Our Presidents Cup Friday four-ball predictions: Can Internationals cut into American lead?

Thursday proved the Internationals won’t just roll over. Can they get it done on Friday?

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — We’re only one round down at the 2022 Presidents Cup and the International squad is already in a hole.

The Americans rolled to a 4-1 win during Thursday’s foursomes (alternate shot) session at Quail Hollow Club and will trot out three of the same pairings for Friday’s four-ball session (each player plays his own ball and the lowest score wins the hole). The Internationals, on the other hand, have a fresh lineup of five new pairings for Day 2 of the biennial bout, including a couple countrymen combos.

Golfweek’s Adam Schupak and Adam Woodard are on the scene this week and made picks for the second round of matches (after nailing the Thursday final score and admittedly missing the mark on a few matches). Don’t be surprised if the Internationals cut into the deficit.

Presidents Cup: Yardage book | Results over the yearsTV times

11:35 a.m. ET: Adam Scott-Cam Davis (Intl.) vs. Jordan Spieth-Justin Thomas (U.S.)

AS: I’m calling the upset. JT-Jordan is a tough foe but neither looked sharp on Thursday. Scott has too much pride to lay another egg and Davis is underrated, if you ask me.

AW: “It’s really fun, right? He’s my best friend in the whole world,” Spieth said of Thomas. “We’ve played a lot of golf together. We’ve played a lot of golf against each other. Now we’ve played quite a bit with each other. There’s nothing more fun than these team events, playing alongside JT.”

All due respect to the other Adam, and I mean with all due respect, but those two aren’t losing. Gimme the Americans.

11:50 a.m. ET: Sungjae Im-Sebastian Munoz (Intl.) vs. Scottie Scheffler-Sam Burns (U.S.)

AS: Don’t sleep on Munoz, who can be a birdie machine but The Scotty-Sammy Show got renewed for another season and doesn’t want to be canceled. I can’t see those good friends, the only American side to lose on Day One, letting their teammates down again.

AW: Captain Davis Love III is trotting out three of the same pairs for four-ball on Friday as he did for foursomes on Thursday, and I’m shocked he didn’t stop at two with Thomas-Spieth and Cantlay-Schauffele (more on them to come). There must be something in the stats that points to this group staying together, but I think we see Munoz come out firing after being left on the sidelines Thursday to lead the Internationals to at least a tie, if not a win.

12:05 p.m. ET: Mito Pereira-Christiaan Bezuidenhout (Intl.) vs. Kevin Kisner-Cam Young (U.S.)

AS: I really like teaming Kisner and Young together and I just have my concerns about whether Pereira and Bezuidenhout can make enough birdies to keep up with the Americans.

AW: Couldn’t agree more. I also wouldn’t be shocked if Kis shows some early emotion and gets the crowd going out at Quail Hollow. After all, this ain’t no hobby.

12:20 p.m. ET: Hideki Matsuyama-Tom Kim (Intl.) vs. Patrick Cantlay-Xander Schauffele (U.S.)

AS: This is going to be a fun one. Until I see Cantlay and Schauffele go down to defeat, I’m going to keep picking them and expecting them to win.

AW: I am all in on Tom Kim. The guy is just what this International team needed in a turbulent time with its roster: he’s young, funny, energetic and absolutely thrilled to be a part of this team. Cantlay and Schauffele have to lose some time, right? I’ll take the underdog Internationals.

12:35 p.m. ET: Corey Conners-Taylor Pendrith (Intl.) vs. Billy Horschel-Max Homa (U.S.)

AS: Oh, Canada! I’ve got a feeling. These two have been playing as a team since before college. Apparently, the stats say they don’t make a great pairing in foursomes, but I guess I’m old-school: familiarity and experience together matter and I’m bullish on Pendrith.

AW: I don’t disagree with the Canada connection, but something tells me after all this time that Billy Horschel isn’t going to lay an egg in his first appearance for the national time. Plus that Max Homa guy is playing pretty well these days, too.

Schupak: USA wins session, 3-2 | Woodard: USA wins session, 3½-1½.

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Presidents Cup Friday four-ball features five new pairings for the trailing Internationals

The U.S. only made two changes to its lineup for Friday while the Internationals will roll out a new team.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — The first match of the 2022 Presidents Cup featured what was on pace to be a historic beatdown and set the table for what would follow Thursday at Quail Hollow Club.

Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele danced all over International vets Adam Scott and Hideki Matsuyama to the tune of a 6-and-5 victory to put the first point on the board (the largest American margin of victory is 7 and 5). From there the United States went on to win its next two matches, both 2 and 1, before Si Woo Kim and Cam Davis bested Scottie Scheffler and Sam Burns, 2 up, for the lone International point of the day. Tony Finau and Max Homa also went to the 18th hole to squeak out a 1-up win over Taylor Pendrith and Mito Pereira to seal the 4-1 Day 1 win.

While the score paints a picture of a strong day for the Americans, it wasn’t worry-free as a few hiccups down the stretch on the back nine kept the Internationals in the mix.

So where do we go from here? Friday afternoon features five more matches, this time in the four-ball format, where each player plays his own ball and the lowest score on the hole wins.

Here’s how the pairings shake out for Day 2 at the Presidents Cup, with the live TV coverage starting 90 minutes earlier than it did Thursday.

Friday four-ball pairings

11:35 a.m. ET: Adam Scott-Cam Davis (Intl.) vs. Jordan Spieth-Justin Thomas (U.S., -170 to win match)

11:50 a.m. ET: Sungjae Im-Sebastian Munoz (Intl.) vs. Scottie Scheffler-Sam Burns (U.S., -150 to win match)

12:05 p.m. ET: Mito Pereira-Christiaan Bezuidenhout (Intl.) vs. Kevin Kisner-Cam Young (U.S., -135 to win match)

12:20 p.m. ET: Hideki Matsuyama-Tom Kim (Intl.) vs. Patrick Cantlay-Xander Schauffele (U.S., -150 to win match)

12:35 p.m. ET: Corey Conners-Taylor Pendrith (Intl.) vs. Billy Horschel-Max Homa (U.S., -125 to win match)

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On the bench

Tony Finau and Collin Morikawa will sit for the Americans while Si Woo Kim and K.H. Lee will ride the pine pony for the Internationals.

Finau went 0-1-1 in four-ball matches in his lone previous appearance at the Presidents Cup, tying alongside Matt Kuchar and losing with Bryson DeChambeau. Kim, however, won his only four-ball match at the 2017 Presidents Cup alongside Anirban Lahiri over Kevin Chappell and Charley Hoffman.

Lee is making his debut in the event his year, same with Morikawa, though the American has a four-ball win from the 2021 Ryder Cup alongside Dustin Johnson.

How to watch, stream, listen

Friday, Sept. 23

Golf Channel/Peacock: 11:30 a.m.-6 p.m. ET
PGA Tour Radio: 12-6 p.m. ET

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Presidents Cup: Xander Schauffele, Patrick Cantlay remain undefeated in foursomes as they dominate Adam Scott, Hideki Matsuyama 6 and 5

“I told the guys last night we need to set the tone and we did.”

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Patrick Cantlay was walking up the first hole at Quail Hollow in the Presidents Cup and said to his caddie Matt Minister that playing as a team with his American partner Xander Schauffele provided a level of comfort in a format where players essentially hit half the shots.

After all, he and Schauffele have become a dangerous tandem not to be messed with in the last three international team competitions and are regular Tuesday practice-round partners when they play the same events and willing to take on all comers in money matches. Not to mention that they won the Zurich Classic of New Orleans in late April, the lone two-man team event in the PGA Tour’s FedEx Cup regular season.

“We’ve now played so many times we feel so comfortable,” Cantlay said. “I said to my caddie on the first hole that even though it is alternate shot it feels totally normal. I think that’s an advantage for us in that format.”

2022 Zurich Classic
Xander Schauffele (left) and Patrick Cantlay (right) hold up the Zurich Classic trophy and belts after winning the final round of the Zurich Classic of New Orleans golf tournament. (Photo: Andrew Wevers-USA TODAY Sports)

In the first of five foursomes matches (also known as alternate-shot) contested on Thursday for the Presidents Cup, Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele of Team USA pounded Hideki Matsuyama and Adam Scott 6 and 5. It marked the second-earliest finish in a match the U.S. won in Presidents Cup history.

“I told the guys last night we need to set the tone,” Schauffele said, “and we did. Playing this format on a day like today and not making any bogeys, it’s exactly what we need.”

