Is the tide turning? A short history of the Ryder Cup since 1981
Forty years ago the Ryder Cup was struggling to find sponsorship, the 2021 match reiterated that it is one of the planet's great sporting events.
That's quite a claim when you consider that no other golfing event prompts so much pre- and post-match chitter-chatter, or that it is golf's most marketable event, not to mention the only one which is ranked among the most-watched sporting spectacles on the planet.
In truth, the Ryder Cup of the 1970s was something of a joke.
Consider that in 1971 the Great Britain and Ireland captain Eric Brown led a sing-song on the place home to celebrate defeat (in mitigation, it was the narrowest defeat on foreign soil in the team's history).
By 1977 even the Americans wanted a better fight. Tom Weiskopf, for example, had opted to go fishing instead of join his countrymen in yet another facile triumph.
Europeans entered the fray in 1979, but there was little immediate change. The first match was yet another straightforward success for the Americans.
At the start of the 1980s interest was waning, but by the end of that decade the Ryder Cup was on course to be in the situation it is today - undeniably one of the world's greatest sporting events, amassing enormous viewing figures and generating astonishing sponsorship deals.
1981
The exact financial state of the contest was revealed in the book 'Ryder Cup Revealed' in which Ross Biddiscombe writes: "Sponsorship prospects looked so bad at one stage that the best offers on the table consisted of Ā£80,000 worth of cigarette coupons or Ā£100,000 Green Shield stamps."
1983
It half-explains why there is no footage of what many believe was Ballesteros' greatest-ever shot, a fairway wood from a bunker. New captain Tony Jacklin had tempted him back, Europe threatened to win ahead of ultimate defeat, but the fire in the Spaniard's belly had been stoked.
1985
Nonetheless, big doors swing on small hinges: midway through the match Craig Stadler missed a tiddler on the 18th hole and with it the momentum of the match switched inexorably. There were giddy scenes as Sam Torrance holed the winning putt.
1987
Spanish Armada šŖšø
ā Ryder Cup (@rydercup) September 16, 2021
The Ryder Cup's most successful partnership were a force to be reckoned with.@Pega | #RyderCup pic.twitter.com/kuKZdnrxWe
Jack Nicklaus captained and hosted at Muirfield Village, yet it was not a happy week for him. He order thousands of flags midway through the match in an attempt to enthuse the sedate galleries, he bemoaned that his team was money-focussed, and oversaw a first American defeat on home soil.
1989
That hole also witnessed Christy O'Connor's sensational 2-iron, a shot that prompted delirium. When his victory was assured, he looked to the skies and opened his arms. With his white grey hair and pot belly many of us continue to think of it as one of the great triumphs for middle-aged man.
But he was actually just 41 (forty one). The match was tied.
1991
1993
1995
Heading into the singles European captain Bernard Gallacher was looking at a third consecutive defeat as his team trailed 7-9. But the Europeans bucked their trend of singles weakness to complete an epic fightback that left Ballesteros and Faldo sobbing in one another's arms, and Philip Walton emulated Eamonn Darcy (in 1987) and O'Connor Jr in becoming an unlikely but legendary Irish Ryder Cup hero.
The moment Philip Walton won Europe the 1995 Ryder Cup š pic.twitter.com/LqgBhOdegi
ā Ryder Cup Europe (@RyderCupEurope) March 28, 2021
1997
1999
Another case of the Americans appalling many, yet also proving that this thing really did mean something to them, celebrating victory with a mass party on the 17th green that overlooked the small matter that victory was not yet assured and Olazabal still had a putt on that very green. Astonishing shenanigans.
2002
More Ryder Cup glory at the Belfry for European captain Sam Torrance whose first master stroke was to send Colin Montgomerie as leader in the singles when the match was tied 8-8. He set the tone with a 5&4 thumping of Scott Hoch.
Torrance also put his arm around the shoulders of the new boys, rather than pack them in a cupboard until Sunday. He asked for miracles at the back-end of the singles and they delivered, never more brilliantly than when Philip Price defeated Phil Mickelson. His nostril-flaring celebration is still awaiting the plaque it deserves on the 16th green.
2004
Hal Sutton wore a 10-gallon stetson like a comedy cowboy, Bernhard Langer just quietly collected points. Lots of them. Europe led by three after the first morning, by five at the end of day one, by six ahead of the singles, and by nine at the end of the week. Not so much a contest as a dissection.
2006
Not a dry eye in the house š¢
ā Ryder Cup Europe (@RyderCupEurope) August 10, 2020
Darren Clarke's performance at The 2006 Ryder Cup will never be forgotten.#MondayMemories pic.twitter.com/GYLtC2Gg5r
2008
Paul Azinger captained with pride and savvy, calling on all his patriotism and also introducing an innovative pod system, seeking to ape the natural friendship and national groupings of the Europeans.
2010
The week got lucky because a tight finish, in which Europe regained the Cup, meant that the appalling weather made the story rather than became it. Inside the ropes it was wet, outside the ropes it was mud. Absurd mud. Monty didn't care though. He ruled Celtic Manor.
2012
KajsnLw48kenzu!j11@&&!!!
ā Ryder Cup Europe (@RyderCupEurope) April 19, 2020
MARTIN KAYMER HAS DONE IT!!
Europe retain The Ryder Cup. It really is a #MiracleAtMedinah š pic.twitter.com/uOMbMAVW7L
2014
The year that Ryder Cup dynamics jumped the shark. Paul McGinley introduced a goldfish bowl to the European team room and Tom Watson told the American team he didn't want the present they'd bought him. McGinley was baffled by Victor Dubuisson but worked him out, Watson was baffled by his team, never worked them out and they told everyone about it in the aftermath of another defeat. Then Phil Mickelson threw Watson under the bus and jumped in the driver's seat to make sure they rode all over him.
2016
Maybe not one of the Ryder Cup's great years, but it did witness one of its finest moments. Patrick Reed and Rory McIlroy at the eighth in the singles was just, well, this good:
2018
"Moli, Moli Moli..."
ā Ryder Cup (@rydercup) September 14, 2021
A partnership of two best friends who won four out of four matches at the 2018 Ryder Cup.
@PEGA | #RyderCup pic.twitter.com/kGMZkbe3T0