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Presidents Cup 2019: Tiger Woods scores first point but Team USA slip to shock 4-1 deficit

US captain secured the first point of the competition alongside Justin Thomas but the International Team stormed back to take a commanding lead in the fourballs

Ian Ransom
Thursday 12 December 2019 09:43 GMT
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Tiger Woods and Justin Thomas recorded the USA's only point on day one of the Presidents Cup
Tiger Woods and Justin Thomas recorded the USA's only point on day one of the Presidents Cup (Getty)

A Presidents Cup rivalry all but buried by decades of American dominance flickered back to life at Royal Melbourne on Thursday, as the unfancied Internationals stormed to a 4-1 lead by routing Tiger Woods' United States in the fourballs matches.

Ernie Els' rookie-laden outfit played fearlessly on a gusty day at the sandbelt course as the Internationals secured a day one lead for the first time at the biennial tournament since 2003.

Woods, only the second playing captain in the 25-year history of the tournament, upheld his end of the bargain, as he anchored a comprehensive 4&3 win with Justin Thomas over Australian Marc Leishman and Chilean debutant Joaquin Niemann.

But that was as good as it got for the US who were consistently bamboozled by Royal Melbourne's undulating greens.

Dustin Johnson and Gary Woodland had been branded a dream team by US media after their pairing was announced on tournament eve.

But they walked off 4&3 losers after a thrashing by South Africa's Louis Oosthuizen and Mexican debutant Abraham Ancer.

Home hero Adam Scott and South Korea's An Byeong-hun made it 2-1 for the hosts when Scott rolled in a six-foot putt for par on the 17th, clinching a 2&1 win over Bryson DeChambeau and Tony Finau.

Canada's Adam Hadwin and South Korean Im Sung-jae stretched the lead further with a hard-fought 1-up win against Xander Schauffele and Patrick Cantlay.

A banner day for the Internationals was complete on the 18th hole, when Patrick Reed missed a long putt to halve the hole and concede a second 1-up win to the east Asian duo of Hideki Matsuyama and CT Pan.

Reuters

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