Teams ready for Junior Ryder Cup

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The European and United States teams are ready for the Junior Ryder Cup to be played at Interlachen Country Club on September 26-27. Following the matches the teams will also play a 9-hole Friendship Match at Hazeltine Country Club, a curtain raiser for the Ryder Cup matches at the same venue on September 28th.

The European team, captained by Maitena Alsuguren is

Falko Hanisch, Germany

Matias Hinkala, Finland

Marcus Svensson, Sweden

Jonathan Goth-Rasmussen, Denmark

Adrien Pendaries, France

Julia Engstrom, Sweden

Emilie Paltrinien, Italy

Pauline Roussin Bouchard, France

Frida Kinhult, Sweden

Beatrice Wallin, Sweden

Emma Spitz, Austria

 

The United States team is

Norman Xiong, California

Lucy Li, California

Patick Welch, Rhode Island

Alyaa Abdulghanny, California

Davis Shore, Tennessee

Gina Kim, North Carolina

Noah Goodwin, Texas

Wilson Furr, Mississippi

Eugene Hong, Florida

Hailee Cooper, Texas

Emilia MIgliaccio, North Carolina

Kaitlyn Papp, Texas

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From Queenie to The King

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Happy Birthday to Arnold Palmer

and to any of the other golfers whose birthday is on September 10th.

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Trade secretary calls”Britain fat and lazy because businessmen prefer golf”

Oh dear…International Trade  Secretary  Liam Fox MP has taken a swipe at golf saying that it is distracting our businessmen on a Friday afternoon when they should be hard at it making money for the country. Listen to this, and the backlash which followed, some of which has little to do with our beloved sport.

Britain is “too lazy and too fat” with businessmen preferring “golf on a Friday afternoon” to trying to boost the country’s prosperity, Liam Fox has said.
The international trade secretary’s remarks, at a Conservative Way Forward event, were recorded by the Times.
Downing Street said he was clearly expressing private views.
Richard Reed, Innocent Drinks co-founder, said Mr Fox “had never done a day’s business in his life”.
Mr Fox, who was a prominent voice within the Leave campaign in the EU referendum, is in charge of negotiating trade deals for the UK once it has left the European Union.
During his speech to activists on Thursday evening he said there needed to be a change in British business culture and said people had got to stop thinking about exporting as an opportunity and start thinking about it as a duty.
“This country is not the free-trading nation it once was. We have become too lazy, and too fat on our successes in previous generations,” he said.
He added: “Companies who could be contributing to our national prosperity – but choose not to because it might be too difficult or too time-consuming or because they can’t play golf on a Friday afternoon we’ve got to be saying to them if you want to share in the prosperity of our country you have a duty to contribute to the prosperity of our country.”
In Mr Fox’s speech he also criticised the “Foreign Office view of the world” for focusing on capital cities and diplomacy rather than business, and claimed his new government department had taken charge of “trading elements”.
The comments follow his letter to Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson, which was leaked to the press, suggesting British trade would not flourish unless the Foreign Office was reduced to a department focused only on diplomacy and security.
Liam Fox says that UK exporters are too often on the golf course to focus on selling their wares overseas.
Analysis – By Joe Lynam, business correspondent
No-one knows how much business is done on the front or back nine – or more plausibly in the clubhouse over a glass of something – but it’s probably not insignificant.
Business bibles such as Forbes, CNBC and Bloomberg all have special features about golf and its importance to sealing a deal.
People do business with other people and golf is a game which relies on honesty, temperament and sound judgement. Cheating is shunned. Deciding whether to do a deal with someone can require similar attributes.

