Shane Ryan’s book “The Cup They Couldn’t Lose” tackles the great Ryder Cup mystery: why Europe kept winning and how America got its groove back at Whistling Straits?

Author Shane Ryan provides the definitive explanation for the European renaissance in the Ryder Cup and how America got its groove back.

No offense to the many other accounts of the Ryder Cup through the years, but “The Cup They Couldn’t Lose: America, the Ryder Cup and the Long Road to Whistling Straits (Hachette, $29),” provides the definitive explanation for the European renaissance in the Ryder Cup and how America got its groove back.

Heading to Whistling Straits last September, the great mystery of the Ryder Cup had been that America routinely lost despite having the superior team. “You know, if I could put my finger on it, we would have changed this bleep a long time ago,” said losing 2018 U.S. Ryder Cup Captain Jim Furyk.

That quote from the prologue perfectly encompasses what Ryan sets out to do in the 289 pages that follow. He puts more than a finger on it; he diagnoses what he terms “the 40-year disease” in astounding detail, artfully piecing together the history of this biennial match-play event pitting teams of 12 players each from the United States versus initially, Great Britain and Ireland, and since 1979, players from throughout Europe.

The section on England’s Tony Jacklin, who established a template that has been passed down from one European captain to the next, alone is worth the price of the book, and included this description of Lanny Wadkins that should be added to his Hall of Fame plaque: “Wadkins was the cockiest son of a bitch you ever met in 10 lifetimes. He was an arrogant bastard, But in the nicest way.” Jacklin served as captain for four Cups spanning from 1983-1989, and you could argue the Euros are still running much of Jacklin’s playbook.

“If 1983 had been the warning shot, and 1985 had proved that the Europeans were a winning team, at least at home, 1987 was the victory that transformed the Ryder Cup forever,” Ryan writes in emphasizing Jacklin’s importance.

Ryan tabs the period from 1983-1999 the golden age of the Ryder Cup when all but one match was decided by two points or less. It’s during this period that Team USA had its head in the sand as to why it continued to struggle despite often being the favorite.

“They adhered to the mindset that a Ryder Cup among equal talents is essentially random, that sometimes they would play better, and sometimes the Europeans would, but all thoughts of strategy or team building were blown out of proportion. Call it arrogance, complacency, or lack of imagination, but they stuck to this belief even as the results showed a pattern that was anything but random,” Ryan writes. “The Americans has been too successful for too long on the strength of talent alone to study the lesson. In that sense, they were victims of their own success, and it would be years before they could humble themselves enough to learn.”

Jack Nicklaus congratulates Tony Jacklin for a tied match at the 1969 Ryder Cup. (AP files)

The 2008 match, where Nick Faldo captained the Euros and Paul Azinger was at the helm of the U.S., “was perhaps the purest test of the old question: Did the captaincy matter?”

Azinger, America’s one outside-the-box thinker, was a winner on home soil, conceiving the pod system and getting the most out a U.S. lineup that featured the likes of Chad Campbell, Boo Weekely and Ben Curtis. Azinger wanted the captaincy again in 2010 and should’ve been given it. Instead, the PGA turned to Corey Pavin and a stretch where each captain approached the Ryder Cup in their own way, with little to no continuity.

“There were plenty of lessons to be learned,” Ryan writes. “They learned none.”

Paul Azinger was able to sell his ’08 American team as underdogs, and the attitude paid off.

The Miracle at Medinah in 2012, when the Euros rallied from a 10-6 deficit was exactly that – a miracle. “Whatever quibble you have with Davis Love III’s strategy, his loss at Medinah was a fluke, built on a pyramid of absurd longshots coming through one after another, and if any of them failed, Europe would have lost.”

There’s a whole chapter, an interlude titled “Why does Europe win?” where Ryan diagnoses the seven most-common theories for the 40-year disease, including old standbys that the Americans just need to play better and Europeans just like each other more. (Ryan quotes an oldie but goodie from a Euro vet explaining their team chemistry: “We get together for a week, we get along, and when it’s over, we all go back to hating Monty.”)

