This will be the sixth Ryder Cup in which former Gophers star Tom Lehman has participated when play gets underway Friday at Hazeltine National Golf Course, and the former Ryder Cup captain talked about some of his experiences playing in the tournament and working as a captain or assistant captain.
Lehman competed three times as a player, with the Americans losing 14 ½-13 ½ to the Europeans at Oak Hill (near Rochester, N.Y.) in 1995 and by the same score at Valderrama in Sotogrande, Spain, in 1997. The U.S. won 14 ½-13 ½ at The Country Club in Brookline, Mass., in 1999.
"It is no fun to lose," Lehman said. "It's a great experience, I loved it, played some good golf, but it was no fun losing. It was way more fun winning. Way more fun winning. It's very difficult to watch the Europeans celebrate, especially on U.S. soil, at the end of a Ryder Cup. I just don't want to see that happen again this year."
Lehman also served as a non-playing captain at The K Club near Dublin, Ireland, in 2006, and an assistant captain at Celtic Manor Resort in Newport, Wales, in 2010 and this week at Hazeltine.
Lehman was asked if there's any reason he can pinpoint for the Europeans' success in recent tournaments, winning six of the past seven Ryder Cups.
"That's a great question," he said. "If you can figure out why, maybe we'll win this time. It seems to me they play with less pressure on themselves and they make a lot more putts. I think we definitely have over the years put more pressure on ourselves than we needed to. We play with a little more anxiety than we need to. And if we can relax and just play golf, we'll probably be a lot better off for it."
Hazeltine challenge
Lehman talked about what he expects from Hazeltine and how the course will affect golfers on both sides.
"Hazeltine has always been very difficult," he said. "Every time there has been a major championship out there, it has really tested the field. It's a very daunting challenge, difficult shots, awkward shots, some real length in the par-5s and par-3s, so it's really kind of become one of the more difficult golf courses that you will play. Of course, the best players over the week will definitely rise to the top, and I think if the U.S. team has the better players, which I think we do, I think we will rise to the top."