Many business people will have been galled to be told that they are too lazy not to be exporting and that it is their duty to be doing so.
The notion that entrepreneurs couldn’t be bothered to increase their sales will irritate – especially when it comes from a politician who has never run a company.
A Downing Street spokesman said Mr Fox had been expressing his own views at the event, and not the views of the government.
A source at No 10 later added: “Whatever form of words we use, the point we all want to make is that Britain can trade its way to greater prosperity, with the well-paid jobs and security that entails.”
Mr Fox’s own spokesman said the minister was committed to supporting the full range of businesses in the UK so they could best take advantage of the opportunities that Brexit presented.
But Mr Reed, who was also deputy chair of the official Remain referendum campaign, called Mr Fox’s comments “absolutely disgusting”.
‘Terrible voice’
“He is a representative of us, of this country, and he turns round and slags us off, calling us fat and lazy,” he said on BBC Radio 4’s Today. “He’s never done a day’s business in his life.”
“He’s talking about business people here who were absolutely clear in saying that we want, and do, export, and that’s why we do want to remain in the EU… I just think: ‘how dare he talk down the country that he damaged, how dare he’.
“He’s a terrible, terrible voice for British business.”
Mr Reed added that he’d “never played golf in [his] life”.
Labour MP Chuka Umunna said Mr Fox’s comments were “a complete disgrace, coming from the man supposed to be promoting our businesses globally” and UK businesses deserved an apology.
“UK business must have woken up today, read Liam Fox’s comments, and thought with friends like these who needs enemies”, he tweeted.
The chief executive of the Engineering Employers Federation, Terry Scuoler, said: “The comments from Liam Fox were extremely unwise and very unhelpful.
“What we’re looking for in these uncertain times is support from government – not negativity – particularly through the forthcoming Autumn Statement.”
‘Offensive and crass’
Shadow minister without portfolio Jonathan Ashworth said Mr Fox lacked “humility” and should apologise.
“These are offensive and crass comments,” he said.
“Every MP knows of hard working businesses in their constituency who are struggling at the moment. None of them are lazy or more interested in playing golf.”
Pat McFadden, Labour MP and supporter of the Open Britain campaign group pushing for a close relationship with the EU, said he was sceptical about how Mr Fox could fulfil his role.
“If the government doesn’t confirm it supports membership of the single market it won’t serve British business, but that is hardly surprising if ministers can’t even speak up for British business,” he said.
“It is hard to see why the government’s trade minister is attacking British business when he is supposed to be promoting the UK as a great place to do business.”

 

What was offensive was using our sport as the example of something which takes people away from their business, when in many cases this is just not true when so much business is discussed while playing golf. And as for people being fat and lazy, Dr Fox needs to find out all the health benefits of playing golf, a message which England Golf have so vigorously promoted over the past four years. Far from our business people being fat and lazy, they are preserving and improving their health, combatting stress and prolonging their working lives by playing golf. Workaholics are ineffective. Those who take physical exercise and breaks from their work in the fresh air perform better and ultimately produce properity for thhe country.

Uninformed comments, disappointing

 

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Tiger to return in October

 

Tiger Woods announced on his website today that he will be returning to competitive golf at the start of the new  2016/17 season after the Fedex Cup playoffs.

He will begin at his own Tiger Woods Invitational on the Monterey Pensinsular October 10-11, followed by the Safeway Open (formerly the Frys.Com Open) October 13-16. He then plans to compete in the Turkish Airlines Open November 3-6 and his own Hero World Challenge In the Bahamas December 1-4.

Woods last competed in the 2015 Wyndhams Championship where he tied for 10th. After two back surgeries this year he has sat out the whole of the 2016 PGA Tour season. He says:

“My rehabilitation is at the point where I am comfortable making plans but I still have work to do. Whether I can play depends on my continued recovery. My hope is to have my game ready to go in October”.

So some conditional language. Let’s hope its going to happen.

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McIlroy supremely confident in Boston

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It felt hard to believe, watching Rory McIlroy’s dominant performance to win the Duetsche Bank Championship on Monday, that this was his first win of 2016.

Trailing by six shots at the start of the final round he won by two shots from Surrey’s Paul Casey with a 65 that looked easy. It was hard to believe that he has had a crisis with his outter, he looked supremely confident. Changing from a Nike blade putter to a Scotty Cameron mallett and working intensively with putting coach Phil Kenyon has restored his confidence. It is only the second tournament since he teamed up with Kenyon and he is now talking about winning the FedEx Cup. “I’m really excited going i to the final part of the season” he said “hopefully its momentum I can bring to Team Europe to help them win”.

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Swoosh…and its gone

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The Chief Executive Officer of Nike Phil Knight gave an interview this week on his decision to shut down the brand’s golf equipment business.

