Henrik Stenson on losing European Ryder Cup captaincy: ‘I don’t feel like I’ve given it up’

“I just expect to be treated fairly going forward depending on what the outcomes are in this whole case,” Stenson said.

BEDMINSTER, N.J. — Henrik Stenson is either naïve, in denial or an unhappy mix of the two.

During a press conference on Thursday ahead of his LIV Golf Invitational Series debut, the 46-year-old Swede said he was disappointed to lose his European Ryder Cup captaincy for the 2023 matches in Italy, but he’s still holding out hope for a resolution.

“I don’t feel like I’ve given it up,” Stenson said. “I made every arrangement possible here to be able to fulfill my captain’s duties, and I’ve had great help here from LIV to be able to do that. And still, the decision was made that I was to be removed.”

In his own statement last week announcing his move to LIV, Stenson also noted how he made “specific arrangements with LIV Golf” to make sure he could “fulfill the obligations of his captaincy.” Maybe he should’ve made arrangements with the European Ryder Cup folks, too.

When the DP World Tour announced Stenson’s dismissal, the statement read, “it has become clear that (Stenson) will not be able to fulfill certain contractual obligations to Ryder Cup Europe that he had committed to prior to his announcement as Captain on Tuesday, March 15, 2022, and it is therefore not possible for him to continue in the role of Captain.”

Despite being asked, Stenson failed to address which section of the “private contract” led to his ousting.

“I believe we’re still all eligible to play,” added Ian Poulter, who joined Stenson for the press conference alongside their fellow Majesticks teammates Lee Westwood and Sam Horsfield. “No decision has officially been made as far as I’m aware.”

“I’m still eligible to play on the (DP World) Tour. I don’t think I’ve been banned from playing any events,” chimed in Westwood, the team captain. “The (BMW) PGA Championship is still my next event on the (DP World) Tour at Wentworth. I’ve had no correspondence on that. That’s an event, a qualifying event, for the European Ryder Cup Team.

“So you know, no decision’s been made on qualification for the team, and my future or any of our futures playing the (DP World) Tour. So that leads me to believe that we’re still eligible to play in it, unless you can tell me otherwise.”

OPINION: Stenson is another dishonest player, but Europe knew he was a risky Ryder Cup gamble

Westwood hopes the DP World Tour makes a decision sooner rather than later, noting how it’s only fair for everybody, no matter what tour they play on, to know where they stand. Stenson agreed.

“I just expect to be treated fairly going forward depending on what the outcomes are in this whole case,” added Stenson, who had already been planning for the 2023 matches and even made a trip to Rome earlier this year.

Reports broke Wednesday night that Luke Donald would be Europe’s new captain, and Stenson was visibly surprised when asked for his reaction to the news. In that moment, it seemed as if he finally realized his rare opportunity had passed.

“Well, that’s — that’s news to me. If that’s — is that something that’s been announced just as we walked into this room, or … I mean, I’ll wait,” Stenson stammered. “Obviously I’m not in the loop on these things at this point.”

Or perhaps, any point going forward.

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Luke Donald on Europe Ryder Cup gig: ‘If I got this captaincy I would live up to my word and see it through…I wouldn’t be doing a Henrik.’

“If I got this captaincy I would live up to my word and see it through. Let me put it that way. I wouldn’t be doing a Henrik.”

DETROIT – Luke Donald had a few more messages than normal on his phone after he finished his opening round at the Rocket Mortgage Classic.

They weren’t to congratulate him on shooting a solid score of 2-under 70 at Detroit Golf Club.

Instead, it had to do with a report that the 44-year-old Englishman will be named to replace Henrik Stenson as captain of the European team in the 2023 Ryder Cup in Italy, according to the Telegraph.

“There’s nothing official to report,” Donald said. “I have been in talks with Guy (Kinnings, Ryder Cup director) at the European Tour. And that’s all I know right now. I know I have a very good chance, Thomas Bjorn and a couple other guys are under consideration.”

In March, when Stenson was initially selected for the role, Donald was perceived to be the bridesmaid.

