🇺🇸 Team USA sweeps 5 matches in opening session of Presidents Cup. 🇺🇸

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MONTREAL -- The Presidents Cup matches were close. The score after the opening session was not.
The Americans clung to a 1-up lead in all five matches Thursday when they delivered shot after shot, putt after putt, until this already lopsided series took a familiar turn.
United States 5, International 0.
The Americans swept the first day of fourballs matches at Royal Montreal behind a feisty Scottie Scheffler, late heroics from Xander Schauffele and plenty of help from the putting-challenged International team.
It was the third time they shut out the Internationals on the first day, and the first time since 2000. The Americans went on to an 11-point victory that year.
We're excited with our start - high fives, celebrate - and we're going to keep the pressure on," U.S. captain Jim Furyk said.
International captain Mike Weir had a plan for the opening two days and he didn't see anything on the course to make any changes for the foursomes matches on Friday. Adam Scott has never been on a winning team since his debut in 2003, and he wasn't about to lose hope.
"The best news is there's tomorrow for us. It's not over," Scott said. "We're going to have to come out, fight really hard, find that gear, win a session and get going in the right direction. The score line looks rough. But I don't think there was that much difference in it today."
Three matches reached the 18th green. One ended on No. 17. The shortest match was Scheffler and Russell Henley getting the last word in a 3-and-2 win over Tom Kim and Sungjae Im.
Scheffler and Henley never trailed in what was the spiciest match of an otherwise flat day, the Canadian crowd mostly silent after Mackenzie Hughes, who sat out the first session, chugged a beer on the opening tee to get them going.
Scheffler and Kim are good friends who play plenty of money games in Dallas. On the par-3 seventh hole, the 22-year-old Kim holed a putt from just inside 30 feet and did a pirouette on the green, screaming, "Let's Go!"
Scheffler matched the birdie from about the same length, and the world's No. 1 player turned toward Kim and screamed, "What was that?"
It got testy on the next hole when Kim made another long birdie, celebrated wildly and then he and Im walked over to the ninth tee without even watching Scheffler putt.
"It's the same thing I would have done at home if he had made a putt ... and he celebrated like that. So it's all in good fun. We enjoy competing against each other," Scheffler said. "That's what it's like out here. It's fun to compete and fun to represent our country, and at the end of the match you take your hat off and shake hands.
"We're friends after, we're not friends during, I guess."
The Internationals never looked like they would win the session. They weren't expecting a shutout, either.
Taylor Pendrith, one of two Canadians in the lineup, made birdie on the 12th as he and Christiaan Bezuidenhout squared their match against Keegan Bradley and Wyndham Clark.
Schauffele and Tony Finau missed 3-foot par putts on the 16th and their opening match against Jason Day and Byeong Hun An was all square.
It could have gone either way. But it only got worse for the Internationals.
Bezuidenhout missed three 7-foot putts in a span of four holes that kept his side from squaring the match. Scott missed a pair of putts from the 12-foot range.
The Americans delivered the goods.
Schauffele atoned for his short miss by hitting his tee shot to 7 feet to a back pin on the par-3 17th for a birdie, and then hit his approach to 3 feet on the 18th to close out the match.
"Tony got the party started on the front nine and he had my back all day," Schauffele said. "I figured it was my time to have his back."
Bradley, the Ryder Cup captain for next year who has gone 10 years since his last cup competition, holed a 35-foot putt on the 13th and secured a 1-up win over Scott and Min Woo Lee with a 10-foot putt. Emotions were pouring from him.
"It was 10 years of pent-up energy of not playing these," Bradley said. "I just had such a blast out there today."
Collin Morikawa and Sahith Theegala rallied from a 1-down deficit through 11 holes when Morikawa birdied the 12th and 14th holes. Theegala secured it with an approach to just inside 3 feet. He made the putt, the first time all day he retrieved his golf ball from the cup.
In the anchor match, Patrick Cantlay was relentless as ever and Sam Burns made a 10-foot birdie on the 13th hole that put them 2 up, and Corey Conners and Hideki Matsuyama could never cut into the lead.
The Americans also swept the opening session in 1994. This was the eighth time in the last nine Presidents Cups they had a lead after the first day.
Friday has five foursomes matches. Furyk is keeping two teams together, including Scheffler and Henley, with Cantlay and Schauffele looking to build on their foursomes record.
"The last couple road games have been close," Cantlay said. "I think it's a huge statement. I think we need to build on that tomorrow."
 