Ryan’s narrative moves briskly back and forth between the drama in Wisconsin while deconstructing the fascinating history and evolution of this 93-year-old competition. He delves deep into the brilliant mind of 2014 Euro captain Paul McGinley, while also explaining the mistakes made by past U.S. captains that led to the infamous U.S. Task Force in 2014.

From left, Europe’s players Jamie Donaldson, Henrik Stenson, Ian Poulter, Lee Westwood and Justin Rose pour champagne over captain Paul McGinley as they celebrate winning the 2014 Ryder Cup.

It all came to a head in the post-match press conference after a beatdown at Gleneagles in Scotland when Phil Mickelson threw U.S. Captain Tom Watson under the bus. Ryan writes of the 2014 debacle, noting it “embodied the stereotypes of the past four decades – brutal efficiency through hyper-organization on the European side, and rank dysfunction on the American side – that the contrast demanded to be recognized. When the mess was over, it was no longer possible to say with any credibility that the Ryder Cup was simply a test of which individuals played better. The effect of management was so obvious that even the most dyed-in-the-wool stubborn American couldn’t pretend everything was fine…It’s the Ryder Cup that broke the Americans.”

And also, he points out, “the one that set them free.”

The Task Force was a necessary evil and while the changes implemented in its aftermath “may not sound like earth-shattering ideas…what may look like foundational elements for any team sport, or even a business, are plainly not obvious in an individualized sport like golf,” Ryan writes.

The showdown at Whistling Straits is at the center of this book and Ryan takes us inside all of the back-room decision-making. He’s at his best when he’s picking apart the shortcomings of Euro Captain Padraig Harrington, taking us into the childhood home of USA Captain Steve Stricker and a meeting with his parents and detailing the importance analytics played in determining the various captain’s picks and who paired well together in foursomes and four-ball.

Ryan provides a road map that details how after a slew of embarrassing defeats, Team U.S.A. won in record fashion in 2021, with its six rookies combining for a 14-4-3 record.

“I think the most important thing for the U.S. team is a lot of young guys that are great players have bought into the Ryder Cup,” Rory McIlroy said. “I think that was probably missing in previous generations.”

Now the question remains: did the U.S. victory on home soil represent a generational shift and a sea change in America’s fortunes?

“Even in an era when home course advantage is massive,” Ryan concludes, “it’s clear that America is operating from a position of strength, and Europe from a position of hope.”

It will have been 30 years since America won on the road when these two proud competitors next meet. Sounds like the subject for a sequel in Italy in 2023.

After health scare that saw him lose 25 pounds, Steve Stricker is set to return to Champions Tour in Houston

Stricker said he lost considerable weight while suffering from inflammation around his heart.

The last 12 months have been something of a whirlwind for Steve Stricker, with the 12-time PGA Tour winner enjoying the thrill of captaining the American Ryder Cup to victory immediately followed by a health scare that left the Wisconsin native emaciated.

But Stricker, who said he lost considerable weight while suffering from a condition that caused inflammation around his heart, is slated to return to action next week at the Insperity Invitational, the Houston stop on the PGA Tour Champions.

Stricker spent 11 days at UW Hospital last fall with an ailment that simply started as a cough.

“I’m down 25 pounds. I’m freshman-in-high school weight. I lost all my muscle. I look like an 85-year-old man, dude. My skin is hanging,” he said back in January, soon after the incident. “I kind of have a feeling that (the Ryder Cup) could have had a part in it. It’s a letdown, right, after that happens? And then your immune system is probably down. It probably played a role in it somehow.”

“My heart is in rhythm now. It was jumping in and out of rhythm from Thanksgiving all the way to Christmas Eve.”

Stricker’s cardiologist originally said it could be six months before he could return to competition, but the University of Illinois product appears to be shaving about a month off that timeline.

And although a former golf coach suggested he simply sit on the sideline and enjoy this phase of his life, the 55-year-old Stricker — who has seven Champions tour victories, including three majors — said that simply didn’t sit right.

“That’s not my style, you know?” Stricker said. “I like to work at things.”

