Nothing along the way, however, prepared him for Monday afternoon in the Ryder Cup.
When pairings for the tournament-ending 12 singles matches were announced, Mahan's role as closer hardly seemed to be of major importance.
With Europe leading by three, conventional wisdom suggested the result would be long-ago settled before the day's final match was even close to being complete.
That wasn't the case. As things turned out, with the U.S. and Europe tied 13 ½-13 ½, Mahan and Europe's Graeme McDowell were the only two golfers left on the course.
"Yeah, it could be a match nobody knows about or the biggest match of your life," Mahan said. "I think about 10, we started to think that it would come down to us." Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments
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