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European captain Nick Faldo, left, shields the Ryder Cup from U.S. captain Paul Azinger as the Europeans arrive in Louisville, Ky.
European captain Nick Faldo, left, shields the Ryder Cup from U.S. captain Paul Azinger as the Europeans arrive in Louisville, Ky.
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Getting your player ready...

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — J.B. Holmes tugged on his black glove, steadied his eyes down the fairway of the 594-yard 10th hole at Valhalla and pounded a tee shot Monday with such force that Raymond Floyd, an assistant captain at the Ryder Cup, could only shake his head.

“It’s a different game,” said Floyd, who played in his first Ryder Cup four decades ago.

It was a display of sheer power, something that was in rare supply Monday as the Ryder Cup activities began with hardly any electricity.

Even as European captain Nick Faldo and seven of his players arrived on a charter flight from London, much of Louisville was without power as the host city tried to recover from a spinoff storm generated by Hurricane Ike that brought 60 mph winds Sunday.

Faldo and U.S. captain Paul Azinger held their first news conference in the Kentucky Exhibition Center, where generators were required for television lighting.

“I’ve got 12 guys who want to win,” Faldo said.

Of equal concern was getting Valhalla Golf Club dressed up for its biggest golf event.

Fairways that normally are as clean as carpet were littered with small twigs and leaves, with larger branches scattered in the rough. Dozens of workers were busy raking the leaves into piles, and carts zipped along the roads removing the debris.

A television tower collapsed onto the back of the 12th green, causing enough damage to possibly eliminate one back hole location.

Course superintendent Mark Wilson and his crew patched dents with pieces of sod in the shape of circles and squares, but there were nasty scars that might need more than a few days to heal.

The matches begin Friday, and there is little doubt who is favored to win.

Europe is on its longest winning streak since this exhibition began in 1927, having won the last three. Its dominance stretches even further, capturing the cup eight of the last 11 times dating to 1983.

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