Lynch: Team USA is trying to mimic Europe’s Ryder Cup magic, but missing the point

There’s been plenty of rancor over the years in Europe’s team room.

Comforting myths have a tendency to become conventional wisdom in golf. Thus, Jack Nicklaus never missed a putt that mattered and Europe’s Ryder Cup success owes to its players having lovingly bonded during dinners and airport delays. As the 71st hole of the ’77 Open and a chat with any European team veteran will attest, neither is entirely true.

There’s been plenty of rancor over the years in Europe’s team room, involving people who weren’t only not friends but who spent the week at each other’s throats, sometimes literally. There was great camaraderie, sure, but the Ryder Cup was not a buddies’ trip for the blue and yellow. To wit: two of the most talismanic figures during Europe’s glory days — Seve Ballesteros and Nick Faldo — would at times have struggled to find more than a few teammates who’d have swung a handbag in their defense in a barroom brawl.

What unity there was within Europe’s squad was seeded in common purpose, not in cordial relationships. Many of the continent’s top stars felt routinely disrespected on the PGA Tour and found solidarity in a shared objective — kicking the enemy’s arse. Bonds between players grew organically around that goal; they weren’t a prepackaged requirement to make the roster to begin with. And that’s where the U.S. team is missing the point in trying to imitate what the peddlers of hackneyed pablum claim is the secret to Europe’s success.

None of which is to say that harmony is unwelcome. It’s clearly preferable to discord in a stressful team room, but it’s nonessential. Many teams in many sports have benefitted from the inclusion of troublesome personalities. The 44th Ryder Cup next month in Rome, however, will test the idea that a team can be successful by explicitly excluding such.

Seve Ballesteros, left, and captain Tony Jacklin celebrate as Europe marched toward its first Ryder Cup win on U.S. soil in 1987 at Muirfield Village in Dublin, Ohio.

The players who didn’t receive one of Zach Johnson’s captain’s picks this week have limited right to complain. They had an opportunity to earn their spot and didn’t, leaving their fate hostage to whatever intangibles the skipper values most. Each of the selections Johnson made is defensible, notwithstanding the various quibbles put forth. Some of the metrics cited in second-guessing are questionable anyway. Like current form. What is “current” when the matches are a month away? Or performances in past Ryder Cups. As any financial advisor will tell you, results from 24 months ago predict nothing one month hence. If they did, ZJ would have picked DJ, who went 5-and-0 at Whistling Straits in ’21.

But the fact that Captain Johnson’s choices can be justified doesn’t mean the reasons underpinning his decisions are beyond scrutiny.

When the final U.S. team was announced, I received a text from a European veteran surprised by the non-selection of Keegan Bradley, whose two PGA Tour victories this season are more than any of the six men who were picked. “When you get a proven competitor with Ryder Cup pedigree in form, it should be enough,” he wrote. Bradley’s subsequent comment to Golf Channel’s Todd Lewis suggested he believes his omission is down to clubbiness: “I’ve always been an outsider in the sport but I have tried to get closer to the guys I thought would be on the team. I feel like moving forward I’m going to have to automatically qualify for the Ryder Cup.”

That perception was bolstered by Johnson’s comments during the announcement, in which popularity was repeatedly cited as a metric that mattered. Sam Burns “meshes well.” Rickie Fowler “makes every team room better.” Brooks Koepka’s “buddies wanted him on the team.” All of those things may be true and aren’t inherently problematic, but they illuminate the process by which the U.S. team is now chosen. Jordan likes JT. Scottie likes Sam. Everyone likes Rickie. Guys assured of being on the team are choosing their own “ride or dies” and the captain’s job is to provide air cover.

The PGA of America’s Ryder Cup task force was conceived amid unseemly acrimony — Phil Mickelson castigating Tom Watson for the loss at Gleneagles in ’14. Ever since, the mission has seemed blurred between having the U.S. team be competitive and having it be convivial. America’s lineup could romp to victory in Rome, in which case any questions about how it came together will be moot. But if it loses, the firing squad will be loading muskets before the European guys sober up from the celebrations. In that scenario, at least Johnson’s players will have plenty of friends at hand to lean on for support.

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Now a Ryder Cup team member, Brian Harman details past disappointing calls from national team captains

“I’ve never not gotten picked and felt like I truly deserved a spot,” said Harman of his past close calls.

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Zach Johnson had six happy phone calls when he made his captain’s picks for the U.S. Ryder Cup squad.

He had to make a handful of disappointing calls, as well, as the 12-player team bound for Marco Simone Golf and Country Club near Rome is set.

