Justin Thomas evokes former UTC star Terrell Owens at Presidents Cup

U.S. team member Justin Thomas, left, celebrates with playing partner and captain Tiger Woods on the 18th green after making the winning putt in their foursomes match during the Presidents Cup on Friday at Royal Melbourne Golf Club in Australia. / AP photo by Andy Brownbill
U.S. team member Justin Thomas, left, celebrates with playing partner and captain Tiger Woods on the 18th green after making the winning putt in their foursomes match during the Presidents Cup on Friday at Royal Melbourne Golf Club in Australia. / AP photo by Andy Brownbill

MELBOURNE, Australia - Justin Thomas delivered the biggest moment for a United States team desperate for one Friday at the Presidents Cup.

He holed an 18-foot birdie putt on the final hole at Royal Melbourne Golf Club, dropped his putter and looked over at his partner - playing captain Tiger Woods - then borrowed a line from Pro Football Hall of Fame receiver Terrell Owens, the former University of Tennessee at Chattanooga star.

"I love me some ME!" Thomas screamed at Woods, who also dropped his putter and moved in for a hard hug.

All the Americans gained was momentum.

The International players were going so well at this Presidents Cup that they took their largest lead after any session in 16 years, and it felt like that was the worst they could do.

Building on a 4-1 lead after Thursday's opening session of foursomes, they quickly won two more matches in Friday's second session of the same format. South Africa's Louis Oosthuizen and Australia's Adam Scott rallied from 2 down by winning five of the next seven holes and closed out Dustin Johnson and Matt Kuchar in the opening foursomes match Friday.

Patrick Reed, so good in past U.S. team events he was nicknamed "Captain America," heard it from the crowd again, including shouts of "Patrick Cheat" for his rules violation last week at the Hero World Challenge in the Bahamas. Far tougher on Reed and Webb Simpson were Mexico's Abraham Ancer and Australia's Marc Leishman, who seized control on the back nine to win 3 and 2.

At one point, the leaderboard was filled with black and gold, the new colors of this inspired International team captained by South Africa's Ernie Els. It had to settle for a 6 1/2-3 1/2 lead.

Patrick Cantlay - who was paired with Xander Schauffele - and Thomas each birdied the 18th hole to win matches for the Americans, and teammates Rickie Fowler and Gary Woodland rallied from 2 down with three holes to play to earn a halve.

"It's perspective, isn't it?" Els said. "I've got to look at where we are. It's easy to just look at where we could have been, because it was looking really unbelievable. We tie this afternoon."

Els then considered that the Americans have a 50 1/2 - 22 1/2 advantage in foursomes while winning the past seven times, and maybe it wasn't all that bad.

"We're in a very good position," Els said.

The International team - the biennial event that alternates years with the Ryder Cup does not include European golfers - had its largest lead through two sessions since it triumphed at Royal Melbourne in 1998, the only time it has won the Presidents Cup. It also had a three-point lead going into Sunday singles in South Africa in 2003, the year of the tie.

photo International team player Sung Jae Im of South Korea bends over after missing a putt on the 18th green in a foursomes match Friday in the Presidents Cup at Royal Melbourne Golf Club in Australia. / AP Photo by Andy Brownbill

Even so, the Americans felt momentum shifting.

"We dug ourselves out of what could have been a big hole," Thomas said.

With his and Woods' match tied going to the 18th, Thomas drove into light rough on the right, and Woods followed with a great shot that landed near the hole and rolled out 18 feet. Japan's Hideki Matsuyama missed his 25-foot speedy birdie chance, and Thomas had the last putt for the win.

"We were both screaming," Woods said. "It was a phenomenal moment, and it was priceless. So I'm glad we were able to experience it together."

Equally important was Cantlay, whose second shot into the par-5 15th set up a birdie to square the match. Schauffele gave him a chance at the winner with an approach shot that put the ball 15 feet from the final hole, and Cantlay knocked it in.

That was the first point. The biggest moment belonged to Thomas because it was one more point that got the U.S. team a little bit closer.

"I've been fortunate to make a lot of putts," Thomas said. "But to do it with my captain and teammate was awesome."

Woods tied Phil Mickelson for the record by winning his 26th match in nine Presidents Cup appearances. Mickelson played in 12 for the United States.

Fowler and Woodland capped the late comeback. They were 2 down with three holes to go when they birdied the 16th and 17th holes to square the match against South Korea's Sungjae Im and Australia's Cameron Smith. It ended with the first draw of these matches.

"Momentum is huge," Woodland said. "That was a huge half-point. Any time you can scrape out something we did it. Now we have to regroup. We have 36 ahead of us tomorrow, and hopefully (we'll) go out and flip this a little bit."

The International team wasn't buying the momentum argument. It paid more attention to the leaderboard.

"What are we, 6 1/2-3 1/2 up? It's very early," Leishman said. "They made a couple good putts on 18, definitely give them that, but I don't think you get momentum with two putts. We played pretty well the first two sessions. Yes, today probably didn't finish off the way we wanted to, but we still halved the session. They made a couple putts at an important time, but if they feel that, that's great."

Reed, meanwhile, is never bashful about egging on the crowd when playing away from home. He made a birdie on the 11th hole, and as he heard it from the gallery, Reed cupped his hand to his ear, then pretended to use his putter as shovel. Walking up the 16th fairway, two spectators yelled at him to look at their shirts that read, "We love a Tiger, but not a Cheetah."

Reed declined interview requests after the round. He was set for another dose of heckling Saturday, because Woods was sending Reed and Simpson out for the third straight session.

Woods was set to be nothing but a captain Saturday morning. He took himself out of the lineup, sending Thomas in the first match out with Fowler for fourballs. Eight points are available Saturday including the afternoon session of foursomes, and that will be followed by 12 singles showdowns Sunday.

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