“I thought I had a good chance this year. Hopefully, that’s not my chance gone,” Donald said at the time. “We have a lot of very worthy candidates, legends of the Ryder Cup, guys like Sergio, I don’t know how this whole Saudi thing is going to play out and if anyone is going to get knocked out because of that. That’s a little bit of a question mark.”

It turned out to be a bigger question mark than anyone thought as Stenson reversed courses and joined LIV Golf, the rival tour backed by Saudi Arabian royalty and clouded in controversy for that country’s poor record of human rights abuses and other atrocities. Stenson, who is making his LIV debut this week, was canned two weeks ago. Donald said he was surprised by Stenson’s about-face.

“I’ve certainly had some of my best moments on the golf course in the Ryder Cups. What an amazing honor it is to represent Europe in the Ryder Cup, and I would love to be a captain. That would be a huge honor as well,” Donald said. “I was surprised that he would put his name forward if his plan was to go to LIV, which, you know, the rumors, and I hate to talk about rumors, but rumors are that he’d been in contact with the rival tours, whatever they were, and he was very interested. And I think everyone knew that, the European Tour knew that. They obviously took his word that he wasn’t going to do it. We all have to sign a clause or contract saying that we won’t have anything to do with (LIV). I’m disappointed I guess that he would put his name forward and then go to LIV. I understand certain guys going to LIV, in certain situations in their careers and stuff, that makes sense. But obviously something big to give up.”

Donald said LIV’s concept was intriguing, and that everyone has a number, but he had not been approached to play in the 48-man league. He had been asked about joining the TV announcing crew.

“Turned that down pretty quickly,” he said. “A little bit of a slight on my game. I know I haven’t played that great, but thanks but no thanks.”

Donald said he was told that a decision on Team Europe’s captain would be announced early next week. He would be the first Englishman since Nick Faldo in 2008 to hold the non-playing position.

“If I got this captaincy I would live up to my word and see it through,” he said. “Let me put it that way. I wouldn’t be doing a Henrik.”

Donald – a four-time Ryder Cup player (2004, ’06, ’10, ’12), five-time PGA Tour winner and six-time DP World Tour winner who played college golf at Northwestern – made a 30-minute presentation to the three most recent Ryder Cup captains – Darren Clarke, Thomas Bjorn and Padraig Harrington – as well as David Howell, chairman of the DP World Tour tournament committee, and DP World Tour CEO Keith Pelley earlier this year. He said he didn’t have to make a second presentation. Sweden’s Robert Karlsson, Scotland’s Paul Lawrie and Italy’s Edouardo Molinari were the other finalists in March.

Donald, a former world No. 1, served as a vice-captain in the past two Ryder Cups and called Rome, home to host site Marco Simone Golf Club, one of his and his wife’s favorite cities.

“We’ve been many times,” he said. “Beautiful city, architecture and the history of stuff that you can go see, it’s one of my favorite places to visit.”

Perhaps in late September 2023.

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Report: Luke Donald will replace Henrik Stenson as 2023 European Ryder Cup captain

The Englishman, a four-time European Ryder Cup player, is reported to take the helm for Rome.

Englishman Luke Donald will replace the sacked Henrik Stenson as captain of the European team in the 2023 Ryder Cup in Italy, according to a report in the Telegraph.

Stenson was canned two weeks ago after announcing he would join LIV Golf, the rival tour backed by Saudi Arabian royalty and clouded in controversy for that country’s poor record of human rights abuses and other atrocities. Stenson begins play on that tour today at Trump Bedminster in New Jersey. The longtime independent contractor has expressed disappointment in losing the honorary Ryder Cup job after breaking his captaincy contract that forbid him from playing on a rival tour by signing a lucrative contract with LIV Golf.

Donald – a four-time Ryder Cup player (2004, ’06, ’10, ’12), five-time PGA Tour winner and six-time DP World Tour winner who played college golf at Northwestern – was long rumored as a potential captain at some future Ryder Cup. The former World No. 1 served as a vice captain in the past two Ryder Cups and is playing this week’s Rocket Mortgage Classic on the PGA Tour in Detroit.

