Marco Simone serves up a drivable par 4 where Ryder Cup dreams might go to die

No. 16 is one of a trio of short par 4s that will test strategy, skill and nerves in the Ryder Cup.

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Drivable par 4s are the most interesting holes in the pro game. Measuring somewhere south of 350 yards, the best of them entice the game’s top players to grab driver –  or sometimes 3-wood, and in a few cases with the longest hitters, even a driving iron – and smash the ball onto the green in pursuit of an eagle, birdie at worst.

There is, of course, a flip side: bogeys, double bogeys, humiliation and a tumble down the scoreboard when things don’t work out as planned.

These short par 4s are sometimes called half-par holes, but even pros who only halfway commit or halfway execute are prone to full-blown scorecard disasters. And with so many options and strategies available – especially when factoring in match play – the short par 4s are where the fun will begin at this week’s Ryder Cup in Rome.

It’s a whole different galaxy of distance and options than encountered by most amateur players, who are far more likely to experience the thrill or despair of a somewhat drivable par 3 than a reachable par 4. Tour players are a different kind of animal, with the advantage typically tilted to the biggest guns in what used to be a knife fight.

Each year we see several drivable par 4s send PGA Tour pros into fits. Always in the spotlight is No. 10 at Riviera and its almost unhittable green. It’s the same story at No. 17 at TPC Scottsdale’s Stadium Course, with water in play left and a tucked Sunday pin location – undoubtably a better strategic hole than the amphitheater par-3 16th that has gained so much fame in recent decades. These holes and dozens of others have oversized effects on eventual prize payouts.

In recent years, even the major championships have embraced their drivable par 4s. No. 6 at Los Angeles Country Club thrilled and confused in this year’s U.S. Open – Wyndham Clark just missed the green with a driving iron in the final round but produced a brilliant up-and-down from the gunch for birdie en route to victory. Likewise, Justin Thomas grabbed control of the playoff at the 2022 PGA Championship with a 3-wood blast that carried a creek to bound onto the putting surface of No. 17 at Southern Hills. Glory beckons on these short holes.

This week’s Ryder Cup at Marco Simone Golf and Country Club in Rome promises such fireworks with several drivable par 4s. The fifth measures just 302 yards, but a pond guards the approach. No. 11 clocks in at 329 yards with a deep depression to the right of the green to gobble up wayward aggression. Both of these holes are within range for these Ryder Cuppers, but at what risk?

But 5 and 11 are mere warmups for No. 16, where plenty of high-pressure matches are likely to end and some Ryder Cup dreams are apt to crater. Just 303 yards long, the 16th has a small pond guarding the right side of the green. The hole is within reach, but so is the water. It’s do or die with the world watching.

Ryder Cup: Check out Nos. 5 and 11 in the yardage book

A bunker plopped into the center of the fairway some 235 yards off the tee only complicates things, as does the water crossing 60 yards short of the putting green. Wary or wise players can lay up short of the center bunker and still hit a wedge into the green, or they can try the more unlikely path of carrying the bunker yet remaining short of the creek to set up an even shorter wedge approach – don’t count on too many players attempting that route.

Or … they can fire away at the green. It’s just right there, within reach, tucked between three bunkers and the acqua. Coming so late in the matches, it could be the one decision and one swing that decides who is the GOAT and who is the scapegoat.

Marco Simone
The StrackaLine yardage map for No. 16 at Marco Simone Golf & Country Club in Rome, site of the 2023 Ryder Cup (Courtesy of StrackaLine)

No. 16 has seen its share of splashdowns in the Italian Open since the course was redesigned by Dave Sampson and European Golf Design, with American architect Tom Fazio involved as a consultant hired by the club. Most notably, Rory McIlroy pushed his tee ball into the drink while in contention at last year’s Italian and eventually finished fourth. Will that memory provide motivation or scar tissue for Europe’s highest-ranked player and arguably the best driver of the golf ball of his generation?

