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Presidents Cup 1998 Presidents Cup Titleist

On The Fringe

A changing of the guard for U.S. golf

Click here for more on this story

Posted: Tuesday December 29, 1998 07:28 PM

  Duval, who was left off the Ryder Cup squad a year ago, likely will be a fixture for the U.S. in international competitions for years to come Ezra O. Shaw/Allsport

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) -- Before anyone writes off Tiger Woods or the rest of the 20-something stars who failed to win a major championship this year, be sure to check the top qualifiers for the U.S. team in the Presidents Cup.

And get used to seeing them represent the Stars and Stripes for years to come.

David Duval, Tiger Woods, Jim Furyk, Justin Leonard and Phil Mickelson were the first five in Presidents Cup points, which amounts to money earned the past two seasons, with the dollar doubled for 1998.

That all of them are in their 20s is no surprise to their captain this week at Royal Melbourne Golf Club.

"You're seeing the young players take over," Jack Nicklaus said. "For a few years it looked like youth would get pushed back, but you knew pretty soon they were going to come through."

The old man in the group is Furyk at a not-so-geriatric 28. He is the least accomplished of the five -- only three victories on the PGA Tour and never really in contention in a major until this year (Masters, British Open). Then again, he also has 25 finishes in the top 10 the past two seasons.

Mickelson, a month younger than Furyk, is playing on his fourth straight national team and already has won 13 times on the PGA Tour. Leonard is 26. A year after winning his first major in the British Open, he didn't challenge in any of the majors, although he did win against the toughest field of the year in The Players Championship.

Duval, 27, was left off the Ryder Cup a year ago, which seems remarkable now because he has won seven PGA Tour events since and might be the best player in the world now, even if he won't make that claim himself.

Woods will turn 23 at the end of the month and is irritated at having to answer questions about a so-called slump. He couldn't get a putt to fall all year and had to settle for two wins worldwide, third place in the British Open (he missed the playoff by one stroke) and top 10s in the Masters and PGA Championship.

The average age of American golf's "Fab Five" is a mere 26 1/2.

Throw in 34-year-old Davis Love III (No. 6 on the Presidents Cup points list), and the average age for the top half of the U.S. team is 27 1/2. The average age for the bottom half on the points list -- which featured three players in their 40s -- is 39 1/2.

Clearly, the American landscape regarding national teams is changing.

"I think it is," said Love, who is caught in between youth and those fast approaching 40. "It used to be Raymond Floyd, Lanny Wadkins, Curtis Strange, Tom Kite and their type. Now, Freddie [Couples] is kind of the leader of the group. Here, we've got Tiger, Duval, Furyk ... that's the group that is getting experience for the future."

Woods compared it to the European class that produced Ryder Cup regulars such as Nick Faldo, Seve Ballesteros, Bernhard Langer and Ian Woosnam.

"That's what's happening here," Woods said. "We all team up well, we're all great friends. And we all happen to be playing well at the same time."

More evidence of a changing of the guard is the list of players whose names are being tossed around as possible captains down the road -- a sure sign their appearances in cup matches are dwindling.

Corey Pavin. Paul Azinger. Payne Stewart.

These are some of the players who briefly interrupted what has become European dominance in the Ryder Cup. Stewart and Azinger have yet to play in a Presidents Cup since it began in 1994.

All of them have the fire in the belly that makes them an integral part of any national team. But attitude alone doesn't win matches, another reason why the focus is shifting to Duval, Woods & Co.

"There is always going to be a changing of the guard," Nicklaus said. "Sometimes, it comes in waves. But I think we're going to see these guys for a long time."

Leonard made his debut in the 1996 Presidents Cup and played his first Ryder Cup last year. Ask him about the strength of the team and he looks at Couples, Love and Mark O'Meara.

"You're always going to have veterans on the team," Leonard said. "In five years, I hope to be known as one of those veterans. But there is a core group of young guys, and it's fun to be part of it."

 
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