In the past, Brian Harman has been on the receiving end of the disappointing calls, but not this year. The 36-year-old played his way on the team as an automatic qualifier for the Americans thanks to a T-5 finish at last week’s BMW Championship. A two-time member of Team USA at both the Walker Cup (2005, 2009) and Palmer Cup (2006, 2007) as an amateur, Harman will make his professional national team debut with the added perspective of a player who has been left behind in the past.

On the season, Harman has earned 11 top-25 and six top-10 finishes on Tour, including three runner-up showings in addition to his win at the Open Championship. Performances like that keep you in the mix for a pick, but Harman knows better than anyone what it means to be on the negative end of that conversation.

“Let’s see. Jim Furyk called me and told me I wasn’t on the (2018 Ryder Cup) team. Him and I had a really nice conversation,” said Harman. “Because when he called and told me I wasn’t, I’m like, ‘Well, I know, I have not performed as well as I should have in an attempt to make this team. I understand.’ I wouldn’t have picked me either.”

“And then Steve Stricker called and told me I wasn’t making the (2017) Presidents Cup team,” he continued. “I thought I had a better shot at getting picked for that one. But Steve’s always been a dear friend of mine and I understood.”

“I never, I’ve never not gotten picked and felt like I truly deserved a spot.”

Harman did say that Davis Love III gave him a call last year about the Presidents Cup, a team that Harman desperately wanted to be on.

“But, once again, I hadn’t, I finished third in Memphis last year, I was 70th on the FedEx Cup and ended up I was playing really well at the end of the year,” he said, “but I hadn’t done anything to warrant a flier pick.”

Many players would hold grudges against captains and make excuses as to why they weren’t chosen. Instead, Harman used it as motivation and made it so he couldn’t be left off this year. Talk about the kind of player you want on a team.

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Who got snubbed in the Ryder Cup selection process?

There are a bunch of names golf fans are debating.

United States Ryder Cup captain Zach Johnson has made his choices and the side is now set for next month’s matchup in Italy.

Four players will make their debut in the biennial event against the Europeans, who haven’t lost on home soil since 1993.

A story at our sister site For The Win, part of the USA Today Sports network, highlighted the players who were snubbed.

At first glance, it’s a really fascinating mix — there are rookies aplenty in the group of automatic qualifiers, so captain Zach Johnson balanced that out with mostly veterans like Jordan Spieth, Collin Morikawa, Rickie Fowler, Justin Thomas and Brooks Koepka. It made a ton of sense.

But who got snubbed by Tuesday’s announcement? There are a bunch of names golf fans are debating, including some who have had big years on the PGA Tour.

‘You just don’t leave JT at home’: Ryder Cup captain Zach Johnson on why he picked Justin Thomas

Thomas is 6-2-1 in two previous Ryder Cup appearances for Team USA.

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One of the biggest questions facing United States Ryder Cup captain Zach Johnson was whether or not to bring an out-of-form Justin Thomas to Italy for next month’s event.

Johnson announced his six captain’s picks to complete his 12-player team bound for Marco Simone Golf and Country Club, Sept. 29-Oct. 1, and Thomas was one of them.

“His passion for the Ryder Cup is very evident,” said Johnson during a press conference after making his selection. “In my mind, he was born for this and you just don’t leave JT at home.”

The 30-year-old former world No. 1 will make his third appearance for the red, white and blue next month near Rome and will look to improve on an already stellar 6-2-1 record.

MORE: Check out Team USA’s Ryder Cup uniforms

“I’ve been very fortunate to play with some good friends of mine that I feel like I know well,” said Thomas, “that I’m not only comfortable around but I feel like I can do my best to try to bring the best out of them.”

“One of the most talented players on the PGA Tour in my opinion,” added Johnson. “(Thomas) has without question been the heart and soul of Team USA at Ryder Cups. Our emotional leader, I would say, and I don’t think he would argue with that. He just leads by example.”

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Meet the 12 players and captains representing Team USA at the 2023 Ryder Cup in Italy

Get to know the 12 players on Team USA for the 2023 Ryder Cup.

Ladies and gentlemen, meet Team USA.

After the conclusion of the 2023 BMW Championship the six automatic qualifiers for the U.S. team bound for Marco Simone Golf and Country Club and the 2023 Ryder Cup were confirmed. Following the Tour Championship, captain Zach Johnson announced his six captain’s picks that would join the team near Rome, Italy.