Of course, not all tee shots that miss the 16th green will find the water. Some might land in a bunker, or tall rough on a downhill slope with the pond beyond, or even the closely cropped fairway approach. The players and their stats masters have to factor if playing a shorter second shot from any of those areas is more advantageous than playing a full wedge from 120 yards back in the fairway. Yes, the goal is to drive the green, but most players who try won’t find the putting surface, instead relying on a spot of luck and their elite short games.

Ryder Cup format matters, too. In the fourball matches – two-man teams with each man playing his own ball, and the lowest score for each team counts – plan to see at least one player on each side swinging for the green on the short par 4s, perhaps after his partner lays up safely. Things are more interesting in foursomes, in which the alternate-shot format often focuses on not leaving your partner in a bad spot. Then the gloves come off in singles, each man (and his team of advisors) having to choose the best route to birdie or better by considering his strengths versus those of his opponent as well as his own bravado versus his own demons.

There are so many options, so many possible outcomes. The realistic scores range from 2 to 6. Expectations are high, as are demands on length plus precision multiplied by some unknown confidence factor.

Ryder Cup Marco Simone
Brian Harman plays from a greenside bunker on No. 16 during a practice round at Marco Simone before the 2023 Ryder Cup in Rome. Players who try to drive the green but miss might find themselves in such a spot, with a long sand shot to a green backed by water. (Paul Ellis/AFP via Getty Images)

Both team captains were titans of the precision and confidence parts. European captain Luke Donald was never known for his distance off the tee but he climbed to No. 1 in the world, and American captain Zach Johnson proved to be the master of the layup by never going for a par-5 green in two en route to his 2007 green jacket. What will be their marching orders? Bet that reams of data will be analyzed figuring out go versus no-go.

There’s no doubt today’s professionals can reach the green of any of the short par 4s at Marco Simone, even guys such as American Brian Harman, who dominated this year’s British Open with a mix of precision iron play and gutsy putting. Short in comparison to Ryder Cup bombers such as McIlroy or European rookie Ludvig Aberg, Harman is still more than capable of driving the ball 300 yards downhill. But will he try? Better question: Should he?

On No. 16 in particular with the hopes of two continents on the line, it’s distance versus control, carpet bombing versus a sniper sneaking up on you. Expect to see eagle putts that knock opponents onto their heels, and also know there might be watery crashes. Hang on to your headcovers.

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Staff picks for the 2023 Ryder Cup at Marco Simone in Rome

Here’s how the Golfweek staff sees it unfolding at Marco Simone.

The 2023 Ryder Cup is set to get underway Friday morning at Marco Simone Golf and Country Club in Rome — the first match will go off at 1:35 a.m. ET — and both teams are in full preparation mode.

The Zach Johnson-led Americans are looking to win on foreign soil for the first time in 30 years while the Luke Donald-led Europeans are hoping to put up a bigger fight than they did at Whistling Straits two years ago when the blue and yellow got thumped, 19-9.

For one of the biggest events in golf, the staff at Golfweek has decided to make predictions on who will be hoisting the Cup come Sunday afternoon.

Ryder Cup: How to watch, schedule | Practice round photos | Picks

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Ryder Cup history, results from previous matches featuring the United States vs. Europe

Brush up on your Ryder Cup history ahead of the 2023 matches in Italy.

The inaugural Ryder Cup was held at Worcester Country Club in Massachusetts in 1927, and featured eight players from the United States and Great Britain competing for 12 points.

The biennial bash between the United States and all of Europe as we know it now dates back to 1979, with teams of 12 competing for 28 points. In those 21 matches, Team Europe has the slight advantage at 11-9-1, but the U.S. currently holds the Cup after its historic 19-9 win in 2021 at Whistling Straits in Wisconsin.

From winners and captains to best performers, brush up on the history of the Ryder Cup featuring the United States vs. Europe.

MORE: Ryder Cup hub

Photos: Ryder Cup golfers and wives rock the red carpet at the gala in Rome

The red carpet was out Wednesday in Rome.

