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			 The 46-year-old Northern Irishman takes over as skipper from Paul 
			McGinley and his former friend will be a tough act to follow. 
			 
			McGinley, a member of the five-man panel that selected Clarke as 
			leader, was hailed as a true inspiration by his players after 
			plotting the downfall of Tom Watson's United States side in Scotland 
			in September. 
			 
			Several members of the European team said the Irishman had paved the 
			way for skippers of the future with a meticulous planning style of 
			management during which he left no stone unturned. 
			 
			"Paul was absolutely fantastic," world number one Rory McIlroy said. 
			 
			"The speeches he gave, the videos he showed us, the people he got in 
			to talk us, the imagery in the team room, it all tied in together." 
			   
			 
			McGinley singled out Alex Ferguson as a key member of his backroom 
			team at Gleneagles, and there are shades of the Scot's departure 
			from Manchester United after a glittering 26-year spell as manager 
			about Clarke's appointment as captain. 
			 
			Ferguson was an almost impossible act to follow at Old Trafford and 
			so it proved for his successor David Moyes who lasted 10 months 
			before he was shown the door. 
			 
			Clarke may find it difficult to hit the captaincy heights the way 
			McGinley did but he is no fool and will put aside their fractured 
			relationship in order to try and pick up a tip or two from his 
			former friend. 
			 
			Asked recently by Golf World magazine to describe relations with the 
			Irishman, Clarke replied: "I don't really want to talk about that. 
			 
			"We say hello. It was one of those things I wish had never happened 
			but I'll tell you one thing, if they do give me the job he will be 
			the first guy I go to for advice. 
			 
			"I'd be foolish not to." 
			 
			TOUGH TIME 
			 
			The pair were close for years and McGinley pulled out of the 2006 
			U.S. PGA Championship to attend the funeral of Clarke's wife Heather 
			after she died of cancer. 
			 
			"Our two families are very much intertwined," said McGinley at the 
			time. "It is a tough, tough time for us all." 
			 
			
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			Neither man has publicly explained the reason for the fallout but 
			media reports suggest it is down to Clarke performing a U-turn and 
			deciding to challenge McGinley for the 2014 captaincy after 
			originally saying he would stand aside. 
			 
			That, however, has not stopped the Northern Irishman recognizing the 
			excellence of his predecessor's performance. 
			 
			"I've played under some great captains and from what I've been told 
			Paul did an unbelievable job with the team last year," said Clarke. 
			 
			"He has moved the job on. We all saw the response he got from the 
			players. That is a great testament to the job he did." 
			 
			Europe have won eight of the last 10 Ryder Cups and Clarke 
			acknowledges the pressure will build on the captains the longer that 
			domination continues. 
			 
			"That's the nature of sport," he said. "If you look at how Europe 
			has performed they have found a way to win but golf is cyclical and 
			there's not much between the teams. 
			 
			"Sooner or later Europe will lose, statistically that's a 
			certainty...having said that the majority of Paul's team will, I 
			think, be at Hazeltine next year. 
			 
			"There will be a core of six, seven players, one that has been there 
			for a while now. That experience is massive." 
			 
			(Editing by Ed Osmond) 
			
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