The dynamic duo for the U.S. improved to a perfect 3-0 in foursomes at the Presidents Cup – 5-0 including the Ryder Cup – to put the first point on the board. Cantlay-Schauffele grabbed the lead with a par at the third. It took five holes for the American side to make a birdie but once the seal was broken the U.S poured it on with three birdies in a row to open a 4-up lead. The Internationals won its only hole of the day at the short par-4 eighth when Schauffele rimmed out his birdie putt.

The International team had a chance to cut into its deficit when Matsuyama stuck his tee shot to six feet at No. 10, but Scott missed the putt. That took the wind out of the sails of the International side as they bogeyed the final three holes.

“You always expect your opponent to come back strong. We got lucky there on 10. That could’ve been a big one that they missed, and we used that as momentum to finish off this match,” Cantlay said.

The pairing of Cantlay and Schauffele was the brainchild of assistant captain Fred Couples, who watched the two Presidents Cup rookies play gin on the 26-hour flight from the Bahamas to Australia in 2019 and told then U.S. Captain Tiger Woods he sensed the making of a winning combination.

“They just play really good, smart, strategic golf and they’ve become best friends so what’s the worst thing that can happen?” Couples, the former Masters champion and three-time winning U.S Presidents Cup captain asked rhetorically. “They lose.”

But at last year’s Ryder Cup and again Thursday, all they do is win. They have become an automatic pairing, which U.S. Captain Davis Love III was wise enough not to overthink. Asked to describe the conversation with Love about teaming with Cantlay again, Schauffele said, “It was kind of like, I’m assuming you want to do this. If that’s cool with you guys, we’re just going to run it back. So it was sort of a very chill conversation, nothing too serious.”

Even with the reconfigured layout to ensure the Green Mile would get plenty of action, the Americans only walked one-third of it. Golf Channel commentator John Wood, who caddied in several of these competitions, noted one of the oddities of a rout.

“The carts start to follow you around for the shuttle ride in because they think you have a chance to close it out,” he said. “It’s great when you’re up, but when you’re down, it feels like the buzzards are circling.”

They circled around Scott, who endured another disheartening day, falling to 7-9-2 in foursomes. The 42-year-old Australian is making his 10th appearance in the biennial team competition and still is seeking his first win. (The match ended in a tie in 2003.)

“Can you imagine? It sucks to lose these things,” said fellow Aussie Geoff Ogilvy, an assistant captain for the International team, who called Scott the captain of the players. “They’re all leaning on him. He just wants to win it for everybody. It’s like he wants to win it for everybody who never got a chance to win one.”

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Presidents Cup: Americans hold on for early lead after Internationals fight back in Thursday foursomes

The Internationals fought hard on the second nine but came up short on Day 1 at Quail Hollow.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — The 2022 Presidents Cup began with an all-star matchup that had fans buzzing but got out of hand in a hurry.

Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele rolled in their opener, 6 and 5, against International veterans Adam Scott and Hideki Matsuyama, putting the first point on the board for the Americans to set the tone and foreshadow what was to come: a leaderboard full of red.

The Americans were in charge for most of the day before a brief International resurgence on the back nine that saw the American advantage fall to, at most, 1 up through 12 holes in each of the final four matches. The Red, White and Blue held on in all but one of the final matches and will take a commanding 4-1 lead into Friday afternoon’s four-ball session.

Here’s a breakdown from each match on Day 1 of the 2022 Presidents Cup.

Presidents Cup: Best photos | Must-see merch

Photos: 2022 Presidents Cup at Quail Hollow Club

Check out these images from the 2022 Presidents Cup at Quail Hollow Club.

The 2022 Presidents Cup is over at Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, North Carolina, with the Americans winning it for a 12th time in 14 stagings of the event.

The biennial event pits 12 United States golfers against a team of 12 international golfers (except Europe) in a four-day match play quest for the cup.

This year, world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, Justin Thomas and Jordan Spieth lead the American side while Hideki Matsuyama, Corey Conners and Adam Scott lead the International team.

Fresh off his second-straight Fortinet Championship win, Max Homa is making his team-event debut and will sport the red, white and blue for the first time.

The U.S. has still not lost on home soil. The 2024 competition will be held at Royal Montreal in Canada.

Check out some of the best photos from the week in Charlotte below:

Presidents Cup Thursday foursomes picks, predictions have Team USA cruising over Internationals

The rout may be on early at Quail Hollow.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — The first round of matches at the 2022 Presidents Cup feature some fan-favorites and a slew of rookies.

