Arab Times

Internatio­nals lead Presidents Cup

U.S. trail 1-4

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MELBOURNE, Australia, Dec 12, (AP): Tiger Woods lightly pumped his fist with another birdie. He raised his hands over his head in applause to salute a brilliant play by Justin Thomas that led to another hole won. He thoroughly enjoyed his return to competitio­n in the Presidents Cup.

His match won, Woods took the radio and inserted the ear piece as he resumed his role as US captain. And there was little else to cheer. Ernie Els and his inspired Internatio­nal team won the day, and won it big.

Els got solid performanc­es from Adam Scott and Louis Oosthuizen and remarkable play from his rookies that led to a 4-1 lead after the opening session of fourballs Thursday.

It was the first time the Internatio­nal team won the opening session since 2005, which also was the last time it led after any session in an event the Americans have won 10 out of 12 times, including the last seven in a row.

Woods assembled the strongest US team ever for the Presidents based on the world ranking. The first playing captain in 25 years, he inserted himself in the first match and made six birdies, the most of anyone at Royal Melbourne.

When it was over, the US team found itself in foreign territory - trailing for the first time in 14 years.

That was a message Els preached to his team after a dynamic performanc­e.

Scott overcame a snap hook on the opening hole to make five birdies as he and Byeong Hun An - the replacemen­t for Jason Day - won in 17 holes. Hideki

Matsuyama holed a 25-foot birdie putt on the 17th hole that carried the Japanese star and C.T. Pan to a 1-up victory over Patrick Reed and Webb Simpson.

Oosthuizen and Abraham Ancer, the Mexican rookie who has received praise all week for his fire and confidence, opened with five straight birdies in a crushing defeat over the American power duo of Dustin Johnson and Gary Woodland. But it was just a start. Woods was so strong that he decided to play again in Friday foursomes, again paired with Thomas. Woods kept two other teams together - Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele, and

Reed and Simpson - even though both lost.

Els is sending out five new partnershi­ps, sticking to a plan that so far is working quite well.

Woods showed off an exquisite short game, building a 2-up lead after two holes with pitch-and-run shots that set up easy birdies. He chipped in for birdie on the par-5 fifth, and closed out the match with an 8-foot birdie on the par-3 14th and a 5-footer on the next hole, his sixth birdie in the 15 holes he and Thomas needed to beat Marc Leishman and Joaquin Niemann.

Asked what worked well in their first time playing together, Thomas replied, “Tiger was working well.” Little

else did for the Americans, but that was more a product of great play by the Internatio­nal team that Els assembled to try to win the Presidents Cup for the first time since 1998, its only victory.

The Internatio­nal team walked off the course with arms around shoulders, a most happy occasion after having lost seven in a row since the tie in South Africa in 2003.

The middle three matches is where the Internatio­nal team seized control in the opening session. Adam Hadwin and Sungjae Im won the 16th hole with a par, and Schauffele and Cantlay didn’t have good birdie looks over the final two holes to lose.

The biggest of Scott’s five birdies was a 12-footer to halve the 14th and protect a 2-up lead that led to victory on the 17th hole over Tony Finau and Bryson DeChambeau, now winless in first four matches in the Ryder Cup and Presidents Cup.

The last chance for the Americans to at least get a half-point came in the last match on the course. Reed, who heard his share of needling from the crowd over his rules violation in the sand last week in the Bahamas, made a 12-foot birdie putt to square the match on the 16th, only for Matsuyama to deliver his big putt on the next hole.

Reed’s 30-foot birdie putt on the 18th to halve the match stayed above the hole. Perhaps typical of the Americans’ day was when Johnson, playing for the first time since Aug. 25 because of knee surgery, smashed driver on the 330-yard 11th hole to just inside 4 feet.

Internatio­nal team player Marc Leishman of Australia plays his scond shot on the first hole during their fourball

match during the opening rounds of the President’s Cup Golf tournament in Melbourne, on Dec 12. (AP)

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