take away America's home field advantage. Should America host on a parkland course rather than one that plays more "European"? Hasn't the exact opposite happened at venues like the K Club!
If you think you have the better team , to increase your chances of victory a captain would prefer to play a course that is less tricky. If you think that the Americans had the better team then Colorado Golf Club was not a good choice, there is a lot , and I mean a lot of luck out there on that golf course.
That being said, the golf course looked and played fantastically!
David:
How'd that work for the US in the 1995 Ryder Cup at Oak Hill -- a match that featured by most accounts a more accomplished US side and a course expressly set up in US Open fashion (narrow fairways, thick rough) to better American golfers' chances.
The only captain -- Solheim or Ryder Cup -- who truly "got" set-up and his players was Zinger at Valhalla.
And if you think luck had anything to do w/ Euro winning this year's Cup, well, you must've been watching a different tournament.
I didn't say the Americans had the better team, I said if they did or thought they were going to it was a bad choice to accomplish the desired outcome of winning.
Was the 1995 team made up of a bunch of players that traditionally do well on US Open courses? If you make the course too difficult, and recovery shots away that might take away the advantage of the better team , if that is one of their strengths.
The Euros putted much better than the Americans all week long that is why they won, period. That being said, because the ball striking into the greens was so much based on the bounce one received from whatever portion of a slope the ball landed , the course emphasized putting more than some others would have , which was clearly to the advantage of the European players.