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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5 burning questions heading into the 44th Ryder Cup in Rome

So many questions for both teams to answer in Rome.

The 44th Ryder Cup gets underway Friday morning at Marco Simone Golf and Country Club in Rome, and there are plenty of questions surrounding both teams.

Rookies litter each roster, and some key stars on each squad are playing less than ideal coming into the week.

But the Ryder Cup is different.

Before the action, we take a look at five burning questions, starting with a player whose selection to represent the United States has been a hotly debated topic across the sport.

A closer look at some of the stat leaders for the 2022-23 PGA Tour season

If you’ve been to the Tour’s stats page, you know it’s a rabbit hole where golf nerds can spend hours.

The Tour Championship is in the rearview mirror and with that, the PGA Tour has closed the book on its statistics for the 2022-23 season. If you’ve been to the Tour’s stats page, you know it’s a rabbit hole where golf nerds can spend hours exploring the numbers.

There are plenty of eye-popping numbers, including the massive increase in earnings, but many will use these stats to determine the PGA Tour’s Player of the Year.

For example, Jon Rahm had the most wins (4), with Viktor Hovland winning the final two stops of the year to finish second with three victories. There were seven others, including Scottie Scheffler, another POY candidate, with two wins.

But it was Scheffler who dominated many of the Tour’s stats this season. He finished first in the Official World Golf Ranking, FedEx Cup regular-season standings, Ryder Cup standings as well as all of these categories:

  • Shots gained: Off the tee
  • Shots gained: Approach the green
  • Shots gained: Tee-to-green
  • Shots gained: Total
  • Greens in regulation percentage
  • Scoring average
  • Bogey avoidance

Let’s take a look at some of the more interesting statistical leaders on the PGA Tour for the 2022-23 season. Many of these will seem obvious, but there’s probably a few here that are surprising.

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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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

Brian Harman shows off Claret Jug to Georgia football coach Kirby Smart, then hits Braves game

Harman had a chance to sit in a football team meeting, but Smart didn’t make a big deal about it.

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British Open champion Brian Harman was back at his old stomping grounds in Athens Monday ahead of playing in the Tour Championship starting Thursday in Atlanta.

“I got to take a picture with the jug,” Georgia football coach Kirby Smart said on 960 The Ref. “I got to see that. Pretty cool. I didn’t drink anything out of it.”

That would be the Claret Jug that Harman won at the Royal Liverpool in Hoylake, England, joining two-time Masters champion Bubba Watson as former Georgia golfers to win a major championship.

Harman had a chance to sit in a football team meeting, but Smart didn’t make a big deal about it.

“I wanted to introduce him to the team, but I was afraid nobody would know who he was,” Smart said.

After Harman won the trophy at Hoylake, the 36-year-old Savannah native said he was inspired by words Georgia football coach Kirby Smart said prior to last season.

“I was a wreck,” Harman said, according to the Golf Channel. “I mean, I’ve been a wreck the whole week. But … I kept thinking about something Kirby Smart said, ‘I’m not gonna be hunted; I’m gonna hunt.'”

Harman, 36, never let up after holding the lead after the second and third rounds. He entered Sunday with a five-stroke cushion at Royal Liverpool in Hoylake, England and lifted the Claret Jug after winning by six.

“Dawgs on top! Congrats @harmanbrian,” Smart tweeted after the victory “Let’s celebrate this fall!”

Harman told reporters after his win that he’s impressed with how Smart has handled success.

“I’ve always kind of — I just always pay attention when really successful people talk,” he said. “There’s always clues there as to how they feel. I’ve always admired the fact that even with all the success that he’s had, it’s all about the next play, the next game, the next week of practice. He knows that the results come because of what you do in the trenches.”

After showing off the trophy to Smart and others on the Georgia campus on Monday, Harman added another big moment on Tuesday night when he threw out the first pitch at the Atlanta Braves game against the New York Mets.

Harman tees off at 1:27 p.m. on Thursday with Patrick Cantlay at the East Lake Golf Club.

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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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Justin Rose threw out first pitch at Cubs game before teeing it up at BMW Championship

“I’ve never thrown a baseball until yesterday,” he admitted Monday.

Two days before tackling the North Course at Olympia Fields, Justin Rose tried his hand at a new sport.

In town with 49 other PGA Tour players for the BMW Championship, Rose took a detour on Tuesday, heading about 35 miles north to Wrigley Field to take in the Chicago Cubs home game against the cross-town rival White Sox.

Sporting a No. 99 jersey, Rose was seen cruising through the stadium, taking photos with fans before reaching the field. He even went down below to meet some of the Cubs players before taking a practice throw on a practice round.

The Englishman admitted the sport was something entirely new.

“I’ve never thrown a baseball until yesterday,” he admitted.

He handled whatever nerves he had, then threw a decent ball to the Cubs mascot, who was appropriately wearing a BMW caddie bib.

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Major champion wants golf media to show ‘world-beater’ Lucas Glover some respect

Brian Harman got mad when an article referred to Lucas Glover as a “journeyman.”

Brian Harman and his wife were in tears watching Lucas Glover claim his recent victory at the Wyndham Championship.

“I know what it means to Lucas. I know what it means to his kids,” explained Harman at this week’s BMW Championship. “You saw his daughter is there and she’s just crying her eyes out. It was just a beautiful scene.”

“It’s hard for me to put into words how proud and impressed I am with Lucas Glover,” he said, “just because of what he’s been through.”

Glover had been dealing with the yips while putting for the better part of a decade and at times would lose all feeling over a 10-inch putt. He then switched to a long putter with a split-handed grip and has now won the last two PGA Tour events at the Wyndham and last week’s FedEx St. Jude Championship.

“It’s been unbelievable. I saw a thing from Data Golf a couple days ago where I think he’s like the ninth best ball striker in the ShotLink era from like 2004,” said Rory McIlroy, Glover’s playing partner for the first two rounds. “We know he’s got the tools from tee to green. It was just a matter of him trying to figure out how to get the ball in the hole, and using this long putter, he’s certainly started to figure it out.”

“I remember when I first moved down to St. Simons, we’d go out and we’d play golf, and it was long before I had a Tour card and I was like, ‘I don’t know how I’m ever going to beat this guy,’” remembered Harman. “He was so good. He’s got such good hands. He was putting it so great. So he goes through that, and like I said, to come out the other side is just unreal.

“I think all of us — we all struggle from time to time,” said Harman, “and Lucas with the putter, he struggled. It’s like — he was talking about putting left-handed.”

The 43-year-old has solidified his spot in next week’s Tour Championship and is now a contender for a Ryder Cup captain’s pick. For that reason, Harman wants fans, and especially golf media, to put a little respect on Harman’s name.

“Lucas — read an article the other day that made me very angry. It called Lucas Glover a journeyman. It said journeyman Lucas Glover, and I thought, what a ridiculous thing to say,” said Harman. “This guy has made I don’t know how many Tour Championships, won the U.S. Open. He’s won six or seven times now. Lucas Glover is a world-beater.”

Glover has made the Tour Championship 10 times, won the 2009 U.S. Open at Bethpage Black, and yes, has six total wins on Tour. And no, that article did not run on Golfweek.

“To go through what he went through with his putter and to come out the other side, I think about like Andy Dufresne, crawling through the river and coming out clean the other side,” said Harman. “I’m so proud of him, I’m so happy for him.”

“It’s great to see. He’s a great guy,” added McIlroy. “You’re not going to find one person out on Tour that has a bad thing to say about Lucas. I think everyone has been happy to see him play so well.”

Just don’t call the 22-year veteran a journeyman.

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Rory McIlroy, Brian Harman, Grandma Susie highlight first round at 2023 BMW Championship

Here’s what you missed from the first round at Olympia Fields.

Storms blew through the Windy City on Thursday and delayed the first round of the 2023 BMW Championship for two hours.

When the clouds vanished and the sun came out, so did the PGA Tour’s best as nearly half the field was under par at Olympia Fields Country Club’s North Course in near Chicago.

The second of two FedEx Cup Playoffs events, the BMW saw a handful of players on the bubble make an early move up the standings and featured the usual suspects in the mix at the top of the leaderboard. From a Lucas Glover heat check to 103-year-old Grandma Susie, here’s what we learned from the opening round of the 2023 BMW Championship.