Golf

Americans 1 point away from Presidents Cup

The Americans came within one match of winning the Presidents Cup — on Saturday.

Anirban Lahiri and Si Woo Kim deliver only victory for the International team

United States' Kevin Chappell celebrates after sinking a putt on the tenth hole during the four-ball golf matches on the third day of the Presidents Cup. (Julio Cortez/The Associated Press)

The International team lost just about everything but its sense of humour.

A long and demoralizing day at the Presidents Cup ended with Anirban Lahiri making two clutch birdies in a fourballs match that spared his team the indignity of watching the Americans celebrate another victory — on Saturday, no less.

From the sun rising over the Manhattan skyline until the chill of twilight at Liberty National, the Americans poured it on with such frightening force that they were one match away from clinching the cup one day early. The International team went 13 straight matches without winning until Lahiri and Kim won on the 18th hole.

International team lives to fight another day at Presidents Cup

7 years ago
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American Charley Hoffman holed out for birdie on the 17th, but Anirban Lahiri quickly matched him with his own birdie putt to stave off elimination.

"They got a standing ovation when they walked in our team room tonight," International captain Nick Price said with a smile. "First time we had seen a match go our way for a long time."

And that means it will be a short Sunday.

Mickelson sets record

The Americans had a 14 1/2-3 1/2 lead and need only one point from the 12 singles matches on Sunday.

This is a powerful U.S. team playing to its full potential, and the result is the biggest blowout since the Presidents Cup began in 1994.

Phil Mickelson set a Presidents Cup record with his 25th victory, breaking the record set by Tiger Woods. Mickelson hit two wedges into birdie range in the morning foursomes session with Kevin Kisner, when the Americans won three matches and halved the other.

Jordan Spieth's best intentions cost him a hole in a ruling rarely seen in match play, though that didn't matter. All that did was inspire Spieth and Patrick Reed to win yet another match. They are 8-1-3 as a partnership in the Presidents Cup and Ryder Cup.

Justin Thomas made another big birdie on the 14th hole and cupped his hand to his ear, covered by a beanie in the chill, to fire up a crowd that didn't need much help. Even in the lone loss of the day, the Americans made it hard on them. Charley Hoffman chipped in from short of the 17th green and body-slammed partner Kevin Chappell, a celebration that lasted only long enough for Lahiri to match his birdie with a 20-foot putt and keep a 1-up lead.

Lahiri and Kim were 1 up playing the par-3 18th, and when Lahiri chipped to 3 feet and both Americans were in the bunker, they chose not to concede Lahiri's putt until after Chappell had made par.

Record-breaking day

It was meaningless in the big picture, yet it illustrated clearly — along with all the celebrations — that no victory is too big for this U.S. team.

"Our goal coming in was to try to win every session, and we've done that up till now," Daniel Berger said after teaming with Thomas for his first point of the week. "Tomorrow, we're going to go out and try to do the exact same thing."

The 11-point margin is the largest going into the 12 singles matches, breaking the International record of nine points set in 1998 at Royal Melbourne, the only time it has ever won the Presidents Cup.

While the outcome was inevitable, this day still had its moment, none more peculiar than the 12th hole .

Jason Day was already down for a birdie. Spieth had 12 feet for his birdie, while Louis Oosthuizen hit his drive behind the green on the reachable par 4 and had a shot at eagle. The ball raced by the hole and was headed down the slope with water on the other side, and the partisan American crowd was urging it to keep going.

Spieth had heard enough and reached over and scooped away the moving ball with his putter.

Match referee Andy McFee, a top rules chief on the European Tour, stepped in and informed Spieth that it was a violation of the first rule in golf (Rule 1-2): "A player must not take an action with the intent to influence the movement of a ball in play."

No player would ever do that in stroke play (though John Daly and Kirk Triplett did it to their golf balls on U.S. Open greens). Spieth figured the International team already had its birdie. Even so, the rule meant Spieth was disqualified from the hole, even as Oosthuizen and Day protested.

"I'm sorry for trying to do the right thing," Spieth said to McFee, a mixture of sarcasm and frustration.