Ten players will make their debut on Thursday in the biennial bout at Quail Hollow Club as the Internationals look to win on American soil for the first time. The U.S. has dominated the foursomes sessions in the past with a 73-39-21 record, and if our predictions are accurate, history will repeat itself once again on Thursday afternoon.

Golfweek’s Adam Schupak and Adam Woodard are on the scene this week and made picks for the first round of matches. Spoiler alert: the rout is on.

Presidents Cup: Yardage book | Results over the years

Hideki Matsuyama and Adam Scott (Intl.) vs Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele (USA)

AS: Neither captain was messing around, bringing out some of their big guns for what should be a terrific matchup. Scott ended the FedEx Cup playoffs on a hot streak while Matsuyama has dealt with a neck injury of late. But they are going up against the dynamic duo of Cantlay-Schauffele, who can finish each other’s sentences and live to play together.

USA wins, 3 and 2.

Sungjae Im-Corey Conners (Intl.) vs Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas (USA)

Tom Kim-K.H. Lee (Intl.) vs Cameron Young-Collin Morikawa (USA)

Si Woo Kim-Cam Davis (Intl) vs Scottie Scheffler-Sam Burns (USA)

AS: Scheffler-Burns has the makings of a go-to pairing for Team USA. I like them to roll to victory.

USA wins, 5 and 4.

AW: Couldn’t agree more with the other Adam on this one, but I think it’ll be a bit closer while still a comfortable American win.

USA wins, 3 and 2.

Taylor Pendrith-Mito Pereira (Intl) vs Tony Finau-Max Homa (USA)

AS: I think this has the potential for an upset, but the U.S. side is on too much of a roll: Finau shot 60 last week in a practice round in Utah while Homa won the Fortinet Championship. The U.S. has too much firepower. The rout is on.

USA wins, 2 and 1. | USA wins session, 5-0.

AW: International assistant captain Mike Weir said his fellow Canadian Pendrith will be one for fans to watch this week, and if Pereira can keep pace, I like the Internationals to keep this one close.

The Green Mile: Evil and golf really do co-exist at Quail Hollow Club, site of 2022 Presidents Cup

There’s a three-hole stretch at Quail Hollow Club that will offer a demanding test.

If you’ve been named after a novel written by horror master Stephen King, there must be an abundance of chilling, eerie features associated with your existence.

Even if the terror in question resides among the soft, rolling hills of a peaceful golf course in the Queen City.

Seriously, can evil and golf really co-exist?

At Quail Hollow Club they certainly do.

During a 1,200-plus-yard stroll covering three holes – that would be the 16th, 17th and 18th – danger, horror and angst refuse to be disguised at the annual home of the PGA Tour’s Wells Fargo Championship in Charlotte, North Carolina.

While it is certainly not as fatal as depicted in the 1999 movie adaption of the same name starring Tom Hanks, where death row inmates take their final steps to the execution chamber on a floor painted a dull green, the dreaded emerald sweep of land at Quail Hollow leaves players gasping for air and heartily exhaling when all is said and done.

In short, the journey is likely to be a good walk spoiled.

That will surely be the case at the 14th edition of the Presidents Cup, where the U.S. will try to continue its dominance of the Internationals. And organizers of the biennial clash have tossed in a major kicker concerning the trifecta of terror. More on that later.

“It’s got to be one of the toughest stretches in golf,” USA’s Brandt Snedeker said. “There’s no way to miss them. There’s no bail-out on any of the holes really.

“You just have to suck it up and get through it.”

Or as Quail Hollow member and 2012 U.S. Open champion Webb Simpson said: “I’ve thought about this many times. I can’t think of a three-hole stretch, including the major championships, that is tougher than the Green Mile.”

How tough is it? Let’s add another movie reference and call on Clubber Lang’s prediction in Rocky II: Pain. Consider: Each hole of the white-knuckle stretch features dangerous water hazards, potentially puzzling elevation changes, strategically placed bunkers and Bermuda greens that are not to be messed with.

This was the result of a major renovation completed ahead of the 2016 Wells Fargo Championship, which included all 18 greens being rebuilt, greens and tee boxes shifted, more than 100 trees removed and length added to the layout.

In five editions of the Wells Fargo Championship since the makeover, the 494-yard, par-4 18th has ranked as the toughest hole in the tournament three times and second once, while the 217-yard, par-3 17th was the toughest hole in 2019 and was never worse than sixth on the list of menacing holes. The par-4 506-yard 16th? It was the third toughest hole in three of those contests.

