The Ryder Cup has never had to wait for a captain like this. Not for Jack Nicklaus or Arnold Palmer, and not even for a Hogan who was barely out of a hospital bed. Yet here the PGA of America sits, waiting for Tiger Woods‘s decision. And the three-time European Ryder Cup captain, Bernard Gallacher, has had enough of waiting.

Speaking to the press, the 77-year-old Scotsman pointed to golf’s greatest names as examples of what Woods should be doing. “When Jack Nicklaus was asked to be captain, he did it right away. When Arnold Palmer was asked, he said, ‘But I’m still playing.’ When Ben Hogan was asked, he hadn’t played and was still recovering from his injury, but he still said, “Yes, OK, I’ll be captain,” Gallacher said. “It was a big shock to me that Tiger said that he felt he couldn’t do it.”

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The history behind those names makes the comparison even sharper. Nicklaus captained the U.S. side in 1983 and 1987. Palmer took charge in 1963 while still an active player. In 1949, while recuperating from a near-fatal car accident, Hogan was the team’s leader. None of them needed time to think. The Ryder Cup captaincy, for that generation, was not a burden to be assessed. It was a calling to be answered.

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