Parting Ryder Cup thoughts

Parting thoughts from the Ryder Cup, where the U.S. might want to install Boo Weekley as its perpetual mascot:-- Paul Azinger made all the right moves in his role as U.S. captain. He kept his players loose, set up Valhalla to encourage birdies and helped the Americans hoist the cup for the first time in nine years.One of Azinger's only miscalculations: His insistence that the absence of Tiger Woods carried no positive effect for the U.S.Obviously, the team would have been stronger, strictly in a golf sense, with Woods rather than Ben Curtis or Chad Campbell. But as Europe's Paul Casey suggested Sunday night, the U.S. thrived in part because of its "no stars" personality.That vibe is simply not possible with Woods on the premises. His larger-than-life persona -- that happens when you win 14 major championships by age 32 -- casts a wide shadow. It's easy to envision the U.S., especially the rookies, playing tighter with Woods (as it has in past Ryder Cups) or becoming deflated if Tiger had lost his matches.Instead, players such as Anthony Kim and Hunter Mahan and Weekley demonstratively seized the spotlight, proving the U.S. is deeper than previously suspected in three days of tense, entertaining golf in an electric setting that showed the power of the team format.-- Lee Westwood probably comes off as a sniveling whiner in print. He complained about the difficult course at the PGA Championship (played at Michigan's Oakland Hills), objected to Weekley's crowd-inciting behavior at the Ryder Cup and criticized U.S. fans for heaping "shameful abuse" on him throughout the weekend.In person, though, Westwood projects an entirely different image -- thoughtful, analytical, amusing. He was hilarious in describing the way one fan, dressed in a white sheet, jumped in front of Westwood on the course Sunday and shouted "Boo!" in a joking attempt to startle him.Tournament officials ejected the fan, to Westwood's dismay. He thought the guy was funny.-- Westwood and Sergio Garcia also earned points in this corner for rising to the defense of European captain Nick Faldo. It has become a ridiculous ritual on the other side of the Atlantic, for the Ryder Cup captain to endure endless scrutiny and criticism. But in Sunday night's news conference, Westwood and Garcia each spoke before Faldo had a chance to answer pointed questions about his decisions. It was especially refreshing to see Garcia voluntarily shoulder responsibility, given how often he finds excuses when he falters in majors.-- In the afterglow of Louisville's whirl as Ryder Cup host, one local journalist figured the event will spark more interest in golf. She then asked Kentucky natives Kenny Perry and J.B. Holmes if they had any advice for kids who soon might take up the game for the first time.Holmes, one of the longest hitters around, smiled."Swing hard," he said.(E-mail Ron Kroichick at rkroichick@sfchronicle.com.)(Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service, www.scrippsnews.com.)