Heartache for Westwood and Garcia
Lee Westwood and Sergio Garcia, so close to being Europe’s heroes along with Colin Montgomerie, suffered heartache in the Ryder Cup at The Belfry tonight.
Chasing their fourth win out of four, Garcia three-putted the 17th and Westwood the 18th to hand Tiger Woods and Davis Love the unlikeliest of victories.
And although Irish rookie Paul McGinley did save Europe a vital half by winning the final hole of the final match of the day to make the overnight score 8-8, Sam Torrance’s side will have to go where few have gone before to regain the trophy.
Since 1957, 22 matches ago, the United States have only twice lost the concluding singles – and as the holders they need only to share them 6-6 tomorrow.
A tired but inspired Montgomerie had taken his record for the week to three wins and a half, but his win with Padraig Harrington – brought in to give 45-year-old Bernhard Langer a rest – proved to be the only European winners in the second series of fourballs.
They took a one-point lead into them, but Niclas Fasth and the previously unseen Jesper Parnevik lost from three-up after seven as America launched their fightback attempt.
One had to feel for Garcia and Westwood, who must have thought victory was minutes away when the 22-year-old Spaniard drilled a fairway wood onto the front of the green at the 564-yard 17th.
They were one-up at the time following Westwood’s 25-foot putt on the 16th - actually for a half as Woods followed him in from 12 – and neither of their opponents were within 150 yards of the green in two.
But Love chipped in for birdie and after Westwood had missed from nine feet Garcia missed his three-foot second putt.
Now level, Westwood and Love were the only two to make the green in two at the fearsome 473-yard last. Garcia was just over the back in two, chipped to six feet and missed again, Love holed from five for par and Westwood, his first putt having rolled four feet past, set it off outside the hole with too much pace to take the break.
Fasth and Parnevik had already lost on the last by then, opponents Mark Calcavecchia and David Duval digging themselves out of their hole in brilliant fashion by coming home in a six under 30.
When Montgomerie and Harrington sent America’s only unbeaten pair, Phil Mickelson and David Toms, to a two and one defeat things looked up again, but then McGinley and Darren Clarke fell one down when Scott Hoch sank a 14-foot birdie putt on the same green.
If they had gone down to defeat the momentum would all have been with Curtis Strange’s team going into Sunday.
But, alone of the four, McGinley made his par on the 473-yard last and, once again, a cliff-hanger is in prospect. We have come to expect nothing less these last 20 years.
Garcia and Westwood had brought the biggest cheers when they took the head covers off their drivers at the 311-yard 10th and made the 265-yard carry over water.
Woods and Love, the two biggest hitters on the cup holders’ team, thought long and hard, but decided to lay-up and lost the hole to Westwood’s two-putt birdie.
Justice, in other words, was done on the hole, but it was Woods and Love who had the last laugh in the match.
After falling behind for the first time in the match in mid-morning, Torrance's two unbeaten partnerships rescued a 2-2 outcome from the second series of foursomes to make the overall score 6 1/2--5 1/2.
Despite a game which Garcia described as possibly “the worst ever in Ryder Cup history”, he and Westwood recorded their third win together.
They beat Stewart Cink and Furyk two and one, the contest containing a mere three birdies and eight bogeys.
“We struggled a bit, but it goes with the pressure and trying to win as many points as we can for the side,” added Garcia.
It still might have been America’s session, but at all square with two to play Montgomerie and Bernhard Langer birdied the long 17th, Langer hitting his approach from 167 yards to eight feet and his partner making the putt.
That left the daunting 18th, where Montgomerie hit the perfect drive and after Langer had come up 70 feet short of the flag the Scot rolled his putt to the holeside and celebrated another victory when Hoch’s birdie chip finished inches away.
At the start of the day and with Europe leading 4 1/2-3 1/2 Phillip Price and Pierre Fulke were finally tossed into the cauldron – and found it too hot to handle.
After threatening to topple Mickelson and Toms and stretch Europe’s lead to two points, the two uncapped players were beaten two and one.
Then Clarke and Thomas Bjorn were defeated four and three by Tiger Woods and Davis Love – Woods’ first win of the week and only his fourth in 13 Ryder Cup games.
One up with six to play, Fulke and Price bogeyed the 13th and 14th and then saw two wonder shots from Mickelson – first a fairwaywood to within two feet of the flag on the 545-yard 15th and then a recovery just as close from under the lip of a greenside bunker at the 16th.
Westwood and Garcia were ahead from the moment Cink and Furyk bogeyed the fourth, while Langer and Montgomerie were never behind either, but had to work much harder.
Torrance had called Montgomerie his “Rock” last year and in putting him with Langer had brought the two most experienced members of his side together.
They did not let him down and Montgomerie said of the 45-year-old German, now the most successful foursomes player in the history of the event: “The whole team wanted to play with this guy and I was just the lucky one.
“I am honoured, whether it’s his last Ryder Cup or whether they are many more to come. He’s the best partner the world can have.”
The two now have a crucial role to play separately rather than together – and every player will tee off knowing what is at stake.
The only times America have lost the singles in the last 21 matches was at Oak Hill in 1995 – and at The Belfry in 1985. The year Torrance holed the winning putt.






