Updated: September 22, 2008, 6:44 PM ET
Faldo assailed after Europe loses Ryder Cup
LONDON -- One headline branded the outcome "Faldo Folly." Another deemed him "Captain Calamity."
European Ryder Cup captain Nick Faldo was under siege Monday after his team's loss to the United States. Faldo, a six-time major winner, was belittled for his player selections. "Nick Faldo, not the crowd, was America's 13th Man," the Daily Mail said of his role in Europe's 16½-11½ loss in Louisville, Ky. The Times of London said that while U.S. captain Paul Azinger instilled belief in his team, "Faldo inspired chaos." The Times assailed Faldo for using his most successful players -- Ian Poulter and Graeme McDowell -- near the end of Sunday's singles matches rather than at the beginning. That meant the overall result was decided by the time they won their matches. "Buzzing around the 17th green, the United States players extolled the team-bonding skills of Azinger," the Times said. "Faldo's thin skin, the need to have his sports shrink by his side even out on the course and his grating sense of humor, had confirmed what we knew all along, which is that he is no natural leader," the paper said. "But what we had not expected was that a man who had dedicated himself so much to this job would make such a colossal mistake." Former European Ryder Cup captain Bernard Gallacher said Faldo got his singles selections wrong.
[Faldo is] about to pay the price of a lifetime of self serving, of devotion to the cult of the individual.
--The (London) Telegraph
Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press