And yes, the field average for each hole was over-par each tournament, including in 2021 when the 18th played to a 4.456 average, making it the second toughest par-4 on the PGA Tour that year.

“Those are three really brutal finishing holes,” Aussie Adam Scott said. “If you can survive those holes and win, you’ve certainly proved that to yourself because they’re so demanding. There is no breather.”

With that, here’s a quick snapshot of each hole.

Quail Hollow Club
No. 16 at Quail Hollow Club, which will play as No. 13 in the Presidents Cup (Photo: Ben Jared/PGA Tour)

The 16th is a par-4 playing to 506 yards. The hole could be tipped out to around 530 yards. The green was shifted 80 yards to the left, right smack up against a large lake. A sizeable, deep fairway bunker on the right must be avoiding on the downhill tee shot. Bunkers fronting the green are best to be avoided.

“The tee shot isn’t overly difficult, but then you get to your second shot and see a lot of water. In the right conditions, you can sort of attack. But it’s rarely the right conditions,” said Justin Thomas, who won the 2017 PGA Championship at Quail Hollow Club.

The 17th is a par-3 playing to 223 yards. The hole could be stretched to 235 yards. The tee shot is over water, with only land to the right side of the green offering you safety from the H2O. The green is usually firm – OK, it’s nearly concrete at times – which means even well struck shots to back pins can bounce and then roll into the water.

Quail Hollow Club
No. 17 at Quail Hollow Club, which will play as No. 14 in the Presidents Cup. (Photo: Ben Jared/PGA Tour)

“Even hitting a fairly good shot at 17, you can still hit it in the water. All you’re trying to do when it’s playing long is hit the green. And if the wind is blowing, you have to make sure to hit land,” Spain’s Sergio Garcia said. (Side note: Thomas’ better-than-good 7-iron in the final round of the PGA Championship basically sealed his victory).

The 18th is a par-4 playing to 494 yards. A creek and heavy rough runs down the entire left side of the hole while a dense collection of trees and problematic bunkers protect the right side of the fairway. The tee shot is downhill and the green is slight raised.

“There’s no bailout on the hole and you just have to come up with your best. You can’t ease up after a great drive. It’s just one tough hole,” said Aussie Jason Day, the victor of the 2018 Wells Fargo Championship.

In summation of the stretch, we offer USA’s Rickie Fowler’s take (he won his first PGA Tour title in the 2012 Wells Fargo Championship): “You just have to buckle up and survive.”

Quail Hollow Club
No. 18 at Quail Hollow Club, which will play as No. 15 in the 2022 Presidents Cup. (Photo: Ben Jared/PGA Tour)

That’s what Rory McIlroy did in 2021, the most recent time the club played host to the Wells Fargo Championship. In the final round, McIlroy birdied the 14th and 15th holes to take a two-stroke advantage to the start of the Green Mile.

The he made a big mistake as he started to think how great it would be to see his wife, Erica, and 8-month-old daughter, Poppy, behind the 18th green and celebrate with them on their first Mother’s Day.

He survived the 16th and 17th with textbook pars to maintain a two-shot lead. But then he set off alarm bells when he pulled his tee shot on the 18th just to the left of the creek and onto a sidehill of nasty rough.

He was going to try and slash the ball to safety with a lob wedge but his caddie, Harry Diamond, talked him into taking a penalty drop. McIlroy did and from 200 yards found the green with an 8-iron and two-putted for the one-shot win.

It was his first triumph in 553 days. And McIlroy, who won his first PGA Tour title at Quail Hollow in 2010, became the only three-time winner of the event.

“Those closing three holes are pretty tough, especially with the crosswinds out there,” McIlroy said. “I made it hard for myself, but hit a great third shot into the 18th there and was able to two-putt and get the job done.

“It’s a tough stretch, one of the toughest stretches that we play all year. I think 17 is the most difficult of the closing stretch. Especially off that back tee, you’re raised up and you’ve got that very skinny green. On 16, you have to be aggressive off the tee. You have to take on that bunker on the right and try to get it down there as far as you can. It’s a long enough hole. And the same thing on 18. I think aggressiveness off the tee; you can reward yourself with a little shorter iron shot in and be able to take on something a little bit more on the green.

“I’ve had my fair share of good runs on that stretch and bad runs.”