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U.S. takes 11-7 lead into final day of Presidents Cup.​

MONTREAL -- Patrick Cantlay couldn't have hit the putt -- he might not have seen the hole -- without lights from a video board and the headlamps from golf carts surrounding the 18th green in the final match of the longest day at the Presidents Cup.
And then he delivered another "Patty Ice" moment that might have been enough to turn the lights out on the International team Saturday.
Scottie Scheffler delivered big moments late in both of his matches, and Cantlay's putt from just inside 17 feet in the dark gave the Americans another win and another point, moving them one session closer to another Presidents Cup victory.
"Huge putt," U.S. captain Jim Furyk said. "If you had to hand-select someone to hit a big putt on your team, I think Pat would come to a lot of people's minds."
They won the four-ball and foursomes sessions by a 3-1 margin. Cantlay and Xander Schauffele won on the 18th over Tom Kim and Si Woo Kim, the high-charged South Korean duo, to give the Americans an 11-7 lead at Royal Montreal.
"Xander helped me read it," Cantlay said of his match winner in near darkness. "It was like a cup out with some speed, and a putt like that will make me sleep a little better tonight."
It was Si Woo Kim who chipped in from deep rough below the 16th green that gave his side hope, and he leaned his cheek into his hands the "Good night" gesture made famous by Stephen Curry in the Paris Olympics this summer.
That turned out to be an early call.
Tom Kim said he could hear some American players cursing at them, though it wasn't corroborated and Schauffele said he didn't know what the 22-year-old was referring to. Most of the matches have been tight all week. The crowd has been loud. It has gotten chippy at times, expected in these team competitions.
What hasn't changed is the Internationals facing a big deficit.
They need to win eight of the 12 singles matches Sunday for a tie, and halve another if they want to win for the first time since 1998 -- four years before Tom Kim was born -- and only the second time since the Presidents Cup began in 1994.
International captain Mike Weir sat out four players all of Saturday, wanting to ride the teams that helped get his side back into the match with that 5-0 shutout on Friday.
One of them was Jason Day, who will be first out Sunday against Schauffele.
It's the same deficit from two years ago, and Weir recalls the Internationals -- a team facing distractions in 2022 of losing players who defected to the Saudi-backed LIV Golf League -- making the Quail Hollow crowd quiet and the Americans sweat.
"We just have tremendous belief in our guys," Weir said. "Might feel similar to what it was in Charlotte, but I'm just telling you, maybe there's an upgrade in belief for our team."
Tom Kim sounded even more determined, bordering on angry.
"I am so motivated to go out tomorrow ... because we've lost so many times, there's going to be one day where it's just going to be our day," he said. "I believe it's tomorrow.
"If we fall short, we'll try again. That's what we are. We'll keep trying. There's going to be one time when we're going to hold the Cup, and it's going to be sometime soon."
Scheffler finished off a tight four-ball match with two late birdies in a morning session delayed 90 minutes by fog, and then he gave the Americans their first lead in foursomes with a wedge into a foot on the 14th hole that led to another point.
Scheffler started both matches slowly. Collin Morikawa kept them in the game in four-ball until Scheffler hit a dart from 195 yards to 8 feet for birdie on the 16th, and rolled in a 15-foot putt from off the green on the 17th for the win.
Russell Henley carried him in foursomes, especially after Scheffler missed par putts from 6 feet and 3 feet as they fell 3 down after five holes. But the world's No. 1 player delivered late with a wedge into a foot on the 14th for their first lead and a 12-foot birdie on the next to take control.
"I have the best player in the world on my team, and we just kind of hung in there," Henley said.
Adam Scott, playing in his 11th Presidents Cup without ever being on the winning side, carried Taylor Pendrith to a 2-and-1 victory in the afternoon foursomes over Brian Harman and Max Homa, the only International point in foursomes.
Si Woo Kim and Tom Kim won big over Keegan Bradley and Wyndham Clark in morning four-ball for the lone International victory.
They were all square or leading in all the afternoon matches at one point until the Americans took control, as they often do. Morikawa and Burns dug out of an early hole and beat the Canadian duo of Corey Conners and Mackenzie Hughes on the 18th hole when when Hughes hit a poor chip and Conners never came close on the 12-foot par putt.
In the anchor match in the morning, Im three times matched birdies against Cantlay and Burns to keep the match from getting out of hand. Cantlay chipped in for eagle on the 12th for a 2-up lead and he twice kept the Internationals from coming back by making putts from 25 feet and 18 feet when they were in tight.
"The guy's an absolute assassin," Burns said about Cantlay.

Sunday's singles matches​

12:02 p.m. ET -- Xander Schauffele, United States, vs. Jason Day, International
12:14 p.m. -- Sam Burns, United States, vs. Tom Kim, International
12:26 p.m. -- Scottie Scheffler, United States, vs. Hideki Matsuyama, International
12:38 p.m. -- Russell Henley, United States, vs. Sungjae Im, International
12:50 p.m. -- Patrick Cantlay, United States, vs. Taylor Pendrith, International
1:02 p.m. -- Keegan Bradley, United States, vs. Si Woo Kim, International
1:19 p.m. -- Tony Finau, United States, vs. Corey Conners, International
1:31 p.m. -- Wyndham Clark, United States, vs. Min Woo Lee, International
1:43 p.m. -- Sahith Theegala, United States, vs. Byeong Hun An, International
1:55 p.m. -- Collin Morikawa, United States, vs. Adam Scott, International
2:07 p.m. -- Brian Harman, United States, vs. Christiaan Bezuidenhout, International
2:19 p.m. -- Max Homa, United States, vs. Mackenzie Hughes, International
 
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Mike Weir has made some strange moves in this thing. Plays the same 8 guys in both sessions yesterday despite a few obviously were playing bad. Then today for the singles matches, knowing the US will send out their best players first to seal the win, he sends out Jason Day who wasn’t good enough to hit a shot yesterday. Of course Day is 5 down after 9 holes. Good job Mike.
 

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