Stricker captained his U.S. to a 19-9 victory over Europe at Whistling Straits, in his home state of Wisconsin. Soon after, he took trophies from the Ryder Cup and the Presidents Cup, the other biennial match-play event between the U.S. and an international team, to a Champions event in Jacksonville.

Stricker became only the third man to captain winning U.S. teams in both competitions, joining Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer.

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Schupak: Padraig Harrington deserved better, but you can’t keep a good man down

Harrington: “You win, you’re a hero. You lose, you’re a zero.”

Padraig Harrington won’t be penning a best-selling tell-all book about his Ryder Cup captaincy. That’s the thing with the Ryder Cup – if you win, you’re a legend, but if you lose you’re a goat. Or as Harrington phrased it, “You win, you’re a hero. You lose, you’re a zero. That’s the way it is. You know that going into it, so you have to take responsibility.”

Harrington deserved better than going down as the losing Captain in the most lopsided defeat for the Blue and Gold in the modern era, a 19-9 defeat at Whistling Straits that concluded on Sept. 26. He deserved better than Rory McIlroy not earning a point until Sunday’s singles and needing to sit his first session at a Ryder Cup due to poor form. To hear his players tell it, Harrington did everything to put his 12-man team in the best position to perform; they just didn’t deliver.

“I hope I don’t read the papers and hear a lot of stuff that will upset me,” Ian Poulter said in the aftermath of Europe’s defeat as he waxed rhapsodically about all the good things Harrington had done to create the proper team vibe.

It really is one of sport’s most thankless jobs. Jim Furyk was standing with U.S. Captain Steve Stricker, fellow assistant captain Davis Love and Harrington when word came over their headsets that the U.S. had clinched victory. Harrington turned to Furyk and Love, who both suffered defeats as the captain of the U.S. side (though Love got a second bite at the apple and experienced victory in 2016), and said, “You know how I feel, don’t you?”

Indeed, they do. Furyk didn’t mince words when discussing how being the losing captain in 2018 in France has scarred him.

“It will always eat at me,” he said. “My favorite question is, Would you have done anything different? I laugh. How stupid would I have to be to go, no, I’d do it the same way. Of course, I’d do things differently.”

Enough time has passed for Furyk to reflect on how the loss affected him.

“For the first I’ll say year, year and a half after France, there wasn’t a week or a day that in my mind I wasn’t thinking this is what I would have done, this is what I would have change, how could I have worked it?” he said.

Furyk packed away all that heavy baggage from Paris into the dark recesses of his memory bank, but they all came flooding back at Whistling Straits.

Harrington is just beginning to deal with the disappointment. For now, he’s showing a brave face. He “made sure to get into the swing of it” and enjoyed the after-party at the Ryder Cup on Sunday night.

“There was a family party where we had dueling pianos, which was a very mature party and very nice, people singing and dancing that finished at midnight,” he said. “Then I came back to the player party, which was definitely young people with more mayhem. You could distinctly see the difference between the two age groups.”

Harrington is not one for second-guessing. Unlike Furyk, he said he wouldn’t do anything differently and he’s quick to downplay the trendy belief that the tide has turned in this biennial battle in favor of Team USA.

“The biggest problem we have in Europe is we’ve really innovated over the last 20 years. The U.S. have just copied us. They do everything we do. Until somebody finds the next unknown, at the moment we don’t know what that is, but it’s hard to get an edge,” he said. “The U.S. team was very strong on home ground, but they had everything. They had everything that Europe has done over the years, they’ve learned from it, and Europe should be proud of the fact that, as I said, we pushed the U.S. team to really work hard and explore every avenue to make themself the best team. No longer can they just throw the balls up in the air and go out and play.”

“Can’t second guess our performance,” he added. “Just U.S. did a great job all the way through and they got their stats right, they got everything like that in terms of their picking, you know. Everything they did was spot on what they learned from us.”

But if the U.S. has copied Europe so well and has such a young nucleus of world-beaters to implement it, doesn’t that mean Europe needs to reinvent itself?

“No,” Harrington said. “It needs to accept that there are ebbs and flows. In the three years since the last Cup, the U.S. has come here (holding his right-hand flat and at eye level) and we were on a peak at that stage and we’ve come down. In two years’ time, all it takes is a little bit from us (raising his hand) and a little bit from the U.S. (lowering his hand) and we’re back on level terms. No panicking in Europe; it shouldn’t change a thing. Just keep doing what we’ve been doing for the last 20 years.”

Harrington is going to keep doing what he’s done and chase that little white ball right on to the PGA Tour Champions.

“I’m interested to see how my game stacks up,” he said.

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Europe’s Viktor Hovland focuses on positives from 19-9 drubbing to the U.S. in Ryder Cup

“Obviously it sucked, but I try to learn from kind of everything that happens and try to turn it into something positive.”

LAS VEGAS – Viktor Hovland is not sulking.

He isn’t breaking out in anger thinking about what might have been.

He’s not kicking himself for not doing more.

Yes, being on the losing side in his first Ryder Cup still stings, but the 24-year-old who is wise and mature beyond his years has chosen to soak up the positives instead of immersing himself in the negatives of Europe’s humbling 19-9 defeat to the U.S. two weeks ago in Wisconsin.

“The loss went over pretty quickly because it obviously wasn’t that close,” Hovland said Thursday after finishing his first round in the Shriners Children’s Open at TPC Summerlin. “If it came down to one putt that I missed on the last hole or something, that would have been tough to get over, but we got beat just by the better team and that’s how it goes sometimes.

“Obviously it sucked, but I try to learn from kind of everything that happens and try to turn it into something positive.”

Hovland played far better than his 0-3-2 record would indicate as he seemed to run into red, white and blue buzzsaws whenever he got to the first tee. His record won’t stand out in his memory bank; the team room and his play on the Straits Course at Whistling Straits will.

“Just some great memories, just being around my teammates,” he said. “Being on that team I’m surrounded by legends of European golf the last 20, 25 years. So that was just incredible.

43rd Ryder Cup
(Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images)

“As far as my golf game, I was able to hit some really nice shots under the biggest pressure I’ve ever had and I take a lot of comfort knowing that I can perform at that level and it should be a walk in the park out here, relatively speaking. Obviously golf is still hard, but just for me to just trust what I’m doing instead of playing with fear, just step up and commit to the shot, if it doesn’t work out, it doesn’t work out, but I’m not worrying about the result.”

The rising star from Norway, who won the 2018 U.S. Amateur, won low amateur honors the following year in the Masters and U.S. Open, and has two PGA Tour titles on his resume, made his season debut at TPC Summerlin.

Shriners: Yardage book | Odds | Tee times

It was one of those rounds that will challenge him to remember the positives instead of the negatives. He began his round on the 10th tee under an overcast sky with three consecutive birdies and added four more at the 16th, 18th, sixth and seventh. But a bad hop on the par-3 14th led to a bogey and a horrible lie in a greenside bunker on the par-3 eighth led to a double bogey.

Then he finished his round by three-putting from 45 feet on the par-5 ninth to finish with a 4-under-par 67, six shots behind pace-setter Sung Kang, whose 61 was one shot short of equaling the course record.

“Obviously a great start,” Hovland said. “Hit the ball awesome and just kind of didn’t make many mistakes. On the 14th hole, I hit a great shot, just one-bounced over the green and that was kind of a momentum killer. But I thought I bounced back pretty well and played really well the rest of the round, but then didn’t really make anything and toward the end I started making some putts and then again just a momentum killer on number 8 with the double bogey there and 3-putt on the last. So I felt like I played way better.”

Check the yardage book: TPC Summerlin for the Shriners Children’s Open 

Hovland has risen quickly and is ranked No. 14 in the official world rankings. He’s given every indication his ascent up the world ranks will continue.

“I don’t like to set goals. You can play great and not win tournaments, so I think, for me, it’s just I need to keep doing what I am doing, because I’m playing really, really well,” he said. “I need to just get a little sharper on and around the greens, which I feel like I’m already showing promises there.