According to the report, Thomas Bjorn and Edoardo Molinari will keep their gigs as vice captains in Rome.

While there was much speculation on who might replace the canned Stenson as captain, as of yet it doesn’t appear the top Euro players themselves are in any rush to jump to LIV Golf. Potential team members such as Rory McIlroy, Jon Rahm, Viktor Hovland and Matt Fitzpatrick, among others, have not joined LIV, with several having pledged a commitment to the PGA Tour and the DP World Tour. Most of the former European Ryder Cuppers who have jumped to LIV, such as Lee Westwood and Ian Poulter, are seen by many as being well past their primes and unlikely candidates to have competed in Rome. Of those who have left to compete for LIV’s Greg Norman, only the aging Sergio Garcia and Paul Casey were considered potential contenders to compete in Rome.

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Lynch: Henrik Stenson is another dishonest LIV Golf player, but Europe knew he was a risky Ryder Cup gamble

Dishonesty and cowardice are two traits common to many players who have decamped to LIV Golf.

For a sport that prides itself on values like honesty, honor and integrity, golf sure seems over-populated with people whose word is worth about as much as a phlegm sundae on a sweltering day. ’Twas always thus, of course, no matter how energetically the PGA Tour marketed everyone as being of admirable character and charitable bearing. Thanks to Greg Norman’s ongoing abuse of the Clown Prince’s checkbook, at least now less work is required to identify the game’s most hollow charlatans. Just lob a dart at the LIV Golf line-up. And don’t feel the need to aim carefully.

Dishonesty and cowardice are two traits common to many players who have decamped to LIV Golf. They lie about their intent to join the Saudi-backed outfit and continually compound that by refusing to admit they did so for money, cowering behind codswallop about growing the game (they’re not) or setting their own schedule (they can’t). It’s an expanding roster of golfers who once insisted they’d never do exactly what they did whenever the Saudis found the inflection point in their spines, where cash trumps conscience.

LIV’s latest recruit is its least surprising: Henrik Stenson, the duration of whose Ryder Cup captaincy compares unfavorably to that of a Kardashian marriage. A few hours after Ryder Cup Europe announced his dismissal, Stenson released a statement expressing disappointment that jumping to the Saudis had cost him the job, perhaps forgetting that just four months ago he signed a contract that forbade him from doing just that.

“It is a shame to witness the significant uncertainty surrounding the Ryder Cup,” Stenson wrote, sounding like a pyromaniac dismayed at the damage caused by the fire he set.

But words, like contracts and character, are meaningless in the ranks of LIV Golf.

No sentient person in golf can be shocked that Stenson left for LIV, least of all those who selected him for the captaincy. Ryder Cup Europe coyly explained the decision to strip him of the captaincy as being “in light of decisions made by Henrik in relation to his personal circumstances.” Those circumstances don’t relate only to what tour Stenson wishes to compete on.

Most everyone on the DP World and PGA tours knows Stenson has more than once been the victim of large-scale embezzlement, so European Ryder Cup bosses must have understood that anyone offering him money would get a hearing. They would also have surmised that the dollar amount the Saudis were dangling would only increase with his assuming the captaincy. In the crude currency familiar to the Saudi regime, the head of the Ryder Cup captain is an attractive trophy to brandish. So what might seem an impressive coup for LIV Golf is really just an acknowledgment of Stenson’s financial history.

It was a risk Ryder Cup Europe chose to assume. It was a mistake common among many organizations and individuals who have had dealings with LIV players—trusting them, thinking their word was a bond rather than a tactic, assuming their signatures on contracts had standing. In the event LIV gained traction during Stenson’s tenure as captain, no one was more susceptible to FOMO—fear of missing out—on the cash. In the current environment, he was always a risky bet, but one that cratered even more rapidly than the Old World decision-makers could have imagined.

The extent to which the Ryder Cup will be impacted by Stenson’s firing is likely less than LIV enthusiasts will claim. The U.S. rout last year in Wisconsin proved that Europe is caught between generations of talent, so there’s little clarity on who the continent will field 14 months from now in Rome. None of the veterans who signed with LIV—Lee Westwood, Ian Poulter, Sergio Garcia, Graeme McDowell—were serious candidates for a spot on the squad. They are all yesterday’s men, as surely as Stenson is yesterday’s skipper.

