Struggling Weir at home in Presidents Cup
2003 Masters winner lobbied to bring event to Canada
![]() J. Rogash / Getty Images file “I haven’t been doing it, but I know what I can do, and I’ve been able to do it most of the time in the Presidents Cup," Weir says. |
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Mike Weir is uncomfortable with the notion that nationality is ultimately what put him in the Presidents Cup.
“I don’t think I’m there as a sentimental pick,” the Canadian said.
Deep down, however, he has to know he would have had little chance of being added to the International team if the tournament were being played in any country but his own.
International captain Gary Player and U.S. captain Jack Nicklaus said as much.
So did two of Weir’s teammates.
“Mike Weir is going to make the event better,” Australian Geoff Ogilvy said after Player completed the 12-man team by adding Weir and Nick O’Hern as captain’s picks. “Is he the 12th best player at the moment? Probably not. But he’s the one guy who can lift the whole event. How can you see that and then not have him on the team?”
But Weir dismisses that — at least in his public comments.
“I know what I can do,” Weir said. “I haven’t been doing it, but I know what I can do, and I’ve been able to do it most of the time in the Presidents Cup.
“I’ve been able to play some good golf in there, and I think that’s what Gary saw. I don’t think he saw it as a sentimental pick. I think he saw from the last three what I can do and what I bring. At least that’s what he told me.”
Weir’s 2-1 singles record and 8-6 overall mark in three Presidents Cup appearances factored into Player’s decision to select the left-hander for the matches Sept. 27-30 at Royal Montreal. But nationality aside, that wasn’t enough to select a slumping player who finished 20th in the race for the 10 automatic spots. Not with the in-form Aaron Baddeley and Andres Romero well ahead of him, and Richard Green, Robert Allenby, Rod Pampling and Tim Clark also available.
“If we didn’t have a Canadian in my team and playing in Canada, I can assure you, the series would be quite flat among the Canadian people,” Player said in announcing his picks the day after the PGA Championship.
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Nicklaus knew Player wasn’t about to sacrifice the home-crowd advantage and set himself up for a week of criticism from the Canadian fans and media.
“I think Gary politically thought it was the right thing to do,” Nicklaus said. “I think he either succumbed to that situation or came to that conclusion that he would like to have him anyway.”
It was obvious to teammate Adam Scott, too.
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Weir, whose 2003 Masters victory and lobbying effort played a big role in Canada getting the event, was worried that Player would pick someone else, especially after the captain failed to call him immediately after the PGA.
“Absolutely,” Weir said. “I didn’t get a call Sunday night and I was wondering if he choose somebody else, which I would have been OK with. I would have understood if he would have picked somebody else, but I’m sure glad he picked me.”
Winless since the Nissan Open in February 2004, the 37-year-old Ontario native wasn’t even the top Canadian in the points race. Stephen Ames, a naturalized Canadian citizen from Trinidad & Tobago, was 16th — four spots ahead of Weir.
Ames could have earned a spot by finishing fourth in the PGA, but shot a 76 in a final-round pairing with winner Tiger Woods at Southern Hills to drop from second to a tie for 12th. Player also could have selected Ames, but went with O’Hern, 11th in the standings and the only player to beat Woods twice in match play.
“I think he’d have had an even tougher choice if Stephen Ames had played a better round the last round of the PGA,” Nicklaus said. “I mean, he’s from Canada, but he’s not naturally born in Canada. Mike being sort of the hero-darling of Canada would be the guy that they wanted to have on the team if they could have him.”
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