oak Hill in New York 13 years ago, said: "Nick Faldo should be captain next time. I would go with that.

"I think he deserves a victory and another chance as he's put too much into the game and done too much for European golf."

One of Faldo's rare successes was the performance of Ian Poulter, who complained that he had been deliberately shoulder-barged by an American golfer, believed to be Anthony Kim, during the fourballs on Saturday.

He would not name his 'assailant', but cameras did show what had appeared to be a collision between Poulter and Kim as the Englishman was walking to one of the tee boxes.

Kim, the Americans' great new star, had been following the match after being rested following his loss in the morning.

"He hadn't played very well and decided to walk around in the afternoon and make his point.

"As opposed to walking around me as I was walking off the tee, he decided to drop his right shoulder into me. It's not what you'd expect from a fellow professional," said Poulter.

Lee Westwood revealed that he had been woken by a phone call in his hotel at half past midnight on the morning of yesterday's singles match and that his parents, in another room, had been woken by a call at 4.30am from someone who obviously intended to target him instead.

A man dressed in a white sheet also leapt out at him on the walk to the sixth hole.

"He just jumped out and went "Whooooo" to my face. He was still there further up the fairway. I should have set two of the blokes dressed as leprechauns on him; instead I set two policemen on him," smiled Westwood.

Reader views (6)

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This is what always happens after the Ryder Cup matches... the winners look around and say "What, what do you mean?" and the losers point fingers and nit-pick the victors. I think we all have lost sight of one major issue... we won it without Tiger! We had more team spirit, we worked as a cohesive unit, we acted like the European teams usually do.

- Scott, Rochester, NY, 23/09/2008 20:15
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In these times, where clear thinking human beings must have a hard time being proud americans, it was a nice gesture from Europe to hand back the cup.
The cheering after missed puts and balls in the water was probably done by people that don't understand what golf and the ryder cup is really about. It's sad to see so many of those (but we got some too) are american.
I can't believe Kim really body checked poulter, although it would proove my point...

- Taco, Amsterdam, Netherlands, 23/09/2008 14:27
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After 3 days of Golf in which they were great matches and I think no less of any of them. Is there anyone on the losing team or the winnning team for that matter, that is still not a millionaire and sleeping soundly every night. What a lot of pressure these poor rich guys had to go through. 3 days of golf on a course I can't afford to play on even if they would let me.

- Paul, San Angelo, USA, 23/09/2008 01:30
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It is interesting that "poor" Ian Poulter and Lee Westwood should be such whiners when the Americans have never once complained of "abuse" during their European losses. Having attended this one as well as some of those, I can assure you that, if Poulter and Westwood have cause to complain, so did the Americans. There are always people in the crowd in this type of match who become overly excited and yes, act inappropriately but you know, they might try sucking it up a bit, quit complaining and just admit, like true sportsmen, that on the week the US simply outplayed them. Something neither of them have managed to say thus far.

- Rusty, Lexington, USA, 22/09/2008 21:05
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From Tee to green, and in our preparation and team spirit we were every bit as good as the Usa, but the americans putting undid Europe, at times there putting was almost mystical.

- Brian, wiltshire, 22/09/2008 17:34
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Lee "boo hoo - cry baby" Westwood got beat and blames the crowd and disparges the United States. Wasn't during the 2006 British Open that purple paint was thrown on the green by those "great british fans"?

- Jim, Chicago, IL USA, 22/09/2008 15:24
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