Endings aside, I don't think international team golf can maintain the status quo much longer. Until this weekend, the President's Cup was hanging by a thread; only Nicklaus's presence as captain persuaded the top-tier U.S. players to attend.
Yet the competition was tremendous, and the event took a huge leap forward in public interest and acceptance. When you consider that 17 of the top 20 players in the world were present in South Africa, that's a compelling argument to find some way to keep the President's Cup -- or the essence of it, anyway -- alive. Yet we all know the U.S. pros are not going to want to play international team golf every fall. You could argue that it would be just as much fun to watch U.S. pros who are willing to show up, even if Tiger and Phil and Davis do not, but that ignores the real drama of seeing Woods vs. Singh or Els in a match for pride rather than money. Estes vs. Els just doesn't have the same feel.
So what to do? Jack Nicklaus seems to be in the drivers seat when it comes to these things, so it's time for him to find a way to merge the President's Cup and the Ryder Cup. I would suggest abandoning the U.S. team in favor of a Western Hemisphere team that playes an Eastern Hemisphere team every other year. The Euros will squawk, but most of their stars are now playing in the UBS Cup. This way, we get Weir and the next stars to emerge from South America, while they get Sergio and the next stars to emerge from Europe.
It would also put the kibosh on the overt "USA! USA!" crap that has hurt recent Ryder Cups, without diminishing our ability to identify with our Western team, if we so choose. The Internationals certainly didn't need nationalism to hold their interest in the President's Cup, just as the Euros have banded together beautifully in the Ryder Cup. Neither of those groups of players should lose the opportunity to play international golf in the spotlight, but if Nicklaus (or somebody) doesn't do something about the status quo, somebody's going to be squeezed out.