The Ryder Cup and the PGA of America Biggest Injustice

Larry Nelson

Larry Nelson, PGA Tour Professional and Vietnam War veteran

With all the hype about the Ryder Cup this week, after been delayed a year due to Covid-19, I cannot stop thinking about one of the biggest injustices in professional golf and Ryder Cup history.

The United States team has had some exceptionally good captains, some not so good, and the ones that never were. Larry Nelson falls into the later category and the PGA of America should be ashamed of themselves over it.

Larry Nelson is not only an American war hero, but also had a remarkable PGA Tour career and an excellent Ryder Cup record. Him, along with Lanny Wadkins, accrued a 4-0-0 record in the 1979 Ryder Cup. Only one other team in Ryder Cup history have accomplished such a feat, the duo of Molinari and Fleetwood at the 2018 Ryder Cup in Paris.

Why Larry Nelson never given the opportunity to be Ryder Cup captain is a mystery to me.

Back in a 2012 article by Stan Awtrey, Nelson did not minced words regarding the selection process and the rationale behind it.

“It never really made any sense to me,” he said. “I played on three Ryder Cup teams and two of the captains I had (Billy Casper in 1979 and Dave Marr in 1981) were not really playing on the TOUR anymore. I feel like their decisions were much more effective, because they weren’t based on friendships or relationships. Sometimes it can be a positive.”

When addressing the issue regarding his age, at 65, he went on to say:

“It’s not like a lot of us are out of the game and don’t know what’s going on. We still love the game. We love to compete. Inside our minds we’re just as competitive as we were 30 or 40 years ago. Our physical bodies aren’t quite as good, but I don’t have to arm wrestle anybody. All I have to do is put together a team and get a team prepared. I don’t think age or actually being part of the TOUR is a detriment at all.”

Larry Nelson’s Ryder Cup record of 9-3-1, two-time PGA Champion, United States Open Champion, and the fact he beat Seve Ballesteros 3 and 2 in singles, should have been good enough for the PGA of America to have reach out to Nelson with a captaincy offer.

This has been one of the biggest mistakes, and injustices, ever made by the PGA of America and the Ryder Cup committee.

As we get closer to the first tee shot at Whistling Straits, I salute the great golfer, American hero, and Ryder Cup captain who never was, Larry Nelson.

United States Ryder Cup Team

No Na, No Reed, No Horschel, No Kokrak?

U.S. Ryder Cup Captain, Steve Stricker Photo courtesy of yardbarker.com

First off, enough with these Captain’s assignments.  Steve Stricker may be a nice guy, but he barely plays on the PGA Tour to be in touch with the younger players on tour.   As a matter of fact, Stricker hasn’t played a PGA Tour full schedule in close to a decade.

Which probably explains his decision to keep Kevin Na, Patrick Reed, Jason Kokrak, and even newly crowned European PGA Championship winner, Billy Horschel, off the United States Ryder Cup team.

On Na he claimed he was too short off the tee.  Is he seriously using that lousy excuse to keep one of the most charismatic players on the PGA Tour off the team?  Couldn’t have he paired him with a bomber? 

I think the incident with Dustin Johnson at the Match Play influenced Stricker’s decision.  In my opinion, a dumb decision.

Unfortunately for Na, this may be the last chance he’ll get to make a Ryder Cup team.

Na brings a lot of swag and fighting spirit to the table.  That’s one of the things you need in a Ryder Cup locker room.  With all due respect to Tony Finau and Scottie Scheffler, but they are as dull as a butter knife.

Billy Horschel didn’t even get a phone call.  Horschel won the WGC-Dell Match Play this year.  Sure, he wasn’t in his best form coming in, but anybody who has followed his career knows Horschel can deliver.  At least he should have been considered.

Patrick Reed, Captain America himself was left out of this team.  This man is the Ryder Cup!  He played the Tour Championship after been sick.  If that didn’t show Stricker grit and guts, then Stricker is out of touch.  With a 4th in S.G. Putting stat Reed should have been on this team, period.

Jason Kokrak, two-time winner on the PGA Tour this year and he wasn’t a pick.  To me this is probably one of the biggest boneheaded decisions made by Stricker.  Kokrak has been playing great golf and has become one of the best putters on tour, reaching 6th in S.G. putting.

I don’t intend to pick on the Captain’s Picks, after all, that’s all on Stricker.  But of all the picks, Finau and Scheffler are questionable.  Finau just won the Northern Trust after God knows how long chocking after leading, that’s not a trend, that’s just a good week.

Scheffler hasn’t won a tournament on the PGA Tour despite that fact he has led a few times.  So, he’s not a proven finisher.

Finau and Scheffler are very good players, but shooting stars are not what we need in the Ryder Cup.  We need fire, we need grit, we need good putters.  Scheffler (107th S.G. Putting) and Finau (91st S.G. Putting) are not good putters and have as much fire in them as an ice box.

Finally, Jordan Speith.  Well, at least we will get good commentary from the lad, I don’t think he’s in good form either.  33rd on S.G. Putting with his best stat a 6th on S.G. around the green.

Ryder Cups are won on the greens, not on the fairways, that’s a fact.

Captain Stricker will have lots of explaining to do about these picks if they get their rear end beaten by a European Team that looks solid all around.

I think Stricker got it wrong, but I don’t expect anything less from a guy who has been removed from a full PGA Tour schedule for quite some time.

Ole, Ole, Ole, Ole, Ole!!!!!!!