“It was an easy financial decision to make but hard emotionally. It was hard on Tiger. But the financial reality just lead us to it”.

The golf brand will continue but only for shoes and apparel, a decision which has also been taken by Adidas. Wilson Sporting Goods are said to be interested in buying up the golf equipment business. It has come as a surprise as in January they had signed 14 new players.

Rory McIlroy, who signed a deal with Nike in 2013 worth £15 million a year has expressed his sadness for the employees “that made genuinely great golf equipment”. Tiger Woods, who has used their clubs since 2000 was once goaded by Phil Mickelson that he used “inferior equipment”.

Prominent Nike and Taylor Made players who will be looking sooner or later to sign with a new manufacturer are World No 1 Jason Day, Michelle Wie, Suzann Pettersen, Ross Fisher, Paul Casey as well as McIlroy and Woods.

 

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Hickory challenge after the European Masters

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From across the pond: how the Americans view the Ryder Cup selections

https://soundcloud.com/user-96678684/episode-46-ryder-cup-roundtable

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Darren Clarke makes his wildcard picks

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It was always going to be a tough call for Darren Clarke. He chose Lee Westwood, Martin Kaymer and Thomas Pieters and omitted Russell Knox. After the second round of this week’s Deutsche Bank Championship Knox said “I was very disappointed to get the call telling me I wasn’t on the team but I’ve got to respect the decision of Darren Clarke and his team”.

With his world ranking of 20, 2 wins and 2 second places on the PGA Tour in any other year choosing Knox would have been high on the captain’s agenda. If Knox had been a member of the European tour he would have earned enough points from his win in the HSBC Champions Champions event in China last year to automatically qualify for the team. But that must have been a major factor in the decision. Knox came over and played in only four events as a non-member, although he was runner up in the Irish Open. He also said that “he barely spoke to anyone on the European Tour and I had that going against me”. This seems to be a big factor, that he didn’t take up membership of the European Tour, nor try to get to know his team mates.

He also had to compete for a place against Thomas Pieters whose run of form, with a particularly hot putter, has been so impressive in the past few weeks. Fourth place in the Olympic Games, beaten by a birdie on the last green in the Czech Open and three successive birdies to win the Made In Denmark event.

He is amused by the covert operation to get him a Captain’s pick so that he can play for the United States team. His dual nationality – his father is American and he has lived in the United States most of his life – means that there is a remote possiblity. Knox says of this “Know that there are a few people talking about it, but its not going to happen”.

However, there is still a remote possibility that Russell Knox could play. Under the Captains Agreement if one of the automatically qualified players has to pull out then the place goes to the next highest ranked player on the World Rankings, which is Knox. With Henrik Stenson withdrawing from The Barclays last week with a flare up of the knee injury which he had surgery for at the end of last year, there is a niggle of doubt about whether he will be fit to play.

If this does happen and Knox is automatically picked would his heart belong to the European team? It is certainly the first time that someone with dual nationality has been eligible for a Ryder Cup side. I believe that if Russell had truly wanted to play for the European Team he should have taken up tour membership and got to know his team mates. Because the Europeans do know each other, they bond like brothers, and this is why the Americans have lost so many times because they are a group of 12 individuals who for the other 103 non-Ryder Cup weeks knock seven bells put of each other, including the Presidents Cup week. This was my concern about Russell Knox playing for the Europeans, that he might have been an American in European clothing, and would not have had his heart and soul in it.

The Ryder Cup is not for the feint hearted, nor the half hearted.

 

 

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European Ryder Cup team a step closer to being finalised

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The players automatically selected for the European Ryder Cup team were confirmed today. Earning their spots from the European or World points lists are:

Rory McIlroy, Danny Willett, Henrik Stenson, Chris Wood, Sergio Garcia, Rafa Cabrera Bello, Justin Rose, Andy Sullivan and Matt Fitzpatrick.

European Ryder Cup Captain will announce his three wildcard selections in a week’s time on 30 August. With five rookies automatically selected he may choose to go for more experienced players such as Martin Kaymer and Lee Westwood. Others in the frame are Graeme McDowell, Luke Donald, Russell Knox (who has dual US and British citizenship, a unique proposition), Thomas Pieters and Andrew Johnstone.

 

 

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