In pondering options for his replacement, Europe should take the opportunity to dispense with the revolving door that has governed the captaincy for a quarter-century. Some of Europe’s greatest successes came under Tony Jacklin and Bernard Gallacher. Jacklin led four consecutive teams, followed by Gallacher for three. Two men held the captain’s job from 1983 until 1997, when Seve Ballesteros assumed the role for the match in Spain. That’s when Europe’s ‘Big 5’ of the 1980s and ‘90s was maturing into management, so the specious idea took root that even a winning captain had to make way simply because it was someone else’s turn.

Paul McGinley was an excellent captain in 2014, but was replaced in 2016 by Darren Clarke, who wasn’t. Thomas Bjorn led Europe to a decisive victory in Paris four years ago, but stepped aside for Padraig Harrington, whose team was battered at Whistling Straits last September.

The same phenomenon is evident on the U.S. side. Why should Paul Azinger have ceded to Corey Pavin in 2010? Or Davis Love III to Jim Furyk in 2018? Or, frankly, Steve Stricker to Zach Johnson this time? If a winning and popular captain has had enough, then fair enough. But if he’s willing and able to stay on, he should not be assumed to be out of the job simply because there are other candidates who feel entitled to a shot.

Hitting a reset button on how Europe selects captains might be the only positive contribution Stenson can claim from his 127-day stint in the job. Even Italian governments would be embarrassed to fall so quickly.

The Ryder Cup forged reputations—for loyalty, for love of competition, for character—that instantly withered under LIV’s insidious caress, lost amid a deluge of duplicity and double-speak. Chalk up Stenson’s as another. “I am committed to growing the game and using the game as a force for good,” he wrote, going on to insist that the sportswashing effort operated and financed by the repressive Saudi regime will be just such a positive force for good. Should one ever need a reminder of how easily credulous people can be duped, Stenson’s statement should be Exhibit ‘A.’

Next week, Stenson will make his LIV debut at a tournament hosted by Donald Trump. It promises to be the Super Bowl for grifters, a gathering of men sorely destitute of character, hungrily pocketing someone else’s cash while claiming it’s in service of a greater good. They are all richly deserving of each other’s company.

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Schupak: Henrik Stenson will regret walking away from Ryder Cup captaincy for money

English golfer Eddie Pepperell: “Henrik, just be honest, it was a bucket load of cash and you couldn’t resist it.”

Say it ain’t so, Henrik, say it ain’t so.

You, too, are headed to LIV Golf? And surrendering your captaincy for Team Europe? Rumor became official Wednesday.

Of all the flip-flops, this is the toughest one to swallow because Stenson effectively admitted that the money – a reported $40 million up front – is worth more than his legacy and the prestige of being captain for the one event where money is never the concern.

Beloved for his deadpan humor and practical jokes, Stenson, 46, has won a major, a Players, a Tour Championship and a silver medal at the Olympics during a career filled with highs and lows. Along the way, he lost his game and a sizeable fortune not once but twice.

From the beginning, he was an easy target for LIV Golf, which provided a sudden chance for Stenson to regain much of his personal fortune. First, he was a victim in a ponzi scheme in 2009 by his sponsor Stanford Financial. Golfers rejoiced when Stenson won the 2013 Tour Championship and FedEx Cup and was financially secure once more, but then he got bamboozled again and so one of the most fascinating elements of the Saudis showering obscene amounts of money for over-the-hill golfers came down to what did Stenson value more: money or the chance to be Ryder Cup candidate?

With the likes of Lee Westwood, Ian Poulter and Sergio Garcia, among others waiting in the wings as future captains, Stenson knew his time was now or never. He was rumored to be on the fence to jump to LIV, but then Phil Mickelson opened his big mouth and Stenson figured that LIV wouldn’t get off the ground for another year, if it ever did.

Remember how Rory McIlroy pronounced it dead in the water? Stenson went with the safe pick and decided to be Ryder Cup captain. He could drink for free in any pub or tavern anywhere in Europe if he brought the Cup back home when the biennial competition is staged in Rome in 2023.

