Tiger Woods’ Presidents Cup and Ryder Cup stats show startling differences

Here’s a great stat that shows how different Tiger Woods’ play was in the Ryder Cup and the Presidents Cup.

If you buy through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works: Tiger Woods is a completely different task for the best golfers in individual sports because they have well -documented difficulties by playing in team USA.

However, it turned out that the rider’s cup was 15 times for major champions, and there was a major difference between the success rate of Europeans and the international cup team. Arguably the greatest golfer of all time has a pretty impressive record of Presidents Cup victories, so his stats drop off significantly when it comes to the Ryder Cup.

If you look at Woods’ overall stats with Team USA, you’ll quickly see how much his Ryder Cup winning percentage has dropped off. He plays more matches in the Presidents Cup and has a very respectable win rate of 63.5% with 27.5 points from 43 matches, but in the Ryder Cup this number drops to 39.19% with 14.5 points from 37 matches.

So while he ranks 9th on the US list in Ryder Cup points, that sub-40% percentage is incredibly low for such a dominant player as Woods, he ranks 2nd in the Presidents Standing Cup and has a better points percentage than the leader, Phil Mickelson. This is the same story with the Tiger record in simple, what you expect would be the only domain of the golf team where he could excel – as he did in the Cup of Presidents by winning seven of his nine Solo outputs.

Contact me with news and offers from other emails from Brandsreceive on behalf of our trust or sponsor to submit your information that you accept terms and conditions and privacy policy and are 16 years old or more. While he won more games than he lost in the Ryder Cup, he only won half of his eight singles matches, losing just two and losing two. Not bad, but not quite “Tiger style.”

In team play, his struggles in the Ryder Cup are amplified, with twice as many losses as wins in both formats, and in the Presidents Cup he has an 8-9-0 record in fourballs, but in foursomes he is a domineering player, going 12-4-1. And winning only four of 14 foursomes and five of 15 fourballs is so hard to believe in the Ryder Cup – even with all the heat Europe has brought in recent games, you’d still expect Tiger to have racked up more points than that.

You’d think that with a batting average of at least .500, that would be the minimum, but as the stats below show, the Ryder Cup hasn’t been a happy hunting ground for Tiger…

M. C Lang

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *