Team USA announces second automatic qualifier for 2023 Ryder Cup in Italy

The 29-year-old has seven top-10 and 12 top-25 finishes this season including a major.

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Wyndham Clark’s breakout year on the PGA Tour has now officially earned him a spot on the 2023 Ryder Cup team.

The 2023 U.S. Open champion will represent the red, white and blue when the Americans take on the Europeans in the biennial bash at Marco Simone Golf and Country Club near Rome, Italy, Oct. 29-Sept. 1, and joins world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler as the first two players to qualify for Team USA.

The 29-year-old has seven top-10 and 12 top-25 finishes this season on Tour with wins at the U.S. Open and Wells Fargo Championship. He previously represented the U.S. at the 2014 Palmer Cup where he earned one point out of four and lost to Jon Rahm, 4 and 3, in Saturday singles.

Those still vying for a spot on the U.S. team can earn points through the 2022 BMW Championship, the second of three FedEx Cup Playoff tournaments. The top six eligible players on the points list at that time will make the U.S. team. The final six spots will be captain’s picks by Zach Johnson and will be announced after the Tour Championship.

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Fred Couples says these 3 players will represent the U.S. at 2023 Ryder Cup

“I’ll say Max Homa’s gonna be in Italy.”

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On Wednesday, Scottie Scheffler became the first player to officially make the 2023 United States Ryder Cup team. This year’s biennial event will be held from Sept. 29-Oct. 1 at Marco Simone Golf Club in Rome, Italy.

Although the U.S. vs. Europe duel is still two months away, the players destined to represent the stars and stripes have begun to cement themselves. As it stands now, Wyndham Clark, Brian Harman, Brooks Koepka, Xander Schauffele and Patrick Cantlay are the other five automatic qualifiers along with Scheffler.

There are several superstars on the outside looking in, including Jordan Spieth, Max Homa and Rickie Fowler.

All three players could receive captain’s picks, but a lot can happen between now and selection time.

However, vice captain Fred Couples did give us a bit of insight during his SiriusXM PGA Tour Radio show, The Fred Couples Show. 

“Here’s the guys that are not confirmed and need to make a case,” his co-host George Downing said. “No. 7: Max Homa.”

“I’ll say Max Homa’s gonna be in Italy,” Couples replied. “I’ll say Max Homa’s gonna be in Italy, without getting anyone in trouble.”

Couples was then asked about Cameron Young.

“Cam Young will be in Italy,” Couples said.

2023 Open Championship
Max Homa of the United States walks from the 17th tee on Day One of The 151st Open at Royal Liverpool Golf Club on July 20, 2023 in Hoylake, England. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images)

How about Jordan Spieth?

“Will be in Italy,” he said.

When asked about Keegan Bradley, Couples replied: “The rest is — I’m stopping.”

Including those three players, the U.S. Ryder Cup roster looks like this: Scheffler, Clark, Harman, Koepka, Schauffele, Cantlay, Homa, Spieth and Young.

Three spots on the 12-man team remain open, with names like Collin Morikawa, Justin Thomas, Sam Burns, Tony Finau, and Fowler still hoping for a phone call.

Thomas, who has a 6-2-1 record at the Ryder Cup, is struggling with his game. In a last-minute push to impress captain Zach Johnson, Thomas is playing in this week’s 3M Open and next week’s Wyndham Championship.

“I’m glad he’s playing this week. The whole world knows that JT’s gotta go to, is it Minnesota, and then Greensboro? He’s gotta go to those places and play well,” Couples said.

The six automatic qualifiers for the U.S. will be official after the BMW Championship, the second of three FedEx Cup Playoff events. After East Lake, captain Johnson will make his six captain’s picks.

But after listening to Couples, it sounds like three of those spots are already taken.

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Scottie Scheffler earns first spot on Team USA for 2023 Ryder Cup

Scheffler made his first Ryder Cup appearance in 2021 where he compiled a 2-0-1 record.

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Scottie Scheffler better start brushing up on his Italian.

The world No. 1 has punched his ticket as the first of 12 players on Team USA for the 2023 Ryder Cup at Marco Simone Golf Club in Rome, Italy, Sept. 29-Oct. 1.

“The experience I had at the Ryder Cup two years ago in Wisconsin is something I will never forget and something I can’t wait to replicate in September,” said Scheffler, who was formally announced as the team’s first automatic qualifier on Wednesday. “Zach’s an amazing leader and I’m ready to do whatever it takes to help him, and our team bring the Ryder Cup back home to the United States.”

“What can I say about Scottie that hasn’t already been said,” said U.S. captain Zach Johnson. “He’s an amazing talent on the golf course, and someone that I know will do whatever is asked of him at the Ryder Cup with a smile on his face. He’s incredibly passionate about the Ryder Cup, and it’s nice to have the World No. 1 on the U.S. Team this year.”

Last season was Scheffler’s coming out party as the Texan earned four wins, including his first major at the Masters, as well as four runner-up finishes and 11 top 10s. The 27-year-old has kept the party going this season with two more wins and an astounding 13 top-five finishes in 20 events.

Scheffler made his first Ryder Cup appearance in 2021 where he compiled a 2-0-1 record, including a Sunday singles win against Jon Rahm, 4 and 3.

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Brian Harman zooms up OWGR and Golfweek/Sagarin rankings, Ryder Cup standings

A big win for Brian Harman means a big jump in all the rankings.

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A big win for Brian Harman means a big jump in all the rankings.

Now he’s in prime position to make captain Zach Johnson’s 2023 Ryder Cup team.

Harman, whose odds to win the British Open were 150-to-1, was ranked 26th in the Official World Golf Ranking heading into the 151st Open Championship at Royal Liverpool. After his first major championship victory, he checks in at No. 10 following Monday’s update.

In the Golfweek/Sagarin rankings, Harman was 44th a week ago, now he’s 34th.

In the FedEx Cup Playoffs standings, he’s up to No. 6.

The biggest number for him, however, may be the No. 3 next to his name in the latest Ryder Cup standings for Team USA.

Harman was 20th in the standings for the American squad but his British Open win vaulted him to third, behind Scottie Scheffler and Wyndham Clark and one ahead of Brooks Koepka. The top six guys on this list – Xander Schauffele and Patrick Cantlay are Nos. 5 and 6 – earn automatic spots on the team. The next six (Nos. 7 through 12) will be captain’s picks.

In the aftermath of his win Sunday, Harman was asked about the Ryder Cup.

“I’m going to kick that can down the road a little bit. I’m going to enjoy this,” he said. “The next thing for me will be our [FedEx Cup] Playoffs, what I’ll be looking forward to.”

After 36 holes at Royal Liverpool, just after he shot a 6-under round to get to 10 under to take sole possession of the lead, Harman was asked: Do you see this week as your stage to make a case for the Ryder Cup team?

His reply last Friday night:

“I’ve spent I don’t know how many years chasing. … it always seems it’s right there at the end and I end up in between 13th and 18th on the list and I’m hoping for a pick. It would mean the world to me to play on the Ryder Cup team. I think I would do very well.”

At that time, Harman knew he was only halfway to the Claret Jug so he tried to then downplay the Ryder Cup chatter by adding: “But I’m not thinking about that at all.”

Now, it’s safe to say, he’s free to think about it all he wants, as his spot on the roster seems secure.

Q&A: U.S. Ryder Cup captain Zach Johnson talks Tiger and Phil’s roles, if any, and much more

What role, if any, will Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson have with Team USA? The captain clarifies.

DETROIT – Zach Johnson loves talking about the Ryder Cup.

Speaking at the Rocket Mortgage Classic last week, the U.S. team captain invited questions on an array of topics related to this September’s road game for the Stars and Stripes. Johnson, winner of 12 PGA Tour titles and two majors among them, has the unenviable task of trying to end the U.S.’s losing streak on foreign soil, which dates to 1993, in Rome at Marco Simone GC.

“It’s the best thing I’ve ever been associated with in golf,” Johnson said of the biennial matches for which he represented the U.S. as a player five times between 2006 and 2016, earning a cumulative nine points.

Johnson knows he’s got a tough task ahead of him but he also might have one of the deepest and most talented teams in some time – top six in points automatically qualify and then he can choose six more players to round out his team. Currently, 14 of the top 20 in the Official World Golf Ranking are Americans (including Will Zalatoris, who is sidelined with a back injury).

What role, if any, will Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson have with Team USA? Has he lost any sleep worrying about the job? And why his wife, Kim, is headed to Rome on another fact-finding mission. Johnson touches on that and more in this Ryder Cup-specific Q&A.

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Less than 100 days to Italy: Updated look at the potential European 2023 Ryder Cup team

Here’s an updated look at who could be bound for Italy.

Mark your calendars, golf fans. The Ryder Cup is less than 100 days away.

That’s right, in just about three months the United States will look to not just defend its Cup title against the Europeans, but also win for the first time on foreign soil in 30 years.

Twelve of the best players from the U.S. will take on Europe’s 12 best at Marco Simone Golf and Country Club in Rome, Italy, for the 2023 Ryder Cup, Sept. 29–Oct. 1, and the teams are starting to take shape.

Qualification for Team Europe began at the 2022 BMW PGA Championship and ends Sept. 3, 2023, three weeks before the Ryder Cup. Six players will automatically qualify, three from a European Points List and three from a World Points List. Captain Luke Donald will then announce his six captain’s picks. DP World Tour CEO Keith Pelley said LIV Golf players can still represent Team Europe, but qualification may be difficult.

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Here’s an updated look at what the European team may look like less than 100 days out from Italy.

MORE: Updated look at Team USA

100 days to Italy: Early look at the potential United States 2023 Ryder Cup team

With just 100 days until the Ryder Cup, here’s an updated look at who may be on Team USA.

Mark your calendars, golf fans. The Ryder Cup is just 100 days away.

That’s right, in just about three months the United States will look to not just defend its Cup title against the Europeans, but also win for the first time on foreign soil in 30 years.

Twelve of the best players from the U.S. will take on Europe’s 12 best at Marco Simone Golf and Country Club in Rome, Italy, for the 2023 Ryder Cup, Sept. 29–Oct. 1, and the teams are starting to take shape.

American players began earning points at the beginning of 2022, and at the conclusion of the PGA Tour’s BMW Championship on Aug. 20, 2023, the top six players on the points list will qualify for the U.S. team. Captain Zach Johnson will then announce his six captain’s picks following the 2023 Tour Championship, Aug. 24-27.

While it’s difficult for LIV Golf players to earn automatic qualification (though one is currently ranked No. 3 in points), American players who left the PGA Tour for the Saudi-backed circuit are still eligible for the team via a grace period for their PGA of America membership that runs until June 2024. But will any be picked?

Here’s an updated look at what the U.S. team may look like 100 days out from Italy.

D’Angelo: It would be un-American to leave Brooks Koepka off Ryder Cup team

Anyone who cares about the Ryder Cup should not be happy if Brooks Koepka is not a part of the team.

What is Zach Johnson going to say now:

“It’s two weeks?”

The U.S. Ryder Cup captain had a very uncomfortable week at the PGA Championship answering questions about LIV golfers — particularly Brooks Koepka — making his team.

And when asked before the tournament, Johnson downplayed Koepka’s runner-up finish at the Masters by saying, “It’s one week.”

Then, Koepka proved he’s more than a one-week wonder and won his fifth major Sunday at Oak Hill Country Club outside of Rochester.

Although LIV golfers have been suspended by the PGA Tour, they remain members of the PGA of America, which makes them eligible to play for the U.S. in the Ryder Cup, which this year will be in September outside of Rome. The PGA of America runs the PGA Championship and the Ryder Cup.

And by winning, Koepka actually is doing Johnson a big favor. Having vaulted to No. 2 in the Ryder Cup rankings, Koepka could take that sticky decision out of Johnson’s hands. The top six in the rankings are automatically on the team. It’s the next six, selected by the captain, that will be dissected and put Johnson on the spot.

More: Brooks Koepka’s coach blasts media, bashes Brandel Chamblee for treatment of LIV Golf players

But not when it comes to Koepka if he maintains that spot in the top six. The only events remaining that will earn him Ryder Cup points are the U.S. Open and British Open.

Koepka second, first in Masters, PGA Championship

Koepka, who joined LIV 11 months ago, has played in two majors this year, the only PGA Tour events he’s eligible for, and finished second and first. Perhaps he was onto something when asked prior to the tournament what would it take to pressure Johnson to add a LIV golfer to the team.

“Go second, first, first, first,” he said about the majors. “It would be kind of tough not to pick, right?”

Not really. In fact, it would be very easy. Koepka, who held the No. 1 spot for 47 weeks, most recently in 2020, once again is the best golfer in the world. Forget what the world rankings say. Given what we’ve seen in the only two events he’s played that matter, nobody believes he’s No. 13, his current world ranking.

Koepka has two more chances to impress Johnson in majors. But even Johnson recognizes that when healthy Koepka has been the best golfer in the world over the last seven years when lights shine brightest.

Starting with his fourth-place finish at the 2016 PGA Championship, Koepka has played in 23 majors with five wins, four times as runner-up and 11 times in the top five. He finished in the top 10 more than 60 percent (14 of 23). And his worst stretch — last year when he was 55th twice and missed the cut twice — came when he wondered if he’d ever be elite again after a long recovery from major knee surgery.

“What I appreciate about Brooks is just how he goes about his work in massive tournaments,” Johnson said. “He’s a rare breed mentally where he just is able to bring out his best in the most difficult and trying of circumstances.”