It’s time to roll out the red carpet in Rome.

The 2023 Ryder Cup begins Friday at Marco Simone Golf Club in Italy, but Wednesday night was one for formal attire. Players and captains, along with their wives and girlfriends, took to the red carpet for the Ryder Cup gala.

Members of the United States and European teams donned their finest gear on the Spanish Steps, a famous landmark in Rome constructed between 1723 and 1726.

In the competition, the Americans lead the all-time standings at 27-14-2. Since 1979, Europe holds an 11-9 edge, and the Americans haven’t won across the pond in 30 years.

Ryder Cup: Tournament hub | Practice round photos

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Take a look at some of the best photos from the 2023 Ryder Cup opening gala.

Scottie Scheffler sought help from renowned English putting coach ahead of Ryder Cup

Scheffler said he already feels more comfortable over the ball despite making only minor tweaks.

ROME — After another dismal putting performance at the Tour Championship in August, Scottie Scheffler had enough.

So, he sought help, first sending a text the night after the tournament and then calling one of golf’s leading putting coaches, Englishman Phil Kenyon, the next day. A few days later they began working in Dallas on his putting woes.

“Basically he just told me I sucked, he couldn’t believe I’d ever won a tournament with how I putted. That’s what you want to hear, right?” Scheffler joked of their initial meeting. “No, on a serious note, I had a feeling what I was doing wrong. It was something that — my suspicions were kind of answered. It was just I was trying to fix it in the complete wrong way. To get into the details of it would take a little bit of time, but it’s really very simple.”

We’re in no rush, Scottie. Please continue: “The way I moved the putter through the ball, I was kind of fighting the toe rising on the putter as I went through, and so sometimes I’d miss contact a little bit in the heel,” he explained. “In order for me to try to keep my putter head low, the way I would do it is I feel everything in my hands, and what I would do is I would lower my hands. But when I lowered my hands, it actually caused the toe of the putter to go higher and higher. So as the year went on, my hands are getting lower and lower, and the problem is getting worse and worse. It was something I couldn’t figure out, and it was preventing me from hitting as many putts on line as I should have. Like I said this year, I really did hit a lot of good putts. Now I feel like I’m much more consistent hitting my start line, especially my practice.”

2023 Ryder Cup
Team USA golfer Scottie Scheffler works on the putting green prior to the Ryder Cup golf competition at Marco Simone Golf and Country Club. (Photo: Adam Cairns-USA TODAY Sports)

Scheffler won the WM Phoenix Open in February and the Players Championship in March and had an incredible run of consistency during the season, good enough to hold the FedEx Cup lead going into the Tour Championship for the second straight year. The only thing holding him back was a balky putter. He ranked 151st in Strokes Gained: Putting. Scheffler has never worked with anyone other than longtime coach Randy Smith on any facet of the game.

“I called Randy. I said, ‘Hey, thinking about calling this guy named Phil.’ He said, ‘Yeah, I know him, I think it’s a good idea, let’s do it,” Scheffler recounted.

Scheffler said he already feels more comfortable over the ball despite making only minor tweaks.

“Like even something as simple as lining up the ball, sometimes I would do it and sometimes I wouldn’t, and I wasn’t using the line in the right way. Phil kind of gave me a different perspective on using the line that’s been really helpful,” he said. “It’s just little things like that. I haven’t felt like I’ve made a huge change. I just kind of got my mind right. I feel like we made little changes to where I’m more comfortable over the ball and now I don’t have to think about my stroke. That’s pretty much all it is.”

Could Scheffler’s work with a coach who is a native from England impact who wins the 44th Ryder Cup?

“When he came to Dallas, I was joking with him,” Scheffler said. “I told him his stuff is going to work so well he’s not going to be welcome back at his home club when he gets home after the Ryder Cup.”

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Team Europe listened to Viktor Hovland’s favorite song at the Ryder Cup — the reactions are priceless

Safe to say, his teammates didn’t love it.

Viktor Hovland is quite the character.