Of the 12 players on the roster, four will make their debut in the biennial event against the Europeans, who haven’t lost on home soil since 1993.

Get to know all 12 players and the captains who will represent the red, white and blue in the 44th playing of the Ryder Cup.

MORE: Check out Team USA’s Ryder Cup uniforms

Think the LIV Golf/PGA Tour rivalry is dead? The Brooks Koepka pick says otherwise

That difference of opinion shows that emotions and opinions remain divided and even polarized.

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In a normal Ryder Cup year, Brooks Koepka’s place on the U.S. team would be anything but controversial.

Koepka won the PGA Championship, conducted by the same PGA of America that runs the Ryder Cup on the U.S. side. And even though he missed out on one of the top six automatic berths in points, Koepka finished a strong seventh on the points list.

This, of course, is anything but a normal year for the Ryder Cup or for men’s professional golf. Koepka’s participation on the LIV tour means there are those who believe he shouldn’t be allowed a captain’s pick onto the U.S. team that will face Europe in Italy next month. There are others who are adamant that Koepka absolutely deserves a berth on the U.S. team.

That difference of opinion shows that after two years of rhetoric and finger-pointing and more than a year since the LIV tour debuted as a rival to the PGA Tour, emotions and opinions remain divided and even polarized.

It also shows that whatever olive branch extended between the PGA Tour and the Saudi Arabia Public Investment Fund, the money behind the LIV tour, hasn’t exactly soothed some very hard feelings among players and fans. The June announcement of a partnership framework between the PIF and the PGA Tour has yet to produce many hard and firm details about what the PGA Tour might look like in 2024. In fact, there is still talk the partnership will not actually come to fruition.

Brooks Koepka
Brooks Koepka tees off at the 1st during a Ryder Cup practice round at Le Golf National. (Photo: Ian Rutherford-USA TODAY Sports)

Polarized feelings

Somehow, caught in the middle of this are Koepka and U.S. Ryder Cup captain Zach Johnson. Koepka has played just four points-gathering events for the Ryder Cup this year, the four major championships. But a win at the PGA Championship and a tie for second at the Masters garnered Koepka enough points to be in the top six in points for the team. That is until last Sunday at the BMW Championship, when the right players finished just high enough on the leaderboard to push Koepka down to seventh and out of an automatic bid. Koepka, of course, didn’t play in the BMW event and isn’t in the Tour Championship this week.

Had Koepka stayed in the top six, he would have been on the team, no questions asked. Instead, he now requires a captain’s pick from Johnson, who no doubt has thought long and hard about the idea of an LIV player on the U.S. team.

A friend called this week, thinking the captain’s picks had been made, and said, “They didn’t put an LIV player on the Ryder Cup, did they?’” That’s one vote against any LIV player participating.

On the other hand, the PGA of America may have painted itself into a corner it can’t escape. By allowing Koepka and other LIV players who qualified to play in the PGA Championship, the PGA opened up the possibility of an LIV golfer on the Ryder Cup. If Koepka is good enough to play in and win the PGA Championship, how can he be barred from a Ryder Cup berth, the critics ask.

The precedent of LIV golfers being banned from events has been set by the PGA Tour, which technically has nothing to do with the Ryder Cup, and by the DP World Tour. That European tour is saying no LIV players will be on the European team in Italy.

Keeping Koepka off the U.S. team will certainly cause another war of words to break out from those who dislike the PGA Tour’s stance on LIV golfers and who will see such a move as hypocritical by a PGA of America that saw fit to let Koepka play in the PGA Championship. Letting Koepka play for the U.S. team will renew anger among fans (and perhaps a few PGA Tour players) who still see a move to the LIV tour as a betrayal by the former PGA Tour golfers.

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We will find out in just a few days which six golfers will join the six automatic qualifiers for the U.S. team. Frankly, it only makes sense for the PGA champion to be on the team, especially since he was allowed to play in that major tournament to begin with. And remember, Koepka is the only LIV player truly under consideration for a Ryder Cup berth.

If he is rightfully on the team, the odds are that will cause the same kind of debate we have seen in the game for two years.

Larry Bohannan is the golf writer for The Desert Sun. You can contact him at (760) 778-4633 or at larry.bohannan@desertsun.com. Follow him on Facebook or on Twitter at @larry_bohannan.

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Making the case for each potential U.S. Ryder Cup captain’s pick for Italy

Does Justin Thomas get the nod on past performances? Will Brooks Koepka or any other LIV players be selected?

Zach Johnson has some choices to make.