Johnson understands how much chemistry matters on a team like this. The most documented example occurred in 2004 when Hal Sutton paired Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson when their relationship was frosty. They lost both their matches on opening day to kick start Europe’s easy victory.

“Chemistry is important on any team,” Johnson said. “It’s important with anything you’re trying to construct if you want to go out and win. My No. 1 goal as the leader is to go put these guys in a position to win, whatever that looks like.”

Check that one off, too. Nobody on the Tour would have an issue with Koepka, or even Dustin Johnson, being a part of the Ryder Cup team. Zach Johnson’s bigger issue may be deciding on Dustin Johnson.

After all, we’re not talking about Patrick Reed or Bryson DeChambeau, two LIV golfers who did not endear themselves to their peers during their time on the PGA Tour and certainly are not missed.

“When you talk about the LIV golfers that left the PGA Tour to go play over there, you never hear a bad word from those players about Brooks Koepka.” Golf Channel analyst Brad Faxon said on air Sunday following the PGA Championship.

“I think Brooks would be a fantastic addition to the team, particularly inside the locker room. Zach would be foolish not to consider him.”

Chamblee says including Koepka ‘slap in the face’ to those who stayed

Faxon’s fellow analyst, Brandel Chamblee, said including Koepka would be “a slap in the face to the players that didn’t go, that didn’t take the money and go to LIV, that somebody who took the money could now have their cake and eat it too?”

Koepka made his decision about a year ago to leave the PGA Tour for LIV, which is financed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, when his head was in a much different place. Now, he clearly has questioned that move.

Following the Masters, Koepka was asked if the decision to join LIV would have been more challenging had he felt this good, and were playing this good, at that time.

“Honestly, yeah, probably, if I’m being completely honest,” Koepka said. “I think it would have been. But I’m happy with the decision I made.”

Koepka cannot be happy that he is relevant four times a year and in between goes back to playing on LIV.

The debate will rage — and follow Zach Johnson — throughout the summer. But anyone who cares about the Ryder Cup should not be happy if Brooks Koepka is not a part of the team.

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‘I didn’t know that’: U.S. Ryder Cup captain Zach Johnson didn’t know the CW broadcasted LIV Golf

When asked where he watches LIV Golf, Johnson offered a subtle if unintended snub to the CW network.

ROCHESTER, N.Y. — Zach Johnson was squarely focused on his own golf game during the final round of the 2023 PGA Championship, finishing an uneven day with a 71, one that included five birdies, four bogeys and a double on No. 17. Although he survived the cut, Johnson struggled to a 10-over 290 through four days at Oak Hill Country Club.

But Johnson is also taking notice of the field, as the selection process for the 2023 Ryder Cup is fast approaching and he’s handling his first tour of duty as the U.S. team captain.

When asked if he would attend a LIV Golf event to scout prospective players, Johnson implied that he would not. And then, when asked where he watches the upstart golf series, the Iowa native offered a subtle if unintended snub to the network broadcasts.

Here’s how the exchange with the reporter went:

Q. Do you get the CW … to watch their broadcast or YouTube?

ZACH JOHNSON: CW?

Q. That’s where it’s on television?

ZACH JOHNSON: I didn’t know that. I do get to see it — I have to ask my kids. I think I get the CW.

As for the team he needs to help build, six players automatically qualify through a point system that would require LIV players to win at least one or more majors to be in the running.  Johnson will have six picks to round out the rest of the team and noted that he would rely heavily on input from the six qualifiers.

When asked about Koepka, who opened the day at Oak Hill in the lead and then promptly birdied three of the first four holes to take a commanding lead, Johnson said he’s always been impressed with the Florida State product’s resolve.

“Look at his résumé prior to this week. He’s an amazing player,” Johnson said about Koepka. “What I appreciate about Brooks is just how he goes about his work in massive tournaments. He’s a rare breed mentally where he just is able to bring out his best in the most difficult and trying of circumstances.”

Koepka, Dustin Johnson and Bryson DeChambeau all have Ryder Cup experience and because LIV players paid their membership dues before June 30, 2022, they retain their PGA of America membership through the end of June 2023 and then through a grace period that runs through the end of June 2024. That means each could be eligible for selection to the team.

Johnson said he’s taking chemistry into consideration when considering his half-dozen picks.

“I mentioned chemistry. I don’t think I mentioned character,” Johnson said. “So take that in context. I mean, chemistry is important on any team. It’s important with any leadership of any team. It’s important with anything you’re trying to construct if you want to go out and win. My No. 1 goal as the leader is to go put these guys in a position to win, whatever that looks like. Time will tell.”