The 2023 FedEx Cup champion recently completed the best season of his career. He’s on the Ryder Cup team for the second time, sitting at fourth in the Official World Golf Ranking before the biennial competition at Marco Simone in Rome, Italy.

He still lives in Stillwater, Oklahoma, home of Oklahoma State, which led to a great soundbite about how his $18 million FedEx Cup prize could go a long way in his college town.

Hovland is also a fan of heavy metal music. And during the practice rounds at Marco Simone in Rome, his European teammates took turns listening to his favorite song.

Ryder Cup: Tournament hub | Practice round photos

The reactions? Priceless.

“Sounds like the devil,” Rory McIlroy said. “That’s like the most horrific thing I’ve ever heard in my life.”

“I’m going to have to have a conversation with him, I think,” added Sepp Straka.

“That’s not even music,” Matt Fitzpatrick said. “That’s horrendous.”

“What is wrong with Viktor?” asked Jon Rahm.

“That’s brutal.” Robert MacIntyre added.

“Yeah, I’ve heard enough,” Ludvig Aberg said. “It’s absolutely terrible.”

And Tyrrell Hatton summed up their thoughts best: “I think you’ve played that for like 15 seconds too long there.”

Meanwhile, Justin Rose knocked out an epic air drums solo.

Hovland thinks his teammates just need to give the song time to grow on them.

“It’s just super chaotic, but the more you listen to it, you find the rhythm and the beats, and it kind of comes together and makes sense,” Hovland said.

Check out the incredible video below.

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At 36, Brian Harman’s long wait to play in the Ryder Cup is over

He has already proven that his career is nothing to be embarrassed about.

ROME — Brian Harman remembers all the phone calls from Team USA captains, breaking the news that he hadn’t made the team. There was one from Jim Furyk in 2018 ahead of the Ryder Cup in Paris. Harman was heartbroken but he also understood.

“I wouldn’t have picked me either,” he said.

Steve Stricker called in 2021 ahead of the Ryder Cup at Whistling Straits and while Harman thought he had a more legitimate chance to make that team, he understood that he hadn’t done enough to make himself stand out. More disappointment last year when he failed to make the U.S. Presidents Cup team led by his good friend Davis Love III.

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

He removed any question of doubt this year when he won the British Open in resounding fashion, his first victory on the PGA Tour since 2017, and earned an automatic selection to Zach Johnson’s Ryder Cup team. At age 36, Harman is at once both the oldest player on Team USA and a Ryder Cup rookie. Johnson, for one, always has recognized something of himself in Harman, his St. Simons Island, Georgia, neighbor.

“He is a bulldog and he is feisty,” Johnson said. “Just tough, relentless, gritty and he wants his back against the wall. So I don’t know how he’s going to play in the Ryder Cup, but I’d be willing to bet that the best of Brian Harman probably will come out at some point during that week.”

Harman had a decorated junior and amateur career and proved his mettle beating Rickie Fowler in match play at the 2009 NCAA Championship.

2023 Ryder Cup
Team USA’s Brian Harman carries a flag across the fifth green during a practice day for the Ryder Cup golf competition at Marco Simone Golf and Country Club. (Photo: Adam Cairns-USA TODAY Sports)

“We’ve never talked about that match,” Harman said during his Wednesday pre-Ryder Cup press conference. “We were college kids. I was trying to beat him; he was trying to beat me. I got the better of him that day. He’s had an incredible career. I’ve done OK.”

As an AT&T commercial put it, just OK is not OK. Harman had won just two times in more than 300 Tour starts before capturing the Claret Jug and earning the moniker of Champion Golfer of the Year. His failure to live up to his hype began to weigh on him.

“If I’m being honest, I was embarrassed,” Harman told The Athletic. “I was embarrassed by my career.”

But winning the British changes the way his career is looked at by fans, media, his peers and by himself. He was tabbed “Brian the Butcher” by the British tabloids, in part for his fondness for hunting and the way he skewered the field. He chuckled at the nickname so much so that his wife threw him a Brian the Butcher theme.