Stenson’s appointment in March seemed to put to bed all the speculation that he could be bought. He was given a choice and he had made it.

“I am fully committed to the captaincy and to Ryder Cup Europe and the job at hand,” he said.

Henrik Stenson of Sweden poses for a portrait on March 14, 2022 in Orlando, after being named captain of the European team for the 2023 Ryder Cup. (Photo: Julio Aguilar/Getty Images)

He added that “The Ryder Cup is golf, and sport, at its very best. I got goosebumps every time I pulled on a European shirt as a player and that will be magnified in the role of Captain.”

He noted that the captain signs a contract with Ryder Cup Europe.

In the ensuing months, though, LIV Golf went from talk to reality. And the reality for Stenson is that his game is a shadow of its former self. He hasn’t recorded a top-10 finish on the PGA Tour since the 2019 U.S. Open and has made just 12 cuts in his last 36 starts since the beginning of the 2019-20 season. He was on pace to miss the FedEx Cup Playoffs again.

The Saudi money is like the sirens call in Greek mythology. What man can resist the allure of all that lucre? If someone offered you $40 million just to do your job, you’d be hard-pressed to turn it down. You’d also probably wonder what’s the catch.

It’s a sad day in the Ryder Cup for Stenson to walk away from being the first Swede to serve as captain of the European team. But he should never have accepted the job in the first place if he was just waiting for the Saudis to match his price. His word is about as good as the sport’s team owner who swears he won’t trade his star player before the trade deadline and then breaks a city’s heart by doing just that.

He tried to explain his side of the story in a four-paragraph tweet. As one of his followers replied, if your statement is that long there’s a part of you that believes what you’re doing is wrong.

“Henrik, just be honest, it was a bucket load of cash and you couldn’t resist it, like the rest of the guys,” tweeted English golfer Eddie Pepperell. “Will always love your game (especially those mid-irons!) but what a disappointing thing to do.”

It’s a tremendously awkward and bad look for the DP World Tour, who really have one chip to play – join LIV and you’re out of the Ryder Cup – and apparently even that isn’t stopping Stenson, who had won $32 million on the PGA Tour and another $30 million on the European Tour, from fleeing for easy money.

It’s shameless.

“He could have waited 15 months,” Padraig Harrington told Sky Sports on Wednesday.

Then again Stenson wouldn’t have been as attractive to LIV. Greg Norman surely loves that he’s thrown the Ryder Cup into disarray. But the Ryder Cup is bigger than anyone person and soon someone who truly is fully committed to the captaincy will be named to step in as a replacement.

Here’s hoping Stenson has found some better handlers for his money but know this: no matter what Talor Gooch may say, Stenson will never experience goosebumps playing for the Majestiks like he did wearing the European shirt at the Ryder Cup.

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LIV Golf announces Jason Kokrak, Charles Howell III as new players alongside Henrik Stenson for Trump Bedminster event

Three new players are bound for LIV Golf.

More PGA Tour winners are taking their talents to LIV Golf.

Tuesday the series announced 45 of the 48 players who will tee it up at its upcoming event at Trump National Golf Club Bedminster on July 29-31, but three spots were left to be filled “in the coming days.” A day later the Greg Norman-led, Saudi Arabia-funded circuit announced Jason Kokrak and Charles Howell III would be making their debuts alongside Henrik Stenson, who broke the news himself earlier in the day after he was relieved of his captaincy of the European Ryder Cup team.

Kokrak, 37, is a three-time winner on Tour, all in the last two years. Howell, 43, also has three wins, most recently in 2018 and previously in 2007 and 2002. Stenson, meanwhile, boasts six PGA Tour and 11 DP World Tour wins over his career.

LIV Golf has long been criticized as a way for the Saudi government to “sportswash” its human rights record.

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Fuming LIV Golf star tells Sky Sports reporter to ‘go (expletive) yourself’ over ‘could this be your last major’ question at British Open

The correspondent quizzed a player on whether St. Andrews would be his last major for a while.