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Lynch: Will Dustin Johnson or Brooks Koepka get a Ryder Cup pick? That’s a definite, um, we’ll see

Both Koepka and Johnson are popular among their peers and would not be thought likely to impair the vibe in the team room.

The considerations that decide Ryder Cup captains’ picks are as varied as the skippers making the calls, though no previous leader of Team USA ever had to check if potential picks are forcing other members of the squad to incur legal bills by fronting speculative litigation financed by a Middle Eastern despot. Such is the job Zach Johnson signed on for as he attempts to end America’s 30-year losing streak on foreign soil in September.

The only LIV players likely to factor in discussions about captains picks are Dustin Johnson and Brooks Koepka, neither of whom was a plaintiff in LIV’s antitrust lawsuit against the PGA Tour nor even offered salty back chat about their former tour or colleagues (Patrick Reed could win the next three majors and still not be invited for a uniform fitting for fear he might sue the seamstress). That removes one possible impediment to a LIV golfer being chosen for the matches in Rome, but there are others.

Captain Johnson met with the media Wednesday at Oak Hill Country Club, where he’s competing in the 105th PGA Championship, and the attributes he stressed for his team did not seem at all random: camaraderie and chemistry. Those are freighted words these days, and cut to the core of the dilemma with including LIV players in the Ryder Cup.

Both Koepka and Johnson (D) are popular among their peers and would not be thought likely to impair the vibe in the team room (notwithstanding Koepka’s spat with the pseudo-scientist two years ago at Whistling Straits).

That resolves the practical considerations around chemistry and camaraderie. Now, about the philosophical angle …

The U.S. team in last year’s Presidents Cup was an impregnably tight-knit group, finally shorn of the jerk contingent that had roiled the back room for years. That’s what the task force was intended to create when it was formed almost a decade ago, after another of Phil Mickelson’s periodic rogue efforts to overthrow whatever powers that be. The task force goal was to establish consistency — in approach, in leadership, in commitment, in preparedness — and eliminate division and rancor.

Zach Johnson has been part of that process and remains surrounded by a trusted star chamber of previous captains, Davis Love III, Jim Furyk and Steve Stricker. How likely is he to venture off the path they paved to gamble on a couple of LIV guys? When pressed on whether he might spend one (or more) of his six picks thus, the skipper bobbed and weaved like a prize fighter.

“I was talking about that just the other day with some of my vice captains. We’re at a point right now where it’s not even a discussion item,” he said. “There’s maybe a couple guys that have come close to securing their spot in the top six, but when it comes to picks, it’s not even on my radar. I think it would be premature and almost irresponsible to even go into that. It’s not on my radar right now.”

“It’s totally on his radar,” another former captain said disbelievingly upon hearing that comment. “It’s only three months away. He probably has a list of 20 guys he’s monitoring.”

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Z was asked if his namesake, D, would be considered among the twelve best Americans now, fresh off his win on the LIV circuit, though almost three years removed from his last victory against a deep, elite field at the 2020 Masters.

“Really difficult for me to judge that. Again, I don’t know the golf courses they’re playing. Never seen them. I’m not there on foot in person,” he said. “You’re talking about an individual whose resume is extremely deep and wide. He’s certainly in my generation one of the best players I’ve ever competed against, but it’s not fair for me to guess his true form or anybody’s true form that I can’t witness.”

To be fair, Captain Johnson’s inability to bear witness might have happened because the CW affiliate in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, cut away before the conclusion of DJ’s win at the weekend.

So what then of Koepka?

“I haven’t really seen where he’s at since Augusta. He played really good that one week, but it’s one week. There’s still a lot of golf between now and then,” Johnson replied, sounding like a high school quarterback unwilling to commit to a prom date until it’s time to zip up the dress.

The LIV question will shadow Johnson until Rome in a way that it won’t with his counterpart, Luke Donald. Europe lost a generation of future leaders to LIV, but no locks as future players. And while most European defectors have or will resign their tour membership rather than pay enormous disciplinary fines, thereby removing themselves from Ryder Cup participation, selecting LIV players remains an option for Johnson.

Yet it’s not a decision he will make out of desperation. His roster is an embarrassment of riches. Consider that Tony Finau has won four times in the last 10 months and even he is well outside the top six guaranteed slots, and that the most likely rookies on his team — Max Homa, Sam Burns and Cameron Young — are all top 15 in the world ranking. That impressive slate from which Johnson must choose is also a valid excuse should he choose to stiff-arm guys who come with a little extra baggage.

Depending on how Johnson (D) and Koepka perform in the coming months—in majors and whatever LIV broadcasts air in Iowa—there may come a time when Johnson (Z) wants them on his team for the Ryder Cup. But there won’t be a time when he needs them on it.

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