“Sometimes it goes your way and sometimes it doesn’t. But I feel like if I just keep working on what I’m doing over the course of a year, if we could just get a little bit better there that’s going to be huge.”

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Fred Couples says he’d like to serve as Ryder Cup captain, but he may be too late

“Would I like to be Ryder Cup captain? Of course.”

Fred Couples has been the winning captain for three U.S. Presidents Cup teams and has been a Ryder Cup vice-captain twice, including two weeks ago at Whistling Straits where the U.S. routed Europe 19-9.

So when will Couples get his chance to captain the Ryder Cup?

Perhaps never, he said on Wednesday.

“Now I’m a little old for the system,” the two-time Players champion said after warming up for the Wednesday pro-am in the PGA Tour Champions Furyk & Friends. “I mean, would I like to be Ryder Cup captain? Of course, but that’s probably not going to happen.”

The Ryder Cup is run by the PGA of America and the Presidents Cup by the PGA Tour.

Speculation is that the 61-year-old Couples might have a chance in 2023 in Rome because of his Italian ancestry. His paternal grandparents came to the U.S. from Italy and changed their name from Coppola to Couples.

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Couples said his main strength as a Presidents Cup captain and assistant Ryder Cup captain is sensing a player’s mood and state of his game just by having a conversation.

“I can just see in their eye something’s going on,” he said. “And it’s easy. Golf is kind of secondary for me. I was a good player and I knew my game, but I can feel out other people’s games pretty easily, I just have a knack for saying ‘what’s going on?’ and I enjoy that.”

Couples had one reason for the U.S. team’s victory this year.

“I’ve never seen people not nervous in my life,” he said of the demeanor shown by a young American team. “There was something going, I don’t quite get it. They’re all better players than probably I’ve ever been, but there was just — there wasn’t much nerves.”

Couples was in charge of a “pod” with Dustin Johnson, Xander Schauffele, Collin Morikawa and Patrick Cantlay. That foursome combined to go 14-1-2.

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U.S. Ryder Cup team member Tony Finau nearly missed playing at Whistling Straits due to illness

Might have been the first time a person was relieved to hear they had Pneumonia.

It turns out the U.S. Ryder Cup captain nearly had to make a call to the bullpen for a reserve play ahead of Team USA’s resounding 19-9 victory over Europe.

Tony Finau, one of Stricker’s six captain’s picks, came down with pneumonia the week before the biennial competition and feared he might have COVID-19. Finau participated in a charity fundraiser hosted by Tiger Woods at Liberty National in New Jersey on the Monday prior to Ryder Cup week and developed a cough.

“I started to kind of feel a little crummy,” said Finau on his podcast, “Let’s Get It.” He previously tested positive for COVID a year ago. “When we start to come down with something these days, what’s the first thing you think about? COVID. It’s like 100 percent. I had it exactly a year ago. So, a lot of these thoughts started to go through my head, like, oh my gosh, I was like, please, not COVID, not now.”

Finau knew that to compete in the Ryder Cup he had to have a negative test three days prior and be tested again on site. This was just five days before he had to get on a plane to go to the Ryder Cup. Finau flew home from Newark to Salt Lake City, a five-hour flight that he described as harrowing.

“I just balled up and threw my hoodie on and I had the chills the whole ride,” said Finau, who complained of a headache and achiness. “I shivered for five straight hours. I had a fever. It was like the longest flight ever.

“I walked off the plane looking like I needed help, like a cane, or someone needed to push me in a wheelchair. It seemed like every bone in my body was aching.”

Finau took a rapid COVID test on Tuesday and the result was negative, but on Wednesday he still felt lousy enough that he couldn’t practice and went to the emergency room to get some antibiotics. Finau was given another COVID test there and received another negative result.

“I was like, Hallelujah,” he said. “I was just waiting to get a positive test. This is going to happen. There’s no way it’s not.”

Ryder Cup 2021
Tony Finau reacts to the fans on the first tee during day one foursome matches for the 43rd Ryder Cup golf competition at Whistling Straits. (Photo: Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports)

A chest X-ray revealed that he had an infection in his left chest and pneumonia.

