The 2014 Ryder Cup gets underway at Gleneagles

by ALASTAIR DALTON
United states fans in kilts. Picture: Ian RutherfordUnited states fans in kilts. Picture: Ian Rutherford
United states fans in kilts. Picture: Ian Rutherford

The opening of the 40th Ryder Cup at the Perthshire course brought as much colour as a day at the races and as much chanting as a football match.

The crowds were clearly as enthralled as St Albans seed merchant Samuel Ryder had been when watching a match at Wentworth in 1926: he donated a small gold cup to the game the following year.

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Yesterday the clash between the cream of American and Euro­pean golf brought a new mix of tribal splendour to the fore, from a US take on wearing the kilt, to spectators dressed as Vik­ings and the blue and gold European Union flag.

Former First Minister Lord McConnell tweeted a picture of a group of fans in stars and stripes kilts, white socks and trainers with the caption: “Best outfits of the morning.”

Then there was the singing, apparently led by the self-titled Ryder Cup Guardians – a male group that has been a familiar sound at the last three tournaments. Resplendent in blue and yellow outfits in the front row of the first tee’s main grandstand, they had spent months perfecting individual ditties for almost every member of the European team.

Their repertoire ranged from the easily copied Bjorn v the USA, to the tune of the Bruce Springsteen anthem, to welcome the Dane Thomas Bjorn, to Viva Garcia to the tune of Viva España for Spaniard Sergio Garcia. England’s Ian Poulter would now have been familiar with his Walking in a Poulter Wonderland chant, while Scot Stephen Gallacher was welcomed with a rousing rendition of There’s only one Stevie G.

With all that noise, it wasn’t surprising the local wildlife was rattled, with a deer sprinting up the first fairway before turning sharp left in front of the first tee and bolting through the crowd.

Later, a wasp made its own mark on proceedings by stinging England’s Justin Rose on the hand. Swedish partner Henrik Stenson, with whom he put Europe’s first point on the board, said: “I high-fived him right on that stingy bit on the thumb after he made the putt on ten and he could still continue, so I guess he’s all right.”

Many fans had travelled to Gleneagles well before first light for the 7:30am start, with park-and-ride sites in Stirling, Perth and at the former T in the Park site at Balado, near Kinross, opening at 5:30am.

Some had slept in their cars hoping to secure prime slots on the course, which opened at 6:30am. While there were spaces for 12,500 cars at the park-and-ride sites, another 7,500 took trains to Gleneagles station, crossing the A9 using specially built footbridges which local residents want made permanent to enhance road safety.

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The tournament has its own bus terminal for direct coaches, such as from Edinburgh, while there is even an official helicopter landing site. But, visiting celebrities please note, only by prior appointment.

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