Golfing beyond the Big Four
The Big Four major tournaments in golf -- the Masters, U.S. Open,
British Open, and PGA Championship -- are over for the year. But the
golf world is still abuzz with talk about the other big ones -- the
President’s Cup and the Ryder Cup.
The first occurs in late September, and the latter will not be
played until 2006 (the Ryder Cup takes place in even years and the
President’s Cup in odd years).
Notably, the matches are played not for the purse but for national
honor.
The precise beginnings are clouded in debate, but it is known that
in 1921 an American team of professional golfers faced a British team
at Gleneagles, Scotland. The U.S. team lost to the British, 9-3.
Another unofficial match was played in 1926. This time it was even
worse for the Yanks, a 13 1/2 -1 1/2 disgrace.
In the stands at this match, however, was one Samuel Ryder, an
English businessman who had made his fortune selling penny seed
packets to the garden-crazy English. At a lunch with both British and
American pros after the match, someone proposed making it a regular
event, and Ryder volunteered to provide the gold trophy.
Over the years the match has evolved, most notably in 1977 when
Jack Nicklaus approached the PGA of Great Britain and encouraged them
to expand their field of player selection to include all the players
on the European Tour division of the British PGA. The result was that
in 1979, Seve Ballesteros and Antonio Garrido joined the once
all-British team.
This arrangement is still discriminatory in that it doesn’t take
into account all the great golfers from South Africa, Australia,
Canada, Argentina, New Zealand, Japan, Fiji and the rest of the
world.
The President’s Cup was created to rectify that situation. Begun
in 1994, it pits an American team against great players who do not
qualify for the European pool of the Ryder Cup.
What really distinguishes both these events is that they are
match-play tournaments. That is to say, it isn’t a whole bunch of
golfers and their caddies against each other in a four-day contest.
Three different types of golf are played -- singles match play,
four-ball match play and foursome match play -- and to describe the
rules would take several more columns. Suffice it to say that the
goal is not money but points, and it makes for some of the most
exciting golf to watch.
For the seasoned golfer or neophyte duffer, there are lots of
books in the library that can help with your game. There are DVDs and
books to help with your swing, your drives, your short game and your
putting.
But there are also some great titles that will help in
appreciating the two big match-play tournaments. For starters, there
is Arnold Palmer’s “Playing by the Rules: All the Rules of the Game,
Complete with Memorable Rulings from Golf’s Rich History,” and “Rules
of the Green: A History of the Rules of Golf,” by Kenneth Chapman.
To get even more specific, there is “Never Out of the Hole: Tips
and Tactics for Winning at Match-Play Golf,” by T.J. Tomasi, Mike
Adams and Michael Corcoran.
If you want to improve your enjoyment of the matches, there are
also “David Feherty’s Totally Subjective History of the Ryder Cup”;
“The Ryder Cup: Golf’s Greatest Event,” by Bob Bupka and Tom Clavin;
and “Us Against Them: An Oral History of the Ryder Cup,” by Robin
McMillan.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public
Library. This week’s column is by Sara Barnicle. All titles may be
reserved from home or office computers by accessing the catalog at
o7www.newportbeachlibrary.orgf7. For more information on the
Central Library or any of the branches, please contact the library at
(949) 717-3800, option 2.
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