Sky Sports reporter Jamie Weir has revealed how a LIV golf star told him to “go (expletive)’ himself after he asked a question.

The golf correspondent quizzed the golfer on whether The Open at St. Andrews would be his last major for a while. Weir did not reveal who the golfer was but he shared the exchange on Twitter.

He wrote: “Odd how one of the players listed below, when I asked him at The Open if he was at all concerned this could be his last major for a while, told me to ‘go (expletive) myself’ and that it was a ‘(expletive) (expletive) question.'”

LIV golfer Lee Westwood responded to the tweet saying: “It wasn’t me but I did overhear the conversation in question. Jamie works for Sky. They cover the PGA & DPWT. Where do you think their loyalties lie and what their agenda is?”

Wednesday, Henrik Stenson was removed as Europe’s Ryder Cup captain with immediate effect “in light of decisions made in relation to his personal circumstances.”

The 46-year-old Swede is understood to be on the verge of signing up for the Saudi-backed breakaway LIV Golf Invitational Series and, after discussions with Ryder Cup Europe officials, the decision was made to effectively sack him as captain.

“In light of decisions made by Henrik in relation to his personal circumstances, it has become clear that he will not be able to fulfil certain contractual obligations to Ryder Cup Europe that he had committed to prior to his announcement as captain on Tuesday March 15, 2022, and it is therefore not possible for him to continue in the role of captain.

“Confirmation of the new 2023 European Ryder Cup captain will be made in due course. Ryder Cup Europe will be making no further comment on any aspect of the process until that time.”

Stenson’s appointment in March had appeared to end speculation about his involvement in the Saudi-backed breakaway as he insisted he was fully committed to the role.

But in a massive blow to the DP World Tour, of which players must be a member to compete in the Ryder Cup or captain the European side, the former Open champion signaled his intention to joined LIV Golf in a move which extends the deepening rift in the men’s professional game.

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Henrik Stenson should be booed forever for ditching Ryder Cup captaincy for LIV Golf

What a joke.

This is the online version of our daily newsletter, The Morning WinSubscribe to get irreverent and incisive sports stories, delivered to your mailbox every morning.

One of the most meaningful jobs a pro golfer can be given is the captaincy of a Ryder Cup team. The event happens only every two years so there aren’t many opportunities to land the gig and to get the reigns of either Team USA or Team Europe means you’ve done some incredible things in your playing days.

It’s a special job for a special event that brings the best out of everyone involved and it’s were very good players can become legends in the span of three days.

Henrik Stenson was named the European captain last March and immediately let everyone know how much it meant to him, saying:

“The Ryder Cup is golf, and sport, at its very best. I got goosebumps every time I pulled on a European shirt as a player and that will be magnified in the role of Captain. While it is great for me personally, it is also great for my country and all the players from Sweden who have played for Europe with such distinction since Joakim Haeggman became the first in 1993.

“When I started out as a professional golfer, it was beyond my wildest dreams that, one day, I would follow in the footsteps of legends of the game such as Seve and be the European Ryder Cup Captain. But today proves that, sometimes, dreams do come true.”

Well, his dream came to end on Wednesday morning and he has nobody to blame but himself. The DP World Tour/Team Europe announced that Stenson’s role as captain “has been brought to an end with immediate effect” because the 46-year-old Swede will reportedly be joining LIV Golf. That deal with LIV must be as good as done because the DP World Tour wouldn’t have made that announcement if it wasn’t.

You can say that Stenson didn’t ditch the Ryder Cup, the team fired him; but you would be wrong. When Stenson took the gig his contract stated it could be pulled if he joined any rival tours or leagues. At the time he even said, “The captain has an agreement… so I’m fully committed to my role as a captain.”

Stenson has made the choice to leave for LIV and that choice has led to the DP World Tour/Team Europe to making its decision.

Stenson is now free to play the 54-hole shotgun starts of the LIV Golf tour, where’s he’s expected to join Ian Poulter’s squad.

That’s right, he’s leaving Team Europe for Team Majesticks GC, which also includes 49-year-old Lee Westwood.

Yikes.