“This is the crazy part,” Finau said. “When they told me I had pneumonia I was happy.

“The only way I’m not playing in the Ryder Cup is if I had COVID. If I can barely walk, I’m playing,” said Finau, who played in the 2018 Masters after injuring his ankle in the Par-3 Contest. “That’s how I roll.”

Finau rested for a couple of days and only touched his clubs once in the lead up to the 43rd Ryder Cup. On Saturday, he forced himself to go to the golf course and sent a few swing videos to his coach, Boyd Summerhays.

“My whole preparation was just getting my mind wrapped around can I even play?” Finau said.

When he arrived at the Ryder Cup on Monday, he had to take a PCR test and tested negative yet again. He breathed a huge sigh of relief.

“In the back of my mind I’m thinking I have COVID. At some point I’m going to test positive and all my dreams of playing a home Ryder Cup are going to be shattered,” he said.

Finau hit a few balls on Monday evening and lack of preparation didn’t seem to hinder his game. He putted out of his mind in his first match on Friday, teaming with Harris English to win a point over Rory McIlroy and Ian Poulter. Overall, Finau had a record of 1-2.

“I knew I could get it together in a few days,” Finau said. “When the juices start to kick in, I was going to be able to step up and play and when my name gets called I’d be ready to go.”

Collin Morikawa told Dustin Johnson during Ryder Cup: ‘Let’s step on their necks’

Dustin Johnson and Collin Morikawa seemed to bring out the best in each other.

In forming one of the best pairings of the Ryder Cup, Dustin Johnson and Collin Morikawa seemed to bring out the best in each other. DJ’s length and even-keeled approach was the perfect complement to an eager Morikawa and his precision iron play.

The U.S. team ran roughshod over the European squad at the 43rd Ryder Cup, winning by a margin of 19-9, earning the most points since the event went to its current format.

Johnson led the way for the Americans, as he entered with a career 7-9 Ryder Cup mark but won all five of his matches at Whistling Straits, becoming the first American since Larry Nelson in 1979 to go 5-0-0.

Morikawa, Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele all won three times during the week. Fellow rookie Scottie Scheffler also went unbeaten, winning twice while earning a tie.

In an interview with Golf Digest’s Daniel Rapaport, Morikawa said he and DJ didn’t exchange a ton of dialogue.

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“We didn’t say too much. When we were up, it was just me saying, ‘Let’s step on their necks. Let’s finish off this match.’ Our conversations ended pretty quickly. It wasn’t a ton, probably less than everyone else,” Morikawa said. “One DJ moment came after Paul Casey holed out on Saturday morning on 14. I think our match was now 1 up. And I’m sure a lot of guys would start freaking out and worrying, but he looked at me, shrugged his shoulders and said Good shot. We went to the next hole. Absolutely no conversation about the hole-out.

“That’s who DJ is. He leads with a quiet confidence. His presence was felt all week. When we really did need him to speak up, before the captain’s picks, he spoke his mind and it was awesome to hear that.”

After the team got off to an impressive start on Friday at Whistling Straits, the captains realized they’d formed some special units. In fact, vice captain Jim Furyk told Golfweek the group’s biggest problem was figuring out who to take out of the lineup.

“It was hard to figure out how we were going to sit four guys,” Furyk said. “It was just a super-talented team and we had a bunch of guys playing well. Not one vice captain ever walked in that room and said, you know what, I think we need to rest this guy because he’s struggling.

“Those are champagne problems, right? When you have those problems, it makes for a great team.”

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Justin Thomas auctioning off some awesome, exclusive Ryder Cup gear for charity

Have some money to spend and want to make a difference?

Justin Thomas felt the love from the fans in Wisconsin last week during Team USA’s historic Ryder Cup rout of the Europeans.

As a result, the 28-year-old is sharing a piece of his experience from the whipping at Whistling Straits. Thomas is auctioning off some of his gear from the event that will benefit his Justin Thomas Foundation, which aims to support youth golf, children in need and military families.

