
In the world of golf, no one wants the greats, equal to the emotions that the Ryder Cup produces in aficionados and golfers alike. The last show of devotion with which the biennial returns to United States and Europe is dominated by Matt Wallace at the end of the European Masters, the last tournament on the calendar before Luke Donald announces this Monday (3pm) his elections for the Old Continent team that will appear from the 26th to the 28th of this month on Bethpage Black.
Wallace, results
The English won with -20 a triumph that came in the hands of the South African Thriston Lawrence (-22) with the Spanish Angel Ayora eighth on -15, and he broke before the microphones to reach the target. I'm never going back with the Ryder, he stammered between Sollozos Wallace, affirming that he could read as if he had received a call from Donald to notify her that he won't be in the team, or as a catrsis for more than a year trying with ahnco to be one of the automatically classified.
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On this end of the week's performance it is the best of those who are following Donald's decision, followed by his compatriot Matt Fitzpatrick, who made it just last year -19. The Danes Neergaard-Petersen and the Englishman Penge (-15) also entered the top-10, two with some cards to play in the first edition. Pierden enters this career, in exchange, other Englishmen, Aaron Rai, and his twin Rasmus Hojgaard, Nicolaj. Both of them went outside the court of Viennes, and certainly also of the 12 who will travel to New York.
The Ryder Cup is a golf trophy created in 1927, bequeathed by Samuel Ryder. It is awarded every two years to the winner of the tournament, which has been a team tournament between Europe and the United States since 1979. The competition is jointly administered by the PGA of America and the PGA European Tour and is contested alternately on European and American courses.
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This competition originated in an exhibition match held in 1926 between two professional teams, one American and one British, on the Wenworth Club course in the United Kingdom. The first true Ryder Cup was played in 1927 in the United States.
The first matches between the two teams were very close. After the Second World War, the American team consistently dominated the British team, so it was decided to include Irish players (1973), and then golfers from across the European continent (1979) in the British team. This change was made possible by the emergence of a new generation of Spanish golfers, such as Severiano Ballesteros. Since then, players from Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, Sweden, Belgium, Austria, and Norway have come to defend the colors of the European team.