On Tuesday the U.S. Ryder Cup captain will make his six selections and complete the 12-player team bound for Marco Simone Golf and Country Club, Sept. 29-Oct. 1.

Locked in as automatic qualifiers are world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, U.S. Open champion Wyndham Clark, Open champion Brian Harman, Patrick Cantlay, Max Homa and Xander Schauffele.

But who will join them? Does Justin Thomas get the nod based on past performances? Will Brooks Koepka or any other LIV players be selected? How about a 43-year-old debutant in Lucas Glover?

Let’s make the case for the potential captain’s picks for the 2023 Ryder Cup.

Opinion: Adding Brooks Koepka to 2023 Ryder Cup team is a no-brainer

Does the Brooks Koepka make the cut?

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Six down, six to go. Does the Brooks Koepka make the cut?

The 2023 PGA Championship winner and LIV Golf standout is ranked 45th in the Golfweek/Sagarin rankings, 13th in the Official World Golf Ranking and perhaps most importantly, seventh in the U.S. Ryder Cup standings.

Only the top six earn an automatic qualifying spot and it was only recently that Koepka slipped to the No. 7. Still, writes Tom D’Angelo of the Palm Beach Post, Koepka’s inclusion on the 12-man squad scheduled to head to Rome in September should be a no-brainer.

He notes that U.S. captain Zach Johnson does have some difficult decisions to make but this shouldn’t be one of them.

This should not be about LIV Golf or Saudi Arabia. This should be about what is best for this team.

And having Koepka on the team is best for the U.S.

Koepka unquestionably is one of the top 12 American golfers in the world, a fact so obvious it feels silly to point out. And adding the Jupiter resident to this team would not upset chemistry. He would not be alienated or shunned by his peers. This would not be Brooks playing the role of Phil Mickelson and the rest of the team in the role of Tiger Woods in 2004.

Just the opposite. He would be welcomed.

He goes to write that if there were a player draft, only Scottie Scheffler would get taken before Koepka.

Koepka is one of three Americans to win a major in 2023. He tied for second at the Masters, tied for 17th at the U.S. Open and tied for 64th at the Open Championship. Those were Koepka’s only chances to earn Ryder Cup points.

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Major champion on Justin Thomas at the Ryder Cup: ‘If they don’t take him, it’s the worst call ever’

“I’ve been inside the ropes at enough Presidents Cups there’s just no chance you don’t take Justin.”

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Is Justin Thomas going to prep for the Ryder Cup while sipping fine Napa wine and dining at the French Laundry?

Thomas and Max Homa, who clinched one of six automatic picks to the U.S. team on Sunday, were both announced as early commits to play in the Fortinet Championship in Napa, California, the kickoff event to the PGA Tour’s fall season. It’s great news for an event that may struggle to attract players who finished in the top 50 of the FedEx Cup standings and already secured status for next season’s Signature Events and looking for some time off.

Homa is the two-time defending champion and a Fortinet ambassador, who wears the company logo on his shirt so it’s evident why he’s teeing it up that week. But is Thomas, who failed to qualify for the FedEx Cup Playoffs after finishing 71st in the regular-season standings, in search of points during the fall to back-door his way into the top events next season or does he see the tournament as a way to knock off some competitive rust before the Ryder Cup in Rome?

U.S. Ryder Cup captain Zach Johnson is scheduled to make his six captain’s picks on Aug. 29, which gives players competing this week at the Tour Championship one more week to make a lasting impression. But to hear PGA Tour veteran Geoff Ogilvy, who has served as a vice captain for the International Team at the last three Presidents Cups, tell it, choosing Thomas, slump or no slump, is a no-brainer.

“If they don’t take him, it’s the worst call ever,” Ogilvy said. “He’s the best head-to-head match player in the world.”

Thomas, 30, is a two-time major champion and 15-time PGA Tour winner but he’s been mired in a slump ever since he won the PGA Championship last May. Thomas shot 81 at the U.S. Open in June and 82 at the British Open in July. He attempted to make a run at the FedEx Cup Playoffs in August, adding the 3M Open, where he missed the cut, and Wyndham Championship, where he finished T-11, to his schedule.

While his performance of late is of concern, there’s no denying that Thomas has been a force to be reckoned with on recent U.S. Ryder Cup and Presidents Cup teams, tallying 17.5 points for the Americans across two Ryder Cups and three Presidents Cups.

“JT would be my first pick. I’ve been inside the ropes at enough Presidents Cups there’s just no chance you don’t take Justin,” said Ogilvy. “He does something to the team. He goes out front and leads and fist pumps and makes everyone behind him believe.”