The gear up for auction? Signed “America” FootJoy shoes, a signed custom headcover, a signed Ryder Cup shoe bag, a Ryder Cup pin flag signed by Team USA and a personalized thank you video message for each winner.

Thomas was also in the headlines earlier this week when news broke that Phil Mickelson’s former caddie and current Golf Channel/NBC Sports analyst Jim “Bones” Mackay would be Thomas’ new caddie going forward.

Have some money to spend and want to make a difference? Get in on the auction action here.

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Sergio Garcia on Ryder Cup loss to United States: ‘We just got out played, it’s as simple as that’

Sergio Garcia had a strong showing at Whistling Straits, but his teammates did not.

JACKSON, Miss. — Sergio Garcia didn’t get much sleep Sunday night.

Despite a 3-1-0 showing at Whistling Straits to improve his Ryder Cup record to 25-13-7, the European’s were routed by the Americans, 19-9, a result that hasn’t quite hit home yet for the 10-time member of Team Europe.

The 41-year-old is the lone Ryder Cup player to make the trek from Wisconsin to Country Club of Jackson this week for the Sanderson Farms Championship, where he’ll look to defend his title last season for the first time in his PGA Tour career.

“I mean I feel good. I’m not going to lie, obviously didn’t get much sleep on Sunday night. But Monday and Tuesday it’s been good, I was able to rest a little bit in Austin with the family, got here last night and I feel pretty good at the moment,” said Garcia on Wednesday after a nine-hole practice round. “I mean you obviously think about it a little bit, it’s very fresh, but at the same time I’m obviously 41 now and I played, I’ve been fortunate to play many Ryder Cups and win many and also loss some so, we just got out played, it’s as simple as that, they played better than us and we gave it everything we had. So we can’t really ask ourselves for more.”

SANDERSONTee times, TV | Fantasy | Yardage book

The only players to earn more than two points, Garcia and Jon Rahm were the bright spots for Padraig Harrington’s squad. The Spanish tandem took down Justin Thomas and Jordan Spieth in Friday Foursomes, Brooks Koepka and Daniel Berger in Saturday Foursomes and Koepka and Jordan Spieth in Saturday Four-Ball. Their lone losses of the week came in singles, with Rahm falling to U.S. rookie Scottie Scheffler and Garcia to Bryson DeChambeau.

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“You don’t get to world No. 1 and do all the things he’s done just by luck or by chance. So it was nice to be a part of it, it was nice to be his partner and kind of combine nicely between the two of us,” said Garcia of his successful pairing with Rahm. “So I had a great time with him, he had a great time with me, we made a good team and hopefully we’ll be able to do it again sometime soon.”

Sometime soon would either be at the PGA Tour’s team event in April, the Zurich Classic of New Orleans at TPC Louisiana, or at the 2023 Ryder Cup at Marco Simone Golf & Country Club near Rome, Italy, when Garcia will be 43.

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Ryder Cup: European newspapers react to the United States 19-9 victory

Check out what some European writers had to say about the weekend at Whistling Straits.

Gloating is not endearing, but after suffering through decades of watching my beloved Chicago Cubs lose, after they finally won a World Series in 2016, I’ll admit that I spent a while reading articles written by Cleveland writers and pundits. I did the same thing after Syracuse won the 2003 National Championship in basketball.

Perusing what columnists and reporters say about your team after it wins a title is a guilty pleasure, but the chance only comes around once a century for Cub fans, and Syracuse has only won one title in my 50-year lifetime, so I don’t get the chance to gloat very often.

It had not been 108 years since the United States won a Ryder Cup. Five years ago, the team sprayed champagne all over Hazeltine National after defeating Europe 17-11, but Europe has dominated this event for the last few decades.

So Sunday evening, I couldn’t help myself. I started looking to see what the European press was saying about the Americans’ win, European team captain Padraig Harrington’s decisions and the scene at Whistling Straits.

Here are some of the columns and articles American golf fans might enjoy. Just remember, in two years the Ryder Cup goes to Rome, Italy, and the United States has not won a Ryder Cup in Europe since 1993, four years before Collin Morikawa was born.