Woods’ misery continues

Tiger Woods plays from the rough on the fifth during a foursome match in Paris, Saturday  

Paris: Tiger Woods’s Ryder Cup record went from bad to worse when he lost two more matches here Saturday, extinguishing a theory that a warmer, cuddlier, middle-aged cat would finally shine in the team format.

The second most prolific major champion of all time now has nine wins, 19 losses and one halved match in Ryder Cup fourball and foursomes.

He has lost seven consecutive times in the team format, a dreadful record that defies easy explanation, not that people will shy away from trying.

He goes into Sunday’s singles with a 4-1-2 record in the format, where he has generally shone in the lone-wolf format.

Golf expert Brandel Chamblee thinks Woods has been a victim of his own aura, his mere presence negatively affecting his partners. Perhaps the expenditure of adrenaline from that victory, as well as jet lag, has contributed to his mediocre form at Le Golf National, though that explanation would be more convincing if he had arrived with a better career record.

At 42, and seemingly a changed man after defying the odds and recovering from a potentially career-ending back injury, Woods now embraces his teammates, and the younger generation feel comfortable around a man they revere as a father figure.

Woods has now had 14 different partners over the years. He has a winning record with only two, with Patrick Reed and Bryson DeChambeau joining an unsuccessful list. Woods twice had the misfortune to encounter his recent nemesis Francesco Molinari, who has teamed up with Tommy Fleetwood to go 4-0-0 this week.

It was Molinari who withstood Woods’s charge at the British Open in July, staying calm amid frenzied scenes playing with the American, who electrified Carnoustie as he stormed into the lead halfway through the final round. Two hours later the Italian was lifting the Claret Jug, having beaten Woods by three shots.

 

 

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