When the top four players in the world rankings and ten of the top-20 are European, it seems a little incongruous that a World Golf Championship event hasn’t been played on European soil since 2006, when Tiger Woods won the American Express Championship at The Grove.

But world number four Graeme McDowell, who is among the favourites for this week’s World Golf Championships-Cadillac Championship over the famed TPC Blue Monster at Doral, acknowledges that finding alternative venues outside the United States creates a logistical nightmare for the players and the International Federation of PGA Tours.

The demise of the World Cup as a World Golf Championship event and the promotion of the HSBC Champions in Shanghai to WGC status at the end of 2009 means that three of the four events in the series are now staged in the US.

Yet despite that move and with 33 of the world’s top 50 hailing from outside the United States, the grumbling about a US-centric golfing world goes on.

Just two weeks after the Accenture Match Play in Tucson and with the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational set for Firestone Country Club the week before the US PGA Championship in August, finding a non-US venue is a headache that won’t go away any time soon.

McDowell is not a fan of the course at Dove Mountain, where he was ousted from the Accenture Match Play in the third round just two weeks ago. Tucson’s four-year contract is up but while the event still appears likely to go ahead there again next year, McDowell sees no way of moving it out of the US in the near future.

“My feelings are that the match play is the wrong one to do that with,” McDowell said of a possible move to Australia, Europe or Asia. “It is a long way to fly to China to get beaten in the first round.  Of course, Tucson is a long way to go for everyone but at least you have Los Angeles the week before and the Florida swing the week afterwards.

“A lot of the top 50 in the world will be going on to play the Florida swing anyway. Having the Match Play in the states makes geographical sense but with the international flavour of golf right now it is important that the WGCs become world events.”

Making that happen will be difficult in the extreme with the PGA Tour about to enter negotiations on a new television contract, which expires in 2012. Attracting major sponsors is increasingly difficult and staging an event outside US prime time TV slots is not attractive to the powers at Ponte Vedra Beach.

“It’s pretty hard when you start thinking about it as an overall schedule,” McDowell said. “Scheduling is a problem because you have got to think about WGCs as top 50 events and the guys in the top 50 are going straight to the majors.

“It’s difficult to take them anywhere else. Maybe they could turn the likes of the Barclays Scottish Open into a WGC, the week before The Open. It’s tough to get the blend right. But there seems to be a kind of rivalry there between the tours. I understand the PGA Tour wants to protect themselves and their members and so do the European Tour. It is the eternal debate and it is tough to get it 100 percent right.”