“We had T-shirts, golf balls, and one of the rotating cameras where you can hold a Brian the Butcher picture up and take pictures. It was fun,” he said.

But hunting has taken a back seat to prepping for the Ryder Cup. He’s waited a long time for this chance. He accepts the fact that he likely will be heckled again as he was at the British Open, where the local faithful were rooting a little too hard and openly for England’s Tommy Fleetwood to come out on top. Harman proved he can handle the big moments and said the naysayers only fueled his fire to win. But even he knows that being in the crucible of Ryder Cup competition is a new frontier for him.

“It’s kind of like if you’re trying to give someone advice if they’re about to have their first child,” he said. “There’s nothing you can tell them to get them ready for it. No, your life is going to change, it’s going to be really hard, but you’ll get through it. There’s lots of people that have done it, and it’s up to you how you handle it.”

Brooks Koepka is another one who admires the way Harman plays with a chip on his shoulder.

“I just love that. Never gives up. Always battling to the end and ready to prove people wrong,” Koepka said.

He has already proven that his career is nothing to be embarrassed about.

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What is the Ryder Cup? Things to know about battle between U.S. and Europe

Here are some other essentials facts all golfers should know about the Ryder Cup.

The Ryder Cup will be staged for the 44th time this week at Marco Simone Golf & Country Club in Rome, Italy.

The U.S. won the last outing, two years ago at Whistling Straits in Wisconsin. The Americans won 19-9, one of the bigger routs in the history of the series.

The U.S. squad has 12 members, as does the European contingent. Zach Johnson, who played in five Ryder Cups, is a first-time captain this year. Luke Donald is heading up the European squad. He assumed the role after the original captain, Henrik Stenson, joined the LIV Golf League forcing him to relinquish his Ryder Cup duties.

Here are some other essentials facts all golfers should know about the Ryder Cup.

Rory McIlroy dishes on Sergio Garcia, Ian Poulter being absent from Ryder Cup team room and replacing leadership

“It’s certainly a little strange not having them around.”

ROME — How does Rory McIlroy feel about a Ryder Cup without Ian Poulter, Sergio Garcia and Lee Westwood, among others?

“It’s certainly a little strange not having them around,” he said on Wednesday during his pre-Ryder Cup press conference.

Garcia, Poulter and Westwood have been stalwarts of the European side, with Poulter and Garcia the heart and soul of the team. While they likely wouldn’t have qualified for the team or even garnered a captain’s pick given the current state of their games, they likely would have been involved in the backroom as a vice captain or in some capacity had they not defected to LIV Golf and renounced their DP World Tour membership, which made them ineligible for the Ryder Cup team. McIlroy mused the consequences of their decision to jump ship for the riches of LIV would be most apparent this week.

“I think this week of all weeks, it’s going to hit home with them that, you know, they are not here, and I think they are going to miss being here more than we’re missing them,” he said. “It’s just more I think this week is a realization that the decision that they made has led to not being a part of this week, and that’s tough. The landscape in golf is ever-changing and more dynamic, and we’ll see what happens and whether they will be part of it in the future.”

He added: “This is a bit of a transitional period for the European Team and there’s people that have been part of the European Team for a long time that aren’t here this week. But I think the guys that we brought in are going to be awesome. Nicolai (Hojgaard), Ludvig (Aberg), Bob (McIntyre), that’s the future of our team and the future of the Ryder Cup.”

2023 Ryder Cup
Rory McIlroy of Team Europe tees off on the 11th hole during a practice round prior to the 2023 Ryder Cup at Marco Simone Golf Club in Rome, Italy. (Photo: Andrew Redington/Getty Images)

But McIlroy’s Euro teammate, Jon Rahm of Spain, said he reached out to some of the old guard, including Poulter and Garcia, who teamed with Rahm to great effect as one of the few bright spots for the Euros at Whistling Straits in 2021.

