Posted on 04/08/2018 8:24:22 AM PDT by ethom
Patrick Reed chipped in for eagle at the 15th hole Saturday at the Masters and let loose a howl so fierce you expected it to send ripples across the pond there.
Fiery, pugnacious and combative.
Thats Reed at his best, stoking the embers of whatever burns within him.
Its the guy Americans love, and Europeans hate to see emerge at the Ryder Cup.
Its the guy he has been trying to awaken on bigger stages, outside the biennial international team event.
To be sure, Reed was able to rouse that persona Saturday, after hearing the roar Rory McIlroy created right in front him, after McIlroy made eagle at the eighth to tie him for the lead.
I feel like I was able to tap into it a little bit today, Reed said. When I get to eight, my lead's gone, I'm all‑square, and to be able to all of a sudden go birdie, birdie, birdie and get back up by three ...
Thats how Reed answered McIlroy.
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Reed rolled in a 9-footer for birdie at the eighth, a 25-footer for birdie at the ninth and another 9-footer for birdie at the 10th to jump three shots ahead of McIlroy.
It felt like Reed was wagging his finger at McIlroy all over again, the way he did in their terrific singles battle at the Ryder Cup two years ago, when McIlroy rolled in 70-footer for birdie at the eighth hole at Hazeltine and Reed rolled one in right on top of him.
Except Reed didnt wag his finger Saturday.
There's a lot of stuff you can do at the Ryder Cup that you can't do at Augusta National, Reed said.
Reed is such a force on the Ryder Cup stage, but he hasnt been able to conjure that same formidable presence in major championships. He has won five PGA Tour titles, but hes 0 for 16 in majors.
But maybe hes beginning to find it. He tied for second at the PGA Championship at Quail Hollow late last summer. And here this week, he is playing like the dynamo who mows over Euros with such delight every other year.
With a 5-under-par 67, Reed took a three-shot lead on McIlroy going into Sundays final round, a five-shot lead on Rickie Fowler. Hes looking to make his first major memorable, slipping into a green jacket.
After answering McIlroy, Reed kept pounding the field on the back nine, making eagles at the 13th and 15th holes. There were triumphant fist pumps with each of them.
I feel like, with that kind of fiery side of me, if I'm not playing the kind of golf I need to be playing, if I hit that one shot, I can pump myself up, and try to get going, and try to flip that switch, Reed said.
Reed said that fiery spirit can lift him up when his games sagging.
Also, same way if I'm playing really well, Reed said. I almost feel like I can kick it into another gear, and go even deeper.
It's just one of those things that I've been working on, trying to tap into Ryder Cups more and more, and try to play some solid golf.
Reed, 27, knows his pugnacious nature makes him a lightning rod, with his backstory of conflict stirring emotions in those who root for him and against him.
In 2014, he boldly shushed the crowds at Gleneagles in the Ryder Cup. He dares to don Tigers red-and-black ensemble on his own PGA Tour Sundays (though hell be wearing a special Masters pink this Sunday). And there was that football game in South Bend, Ind., last year, when he miffed Georgia fans posing for photos wearing Notre Dame attire in a Bulldogs-Fighting Irish game. He used to be a Bulldog, before things turned sour there.
Reed was booted off the Georgia team back in college, but this state is still a special place to him. He left the Bulldogs to lead Augusta State to back-to-back national championships.
Reed was asked what it is about him that can stoke such strong feelings from the social media mob who like rooting against him.
I don't know, he said. Why don't you ask them? I have no idea, and honestly I don't really care what people say on Twitter or what they say if they are cheering for me or not cheering for me. I'm out here to do my job, and that's to play golf. I feel like if I'm doing it the right way, then that's all that really matters.
The way he treated his little sister, he has a long way to go to become a beta-male. His own teammates were rooting for him to lose in college. I hope he shoots a 90 and is never seen again.
Or Sarazen for the bridge over the pond on #15
“oh...so the author is lying about Reeds unpopularity?”
No, the author is simply exaggerating to get you to read the article.
I wasn’t talking about him. I was talking about the people who complain about him.
Go, Patrick, Go!
Reed and his wife sound like @ssholes.
>>Or Sarazen for the bridge over the pond on #15<<
Haha, good! Maybe to carry the theme: Gene, Seven (# of majors won), or G.S. (Grand Slam).
I hope the @sswipe has a complete meltdown....
he has already lost a shot on the 1st hole.
Never heard of the guy till this weekend. But then again, the media loves to create drama and heroes......almost as fast as they love to destroy them.
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....... wrong
What a tournament!!!
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Too bad the guy who won, Patrick Reed, reminded me of John Wayne Gacy all day long. He is one surly, creepy looking competitor.
I suppose he's a nice enough guy off the course. We'll see as time goes by and more comes out about his life.
******
On the other hand, Simone Biles lives just a few miles down the road from me. She built a world-class training center on Birnham Woods and Riley Fuzzel in Spring (the nicer part, the Montgomery County part).
-PJ
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