{"id":293346,"date":"2023-10-02T21:40:26","date_gmt":"2023-10-02T21:40:26","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/allmysportsnews.com\/?p=293346"},"modified":"2023-10-02T21:40:26","modified_gmt":"2023-10-02T21:40:26","slug":"oliver-holt-watching-cantlay-defiance-was-a-privilege","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/allmysportsnews.com\/golf\/oliver-holt-watching-cantlay-defiance-was-a-privilege\/","title":{"rendered":"OLIVER HOLT: Watching Cantlay defiance was a privilege"},"content":{"rendered":"
An angry man wearing a bucket hat coloured in European blue and yellow waved a bank note at Patrick Cantlay as he walked to the eighth green on Sunday. \u2018Here you go, Patrick,\u2019 he yelled as the American and his caddie, Joe LaCava, walked past. \u2018I\u2019ll give you a few dollars, mate, if you need it that badly.\u2019<\/p>\n
Cantlay smiled and carried on as best he could. Hundreds of people in the stand were on their feet, waving their caps at him because a television reporter had suggested on Twitter\/X that Cantlay had refused to wear his hat this week to protest against the fact that players are not paid to play in the Ryder Cup, a suggestion Cantlay insisted was false.<\/p>\n
\u2018Hats off for your bank account,\u2019 they sang. Another group of European fans broke into a chorus of Abba\u2019s Money, Money, Money. Others sang the lyrics from Jessie J\u2019s Price Tag. And when Cantlay, world No 5, smote his drive down the ninth fairway, another comedian in the gallery yelled: \u2018That\u2019s the money-shot, Patrick.\u2019<\/p>\n
Maybe it is a debate for another day but the question of whether players should be paid to play in the Ryder Cup makes for an interesting argument, even if the nuances of it appeared to be lost on most of the supporters here as they paid \u20ac20 (\u00a317) for a burger and \u20ac4 (\u00a33.50) for a bottle of water. And that was the cheap end of the food and drink.<\/p>\n
Forget some of the misty-eyed rhetoric surrounding the event: it is one of the most intensely commercialised, ruthlessly money-making, sponsor-led sporting occasions anywhere. Players seeking some remuneration for it does not seem entirely unreasonable.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
USA star Patrick Cantlay\u00a0was the very epitome of grace under pressure on Sunday<\/p>\n
Nor did LaCava escape attention. He had been involved in an ugly row with Rory McIlroy on Saturday evening when he waved his own cap to give the European supporters a taste of their own medicine after Cantlay had sunk a crucial putt on the 18th.<\/p>\n
LaCava compounded that by standing in McIlroy\u2019s line and then remonstrating with him. Later on Saturday evening, footage emerged of McIlroy shouting abuse at another US caddie \u2014 Jim \u2018Bones\u2019 Mackay \u2014 in the players\u2019 car park, which ramped up the animosity towards LaCava even more.<\/p>\n
The PGA of America requested extra security for Cantlay and LaCava during the singles match with Justin Rose. Two members of the Carabinieri shadowed them all afternoon.<\/p>\n
LaCava was roundly booed when he walked on to the first tee. As he walked up the fairway with his player, someone shouted \u2018scumbag\u2019 at him. LaCava kept walking.<\/p>\n
And when Cantlay missed a putt on the 12th to lose the hole, a Yorkshire voice accosted LaCava as he walked past on his way to the 13th tee. \u2018You\u2019re not waving your hat now, are you Joe,\u2019 the man said.<\/p>\n
The baiting was relentless. Cantlay, who has been criticised for his slow play before, was the butt of more jokes for that. \u2018Hurry up, Patrick,\u2019 another English voice shouted out as he lined up a putt on the 10th green, \u2018I\u2019ve got a plane to catch tomorrow.\u2019<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Fans wave their caps after reports Cantlay refused to wear his hat in protest at not being paid<\/p>\n
So you get the picture. That is what it was like walking around with the pantomime villains of the USA team on a blazing hot Sunday as they fought and fought against the inevitable European victory in this 44th Ryder Cup.<\/p>\n