Now, back to the kicker. Because the Green Mile is the star of the golf course, those in charge of the Presidents Cup rerouted the layout to help ensure that players in the match-play format will reach the three holes.

Thus, the Green Mile will play as holes 13-14-15, with the par-5 10th, the par-4 11th and the par-4 ninth pinch-hitting as the closing three holes.

The Green Mile will follow two risk-reward holes – the drivable par-4 11th (annually the 14th) and the uphill, reachable par-5 12th (annually the 15th). That five-hole stretch – with each hole guarded by water – is sure to please.

But it will be the Green Mile that will shine the brightest – for the good or bad.

“A lot happens on those three holes,” USA’s Jordan Spieth said. “That is where you go to see some triumph and disaster.”

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Presidents Cup: Why players love Fred Couples, Internationals to watch and more

If anyone knows about chirping and jabbing players, it’s Fred Couples, a three-time Presidents Cup captain.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — There’s no denying the Americans have the advantage on paper at the 2022 Presidents Cup.

All 12 players on Davis Love III’s U.S. squad rank inside the top 25 in the world, with five inside the top 10. Only five International players rank inside the top 30. The Americans have five rookies, but two have played in the Ryder Cup.

The Americans aren’t afraid to tell you just how good they are, too.

“I mean, they don’t miss many shots, and they have a good time doing it,” said assistant captain Fred Couples, “and they like to show off a little bit and chirp.”

If anyone knows about chirping and jabbing players, it’s Couples, the three-time Presidents Cup captain who’s now in his fourth stint as a captain’s assistant.

“So he’s a great guy to have in the team room. He’s very calm, relaxed, rubs off on everybody,” Steve Stricker said of Couples. “And he’s not afraid to jab people, have fun with people, but when it comes time to be serious, he’s right there to be serious and, like I said, to provide that knowledge and that insight that he has.”

“Inside the team room, it may seem like he’s got this really easygoing, simplistic view, but it’s extremely cerebral. There’s a lot of thought, and he puts a lot into it. He’s invested. You just want to be around that,” added Zach Johnson, a two-time captain’s assistant who’s preparing for his Ryder Cup captaincy in 2023. “Then I like that he chirps. He gets on these kids. He’s not going to let them get on him or get complacent. He’s going to get after ’em, and that’s what you want in a leader.

“He’s been one of my favorite guys that I’ve ever had to play for, period.”

The love for Boom Boom Couples wasn’t the only thing discussed on the last day of practice rounds before Thursday’s foursomes matches. From the International challenge ahead to some fun players to watch, here are some highlights from a busy day of press conferences ahead of the 2022 Presidents Cup.

The International challenge

The challenge is, I don’t know, we’ve got to win 15 ½ points against a really good team,” said assistant captain Geoff Ogilvy. “(Ernie Els) did an unbelievable job last time. I think we got a little bit of momentum out of it. We’ve got eight new players, maybe more, this week coming out here.

“It’s a perfect year, I think, for a really sort of fresh young team. Everyone is super excited.”

Let’s not glance over the, “maybe more” than eight new players comment. The rosters are set, but don’t be surprised to see some guys come out and support their respective teams this week. Immelman said on an episode of the No Laying Up podcast that Mackenzie Hughes, who lives in Charlotte, has been calling him and asking for tickets so he can come watch and spend time with the team. Will Zalatoris, who would have played for the U.S. team if he wasn’t injured, was seen on the grounds during Wednesday’s practice round.

While this event still somewhat lives in the shadow of the Ryder Cup and has struggled to find its identity, it still clearly means a lot to the players.

Speaking of identity … what steps forward have the Internationals taken since 2019?

“Look, I think the shield, I think, is pretty important. I think it was often hard for us to sort of have an identity,” Ogilvy explained, “bringing so many different cultures together in the same place.”

“The first year (2019) was great. This is the second time. It’s more and more recognizable. People are starting to buy the merch. Kids growing up in the world look at that and think, ‘I want that on my shirt one day,’ and that’s really powerful,” he added. “You might underestimate that, but that’s a really powerful thing. We represent the rest of the world. That’s a lot of people.”

“More than anything, he’s given this team an identity and given international kids something to aspire to.”

Simpson’s Quail Hollow knowledge doesn’t go as far as you think

“I don’t have a whole lot to offer to these guys in terms of course knowledge,” said Webb Simpson, an assistant captain for the U.S. and member at Quail Hollow. “One, most of the guys have been here and know it. And I’m telling you, these caddies, they know what they’re doing. We get to greens, they’re putting the holes down exactly where I would have put them, and they’re telling players to hit this putt and this chip.”