If Thomas is selected for the Ryder Cup team, he would be in danger of going nearly two months without competing in a tournament – unless he were to go play on the DP World Tour –before the Ryder Cup in Rome, which is scheduled for Sept. 29-Oct. 1. So, it would make sense to return to the Fortinet Championship, which is being played Sept. 14-17, for the first time since 2019, where he finished T-4.

According to Golf Channel’s Todd Lewis, Rory McIlroy agrees with Ogilvy’s assessment of Thomas.

“Because JT has that great experience and because as Rory called him ‘an annoyance,’ he should definitely be on that team,” Lewis reported.

Ogilvy noted that if he were Johnson, he would play Thomas and Jordan Spieth – “They are untouchable” – and Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele every match, and if Thomas happened to play poorly, he’d sit him during the fourball session. Asked if he would take the hot hand in Lucas Glover, who has won in two of his last three starts, Ogilvy said, “It’s hard to not take Lucas but you can’t take him at the expense of Justin Thomas.”

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LIV Golf at the Ryder Cup: Does anyone besides Brooks Koepka have a shot?

Max Homa and Xander Schauffele’s top-10 performances at the BMW Championship were costly for Koepka.

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Since he made his move to LIV Golf, Brooks Koepka has often claimed there’s little to no animosity between himself and those who remained on the PGA Tour.

“No one is angry at anybody from what I’ve seen,” he said earlier this year before the Masters. He would go on to tie for second at Augusta National. After Sunday’s final round at the 2023 BMW Championship, it’d be fair if Koepka held a little hostility towards Max Homa and Xander Schauffele.

When Koepka claimed the PGA Championship earlier this season, he climbed into one of six automatic qualifying spots on the U.S. Ryder Cup team bound for Italy next month. He’s been the only LIV player with any real chance at the Ryder Cup all summer, but those hopes took a turn over the weekend at Olympia Fields outside Chicago. There were scenarios for ten different players to punch their Ryder Cup tickets after the conclusion of the BMW. Koepka was clinging to the fifth spot, but by the time the final putt dropped he had been ousted from the top six.

Max Homa needed a two-way T-9 and Xander Schauffele needed a solo-ninth to kick Koepka the curb. Homa finished T-5 while Schauffele came in just two shots back at T-8.

Now the spotlight is on U.S. captain Zach Johnson, who will make his six captain’s picks in just eight days time. Will he leave the No. 7 player on the standings – who finished just 29 points behind Schauffele – off the team? Does anyone else from LIV have a case to make for a pick?

Let’s start with Koepka’s qualifications first. The 32-year-old is still No. 13 in the world after claiming his fifth major title earlier this year. He also finished T-17 at the U.S. Open. Across five LIV starts since his PGA win, Koepka has finished T-12, 3, T-17, T-38 and T-38. In three previous Ryder Cup appearances for the red, white and blue, Koepka boasts a 6-5-1 record, 2-0-1 in Sunday singles.

Koepka proved this year that, when healthy, his game still stacks up against anyone on the biggest stage. Can Johnson really leave a player with that kind of ability and mindset off a squad that already features three rookies and will be looking to win on foreign soil for the first time in 30 years?

There’s also been some recent chatter around Bryson DeChambeau, who fancies himself as a top-10 player but admitted he hasn’t heard a word from Johnson. The bulked-up bomber recently shot a 58 to win LIV Golf Greenbrier, and his T-4 at the PGA Championship was a strong showing, same with his T-20 at the U.S. Open. He’s now ranked 113th in the OWGR. That said, is a handful of good performances after just as many bad with LIV really enough to propel him onto the team?

He’d be a comical pick to pair with Koepka after their former beef, and offers just a 2-3-1 record in two previous appearances. DeChambeau seems to have found something in his game and appears to be trending in the right direction. It just might be too little, too late for him to earn one of the six picks, especially with the likes of Koepka, Jordan Spieth, Cameron Young, Collin Morikawa, Keegan Bradley, Sam Burns and Rickie Fowler all angling for selection, as well.

Talor Gooch is currently having the second-best season on LIV this year thanks to his three wins, but the 31-year-old was pedestrian to say the least at the majors with two missed cuts at the PGA Championship and the Open and a T-34 at the Masters. Patrick Reed’s time as Captain America has come and gone, and while Dustin Johnson may still have a world-class A game at his best, he’s rarely been anywhere near his best this season.

If LIV is to be represented in Italy, there’s two players with an arguable shot and one man with a decision to make.

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