And the truth is, it was a privilege to watch Cantlay play. It was a privilege to watch his defiance in the face of overwhelming odds and the ridicule of the crowd. It was a privilege to watch the standard of the golf he played and to witness how he conducted himself.<\/p>\n
There were times when it was hard to see the way he was treated. It was the kind of behaviour that makes you wince. The Ryder Cup is about the passion and the crowds, sure, but the way Cantlay was barracked felt very close to crossing a line. It also emerged later that Cantlay is getting married on Monday.<\/p>\n
Xander Schauffele\u2019s father said the reason he was not wearing a cap was because he did not want his wedding photos to be ruined by the classic golfer\u2019s tan line across the top of his face.<\/p>\n
If that is the case, it makes the treatment that was meted out to him in the hills above Rome even more regrettable.<\/p>\n
He was the very epitome of grace under pressure, particularly as he remains adamant that the story that excited the animosity of the fans towards him was \u2018totally unfounded\u2019. He continued to smile at those who abused him. He got on with his job of taking down one of the European heroes.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Cantlay’s caddie Joe LaCava was roundly booed when he walked on to the first tee<\/p>\n
Cantlay is a thoughtful, decent man, who answered the stream of questions about his hat with a certain amount of bemusement but with unfailing good grace. And he was the anchor for an American rally that gave the Europeans some anxious moments before they got over the line in the late afternoon yesterday.<\/p>\n
He had played some stunning golf on Saturday evening to turn around the fourballs match that had pitched him and his playing partner, Wyndham Clark, against McIlroy and Matt Fitzpatrick and yesterday afternoon, he picked up where he had left off.<\/p>\n
Going out in the third match of the day Cantlay took the lead with a birdie putt on the second hole but, for the next hour, his name provided the only splash of American red on the leader-board. For what seemed the longest time, he was surrounded by a sea of blue. Europe led in five of the first six matches.<\/p>\n
In the circumstances, Cantlay\u2019s focus and courage was remarkable. \u2018It\u2019s been a crazy 24 hours,\u2019 he admitted later. He kept the USA standard flying when all hope seemed lost and, gradually, other players began to rally to it. More and more red began to appear the longer the afternoon wore on.<\/p>\n
Cantlay and Rose both played some superb golf and as the crowd became more and more partisan and agitated and Rose became more and more pumped up, the Englishman fought his way back into the game. Cantlay\u2019s lead fell from three up to one up.<\/p>\n
When Cantlay walked down the 16th fairway, Fred Couples, one of golf\u2019s greats and one of Zach Johnson\u2019s vice-captains here, put his arm around Cantlay\u2019s shoulder and walked with him, muttering words of encouragement to him as they approached the green.<\/p>\n
When Couples peeled away, Cantlay was left with the final few yards to the putting surface and was met, as he had been met for the last four hours, with the sight of thousands of caps being waved in the air, thousands of people trying to get into his head, thousands of people trying to unsettle him, thousands of people trying to mock him.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Cantlay and Justin Rose both played some superb golf during their singles match on Sunday<\/p>\n
When experts talk about a sportsman\u2019s mental strength, this is what they mean. And Cantlay proved his. When everything seemed to be closing in on him, he held his nerve and he saw it through. He holed a 15-foot putt on the 17th to win the game and finish two up. It was the USA\u2019s first win of the day. It gave them hope.<\/p>\n
In the end, the miracle comeback was frustrated but Cantlay\u2019s performance summed up something about this American team.<\/p>\n
In the end, they were not humiliated. They did not fracture, as they had done at Gleneagles in 2014.<\/p>\n
\u2018Our boys fought like madmen,\u2019 Johnson said later. And no one \u2014 no one \u2014 fought harder than Patrick Cantlay.<\/p>\n