“I did have a little bit of a chat with him, and with Poulter, as well,” Rahm said. “Not that it’s going to be easy to take on the role that those two had both on and off the golf course, but just to hear them talk about what they thought and what they felt is obviously invaluable information.”

While the Euro side has lost a great deal of veteran leadership – Graeme McDowell and Henrik Stenson deserve mention too – McIlroy contends the void will be filled and the European scouting trip to Marco Simone before the BMW Championship earlier this month laid the foundation for team unity.

“I couldn’t believe that we’ve never done it before,” McIlroy said. “We played a practice round and we got familiar with the golf course but then the sort of time we spent off the course I thought was great. Just sort of sharing stories around the fire pit and sort of describing our journeys in golf and what the Ryder Cup means to us. Sort of just getting to know one another a little better, even people that I thought that I knew for a long time, sort of getting to know them a little better, too, was wonderful.”

McIlroy also shared what he told the younger players about his role in the team room and mentoring the newcomers.

“I don’t want anyone looking up to me,” he said. “I just want everyone looking at the side. I want them looking over to me. I don’t want them looking up to me in any way. I want them to see me like I’m on their level. And there’s no hierarchy on our team. It’s we are all one part of a 12-man team and we all go forward together. I guess that’s the one message I’ve tried to relay to some of the younger guys on the team.”

McIlroy credited Euro captain Luke Donald with setting a proper mood for the team.

“I think Luke and his vice captains have really sort of tapped into that emotional connection around Team Europe this week, and we have all bought into it,” he said. “It’s been an amazing experience so far, and it’s only Wednesday. There’s a lot of great things to come. But couldn’t be more excited to be a part of the team, and to have those other 11 guys be my teammates.”

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Brooks Koepka had this to say about LIV golfers upset at Ryder Cup snub

“I had the same opportunity as every other LIV player, and I’m here.”

Brooks Koepka is the lone LIV golfer of 24 playing in this week’s Ryder Cup at Marco Simone in Rome, Italy. The five-time major winner captured the 2023 PGA Championship, his third Wanamaker trophy, to essentially clinch his spot in the field.

And Koepka, never one to mince words, said this when asked whether LIV golfers were snubbed in the selection process for the biennial competition between the United States and Europe.

“Play better,” he said. “That’s always the answer.”

Bryson DeChambeau, who last week won the LIV Golf event at Rich Harvest Farms in Chicago, has said numerous times he felt snubbed by U.S. captain Zach Johnson, even saying he never received a call in the weeks leading up to the captain’s selections. Not even after he shot 58 to win the LIV Golf Greenbrier event in August.

“If you look at it, it would have been nice to at least just have a call,” DeChambeau said. “There’s numerous people that I think Zach should have called out here, and we didn’t get that.

“I understand, I get it, but we’re nothing different. We’re still competing. We’re still working super hard to be the best we possibly can be.”

2023 Ryder Cup
Team USA’s Brooks Koepka tees off on eight during a practice day for the Ryder Cup at Marco Simone Golf and Country Club. (Photo: Adam Cairns-USA TODAY Sports)

In addition to DeChambeau, who represented the Americans at Whistling Straits in 2021, Dustin Johnson also commented recently he probably would’ve made the team if he was playing on the PGA Tour.

Meanwhile, Koepka, who also finished T-2 at the 2023 Masters, said the Ryder Cup came into focus after that week in Augusta, Georgia. He admitted he had a lot of other things going on in his mind when he made the jump to LIV last summer, and the Ryder Cup wasn’t one of them.

But a T-2 and a win in the first two majors of the year vaulted him up the board, and he earned one of six captain’s picks to head to Rome. Yet Koepka doesn’t think anyone was snubbed.

“I don’t make the decisions,” Koepka said. “It doesn’t — everybody had an opportunity to get there. I mean, I had the same opportunity as every other LIV player, and I’m here.”

This is Koepka’s fourth consecutive Ryder Cup, where he has a 6-5-1 record and is 2-0-1 in singles.

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