ryder cup
ryder cup
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The Ryder Cup
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Ryder Cup brings the money rolling in
Captains call for sportsmanship by all
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Sutton rates USA best putting team ever
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Tiger Woods accepts the pressure to perform
Officials warn fans over course behaviour
Captains praise Oakland Hills set up
Casey sacks caddie on eve of Ryder Cup
European team expecting partisan crowds
Team spirit key for European Team
Gamesmanship common in Ryder Cup play
Langer promises a tough contest
Hal Sutton firmly in control of USA Team
Fred Funk thrilled to be part of Ryder Cup
Mickelson could be USA's trump card
Ryder Cup has developed into global event
Hal Sutton follows Seve's 1997 example
Attention to detail is Langer's hallmark

Ryder Cup has developed into global event

The Ryder Cup is acknowledged as one of the greatest occasions in sport, a biennial source of high drama, fluctuating emotion and top-quality golf.

Twenty five years ago, however, the competition was a low-key affair in which the United States yawned their way to one victory after another over an outclassed Britain and Ireland team.

In 1979, the competition's rules were adapted and the U.S. took on a 12-man team from Europe at The Greenbrier in West Virginia.

That year's result, a U.S. victory by 17 points to 11, was in keeping with the tournament's tradition but the addition of Spaniards Seve Ballesteros and Antonio Garrido provided much-needed muscle and self-belief in the new-look team.

From the early 1980s, the depth and quality of European golf improved beyond recognition and the likes of Ballesteros, Nick Faldo, Sandy Lyle, Bernhard Langer, Ian Woosnam and Jose-Maria Olazabal have been in the vanguard of that renaissance.

In the last 10 encounters, the Ryder Cup could hardly have been more closely fought with Europe winning five matches, the U.S. claiming four and one -- at The Belfry in 1989 -- tied.

In those 10 contests, only two were decided by a margin of more than two points in either team's favour and the trans-Atlantic showdown event has often transcended golf to become sporting theatre of the most dramatic kind.

The Ryder Cup's unusual design, featuring three different playing formats over three days of competition, produces a roller-coaster ride of fortune and form for the teams.

Often the end result is decided by the last singles match still out on the course on the Sunday.

The history of the Ryder Cup dates back to 1921 when Britain and Ireland comfortably won the first of two unofficial matches against the U.S. at Gleneagles in Scotland.

The second match, staged at Wentworth in England in 1926, was also easily won by the home side. British professional Abe Mitchell and his U.S. counterpart Walter Hagen convinced Samuel Ryder, an English golf enthusiast, to put up a trophy for future matches.

Ryder, the son of a Manchester corn merchant, was happy to oblige with a solid gold trophy worth 250 pounds ($444.8).

The biennial team competition was born, with the first match taking place at Worcester Country Club in Worcester, Massachusetts from June 3 to 4, 1927. The U.S. won by 9-1/2 points to 2-1/2.


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