I know some of you right now are probably yelling about money and letting Stenson, who is well past his prime, take the cash, which I’m sure he got a bunch of from the Saudi-funded league. And yes, he can take the cash and run to LIV if that’s what he wants to do. That’s his choice.

But that doesn’t mean we can’t make the choice to boo him forever because of it. And that’s exactly what we should do to a man who basically spit on one of the greatest events in all of sports so he could go play with his other old friends in a league that is fracturing the sport of men’s professional golf.

Leaving the Ryder Cup captaincy for LIV Golf is disgusting and sad but hey, money.

Enjoy the cash, Henrik. Good stuff.

Quick hits: MLB fans loved ump cams in All-Star Game… NBA offseason grades… Roberts’ favorite Kershaw moment… And more. 

– The home plate ump in last night’s MLB All-Star Game wore a camera on his mask and the view was pretty cool.

– Bryan Kalbrosky grades the offseasons of all 30 NBA teams so far and is really impressed with what the Knicks have done.

– Dave Roberts told me his favorite Clayton Kershaw moment and it was pretty sweet.

– MLB fans were rightfully not impressed with this grown adult trying to get autographs at the All-Star Game.

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Photos: Henrik Stenson through the years

View photos of Henrik Stenson throughout his professional career including the 2016 Open Championship and multiple Ryder Cup appearances.

One of the biggest names of the mid-2000s and 2010s, Henrik Stenson was a Swedish assassin.

Nicknamed “The Iceman,” Stenson has 25 worldwide wins including a 2016 Open Championship duel against Phil Mickelson.

Turning professional in 1998, Stenson joined the European Tour full-time in 2001. Wasting no time, the Swede earned his first pro win at Benson & Hedges International Open the same year.

Other career highlights include wins at the 2007 WGC Matchplay, 2009 Players Championship, 2013 Tour Championship and nine top-5 major finishes.

A five-time Ryder Cup participant, Stenson boasts a 10-7-2 record and even clinched the winning point in his debut for the Euros in 2006. He was slated to be captain of the Europeans for the 2022 matches, before that invitation was rescinded on July 20, 2022, in advance of his expected move to LIV Golf.

Here’s a look at Stenson’s career through the years:

Henrik Stenson officially out as European Ryder Cup captain, expected to join LIV

“It has become clear that he will not be able to fulfill certain contractual obligations to Ryder Cup Europe.”

Henrik Stenson, who was named European Ryder Cup captain in March, has been relieved of his duties by the DP World Tour, it was announced, effective immediately. Stenson is expected to join LIV Golf, perhaps as early as today.

“In light of decisions made by Henrik in relation to his personal circumstances, it has become clear that he will not be able to fulfill certain contractual obligations to Ryder Cup Europe that he had committed to prior to his announcement as Captain on Tuesday, March 15, 2022, and it is therefore not possible for him to continue in the role of Captain,” the DP World Tour said in a press release.

Stenson, 46, had been linked to LIV Golf for several months, but effectively changed his mind following the publication of Phil Mickelson’s incendiary comments late last year, which seemed to postpone the launch of the rival league. Stenson committed to the Ryder Cup captaincy and even took an initial visit to Rome to begin planning for the job. But LIV debuted in June and is scheduled to hold its third invitation next week in New Jersey. It has paid enormous guaranteed contracts to woo the likes of U.S. Ryder Cup stars Phil Mickelson, Bryson DeChambeau, Dustin Johnson and Brooks Koepka and European stars Ian Poulter, Lee Westwood, Graeme McDowell and Sergio Garcia to jump ship. Stenson, a former British Open champ, has slipped to No. 171 in the Official World Golf Ranking.

Confirmation of the new 2023 European Ryder Cup will be made “in due course,” the release said.

Ryder Cup Europe will be making no further comment until it names a replacement for Stenson.

The 2023 Ryder Cup at Marco Simone Golf and Country Club in Rome, Italy is scheduled from Sept. 25 to Oct. 1, 2023.

Zach Johnson was previously named the U.S. team captain. The Americans won the Ryder Cup at Whistling Straits in Wisconsin in September by a score of 19-9.

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