2022 Presidents Cup
Team USA poses for a team photo with US soccer jerseys during a Wednesday practice day for the 2022 Presidents Cup at Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, North Carolina. (Photo: Peter Casey-USA TODAY Sports)

“More than anything, I’ve been a flag holder and a raker the last few days. But whatever they need from me, I’ll give it to them. I won’t hold back.”

Kim is stealing the show behind the scenes

Everybody has something nice to say about International rookie Tom Kim. The 20-year-old South Korean is coming off a breakout season on the PGA Tour that featured 10 made cuts in 11 starts with six top-25 finishes and a win at last month’s Wyndham Championship. Off the course, his sense of humor and youthful exuberance has been the catalyst for the good vibes in the International team room.

“We’re on 12 today, and (Tom) makes a mistake doing simple math there,” explained assistant captain Camilo Villegas. “So I look at the kid and said, ‘Tom, is that a college math?’ He looks at me and goes, ‘Dude, I didn’t even graduate from high school.’”

Keep an eye on Pendrith

“I think people are going to come to know Taylor Pendrith this week and going forward. Very impressed with his game,” said Canadian golf legend and assistant captain Mike Weir. “I think you guys all know how long he is, and that’s what’s talked about. He has a good, well-rounded game. Watching him hit iron shots, pitching, putting, he’s a very good player.

“You could put him on the range against anybody, and you would be like, ‘Is that guy the No. 1 player in the world or going to be?’ It’s that impressive. So excited that he’s on the team.”

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International captain Trevor Immelman gives each member of his Presidents Cup team a Rolex

No way anyone on the Internationals misses his tee time with one of these bad boys.

We’re less than 24 hours away from the start of the 2022 Presidents Cup at Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, North Carolina.

The all-time record stands at 11-1-1 in favor of the United States. The Internationals are still searching for their first win on foreign soil.

The five matches for Thursday have been announced, the first one being Xander Schauffele and Patrick Cantlay facing off against Hideki Matsuyama and Adam Scott.

Sending out a pair of International team veterans wasn’t the only thing captain Trevor Immelman did for his squad Wednesday.

He presented them all with one hell of a gift: custom-made Rolex watches.

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Presidents Cup Thursday foursomes pairings feature 10 rookies, powerhouse opening match

Check out the pairings, tee times for the first day of play at the 2022 Presidents Cup.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — After all the speculation and predictions, it’s officially time to start the 2022 Presidents Cup.

United States captain Davis Love III and International captain Trevor Immelman made their selections for Thursday’s foursomes matches at Quail Hollow Club, which will set the tone for what should be an exciting week. If you’re unfamiliar with the format, foursomes is simply alternate shot, where competitors on the same team play the same ball and the lowest score wins the hole.

Both teams this year feature a fair share of rookies – five for the U.S. and eight for the Internationals – and 10 will be in action Thursday afternoon.

Here’s what you need to know for the first round of play at the 2022 Presidents Cup.

Thursday foursomes pairings

1:05 p.m. ET: Adam Scott-Hideki Matsuyama (Intl.) vs. Patrick Cantlay-Xander Schauffele (U.S.)

1:17 p.m. ET: Sungjae Im-Corey Conners (Intl.) vs. Jordan Spieth-Justin Thomas (U.S.)

1:29 p.m. ET: Tom Kim-K.H. Lee (Intl.) vs. Cameron Young-Collin Morikawa (U.S.)

1:41 p.m. ET: Si Woo Kim-Cam Davis (Intl.) vs. Scottie Scheffler-Sam Burns (U.S.)

1:53 p.m. ET: Taylor Pendrith-Mito Pereira (Intl.) vs. Tony Finau-Max Homa (U.S.)

On the bench

Sebastian Munoz and Christiaan Bezuidenhout are on the pine pony for the Internationals and will have to wait until at least Friday to make their Presidents Cup debuts. On the American side, Billy Horschel and Kevin Kisner are sitting out for Thursday foursomes.

The only player of the four with any Presidents Cup experience, Kisner went 1-0-1 in 2017 in foursomes alongside Phil Mickelson.

How to watch

Thursday, Sept. 22

Golf Channel/Peacock: 1-6 p.m. ET
PGA Tour Radio: 1-6 p.m. ET

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