Rory McIlroy doesn’t want LIV Golf players on the Ryder Cup team, says European squad needs a rebuild

Tell us how you really feel, Rory.

There’s something inherently special about a national open, but it comes as no surprise that the attention this week at the 2022 Italian Open is more so focused on the future.

Marco Simone Golf and Country Club in Rome plays host both to this week’s DP World Tour stop, as well as the 2023 Ryder Cup, September 29-October 1. A handful of hopefuls for Luke Donald’s European squad are in the field, including 2022 FedEx Cup champion Rory McIlroy, 2022 U.S. Open champion Matt Fitzpatrick, Viktor Hovland, Tyrrell Hatton, and local favorite and 2018 Italian Open winner Francesco Molinari.

Unlike at last week’s BMW PGA Championship, there’s a small presence of LIV Golf players in the field this week as most are competing at the series’ fifth event near Chicago, but that certainly didn’t keep McIlroy from fielding yet another question about the upstart circuit led by Greg Norman and backed by the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia.

Italian Open: Leaderboard and tee times

“I have said it once I’ve said it a hundred times, I don’t think any of those guys should be on the Ryder Cup team,” McIlroy definitively said during a Wednesday press conference.

Donald is joined in the field by vice captains Thomas Bjorn and Edoardo Molinari, who will undoubtedly be scouting out players for their six selections for the 12-man team that will challenge the United States in a years time. McIlroy even let slip that he, Donald and a few others would meet for dinner Wednesday evening for some team bonding and discussion on how the course could favor the Europeans.

“I think the European Team has a core of six or seven guys that I think we all know are pretty much going to be on that team, and then it’s up to some of the younger guys to maybe step up,” McIlroy said.

“But I think we were in need of a rebuild, anyway. It was sort of, we did well with the same guys for a very long time but again as I just said, everything comes to an end at some point. I think Whistling Straits is a good sort of demarcation, I guess.

“That’s all behind us. We have got a core group of guys but let’s build on that again, and instead of filling those three or four spots with older veterans, let’s blood some rookies and let’s get them in and build towards the future. I think that’s important.”

The United States rolled to victory at Whistling Straits in Wisconsin, 19-9, back in 2021, defeating a European side that featured the likes of Bernd Wiesberger, Paul Casey, Lee Westwood, Sergio Garcia and Ian Poulter, all of whom have gone to LIV Golf (Garcia and Poulter were captain’s picks).

Ryder Cup Practice Round
Team Europe player Jon Rahm (left) hits his tee shot in front of player Rory McIlroy (right) on the fifth hole during a practice round for the 43rd Ryder Cup golf competition at Whistling Straits. (Photo: Orlando Ramirez-USA TODAY Sports)

Using the 2021 side to speculate, one can assume the six or seven core players McIlroy referenced are himself, Jon Rahm, Tommy Fleetwood, Hatton, Hovland, Fitzpatrick and Shane Lowry. As for the rookies, the trio of captains will likely have their eyes on the Hojgaard brothers, Nicolai and Rasmus, who are both in this week’s field.

“I think anyone playing well this week will obviously be seen under a different light in a year’s time,” Edoardo Molinari explained. “Obviously still a very long way to go. Everyone will have to play very well to make the team or get a pick.”

“I think it’s very important, at least to have a good first look,” he said of McIlroy and Fitzpatrick playing this week. “I mean, as I said, we are going to make a few little changes but the bulk of the course will be the same, and even just for us to get their opinion on how the course is playing and what they would like to see and what they like to see on a golf course, how they play better in certain conditions or others, I think it’s just a benefit for everyone, and obviously it’s much appreciated that those guys were able to come here and play this event ahead of the Ryder Cup. Hats off to them.”

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Rory McIlroy to make Italian Open debut at Marco Simone, site of 2023 Ryder Cup

“I think when you win and when you do things, it energizes you more than anything else.”

Rory McIlroy just captured the PGA Tour’s 2022 Tour Championship, yet he’s not taking much time off.

McIlroy, who Sunday became the first golfer to win three FedEx Cups, will head across the pond and play three times in four weeks, including a stop at Marco Simone Golf Club in Rome, which is hosting the 2023 Ryder Cup. The course is also hosting the 2022 Italian Open from Sept. 15-18, and McIlroy is slated to make his tournament debut.

“I have a whopping one week off coming up and then I go to Europe for three out of four weeks, playing quite a bit over there,” McIlroy said after winning in Atlanta on Sunday. “But maybe that’s a little less intense than what we’ve just been through the last three weeks in the Playoffs here.

“Again, I think when you win and when you do things, it energizes you more than anything else. It makes you want to do it more.”

McIlroy won three times during the Tour’s 2021-22 season, including a come-from-behind victory in the Tour Championship, and he finished in the top eight of all majors this calendar year.

Now, he’s heading to Europe, where in two weeks he’ll tee it up at Wentworth in the BMW PGA Championship on Sept. 8-11. He’s also set to play in the Alfred Dunhill Links, Sept. 29-Oct. 2.

McIlroy is also in position to win the DP World Tour’s Race to Dubai, the season-long points race. He’s in first by more than 300 points. He has won the title three times but not since 2015.

“Look, it’s been a long few weeks and I’m looking forward to just chilling for a few days, but yeah, it gets you excited to get out there and play again because you’re playing well and you want to have this feeling more often,” McIlroy said.

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European Tour golfer Fredrik Andersson Hed, 49, dies of cancer

Fredrik Andersson Hed, who won the Italian Open in 2010 and retired in 2015, has died of cancer.

Fredrik Andersson Hed, who won the Italian Open in 2010 and retired in 2015, died Sunday of cancer.

The European Tour confirmed his death. He was 49.

“Fredrik was much loved in the golfing world and beyond, particularly amongst our Scandinavian players and staff, past and present,” said European Tour chief operating officer Keith Waters. “Our hearts go out to them at this incredibly sad time.”

Hed was from Sweden and played in 358 Euro Tour events. He was an outstanding amateur golfer, winning the European Young Masters and Swedish Junior Stroke Play Championship. He also competed in the Eisenhower Trophy before turning pro in 1992. He won twice on the Challenge Tour before spending the next decade on the European Tour. Six times in his career he kept his status via qualifying school.

After 11-year drought, Ross McGowan wins on European Tour

Ross McGowan won his second European Tour event, and his first in 11 years, at the Italian Open with a birdie on the 72nd hole.

This year isn’t all bad — especially if you’re Ross McGowan.

After 11 years and 15 days, McGowan finally snapped his winless streak on the European Tour Sunday at the Italian Open. McGowan shot rounds of 66-64-67-71 at Chervò Golf Club in San Vigilio di Pozzolengo, Brescia, Italy, to win his second Euro Tour event at 20 under.

Laurie Canter and Nicolas Colsaerts finished one shot behind McGowan at 19 under. Sebastian Heisele finished in fourth at 18 under while five others including Martin Kaymer finished T-5 at 17 under.

“I can’t believe it,” McGowan said after his win. “Hit the ball terrible today. Luckily the putter kept me in it again.”

Italian Open: Leaderboard

McGowan, 38, last won the Madrid Masters on Oct. 10, 2009, a tournament he won by three shots.

The 2006 English Amateur Championship said he was lucky to have success when he did today because he was “hitting it all over the place.” McGowan began the round alongside Canter with the lead at 19 under, but a rollercoaster of a start to his final round cast some doubt on snapping his winless streak in Italy.

On the front nine, McGowan went bogey-birdie-double bogey-eagle on Nos. 3-6 before adding another bogey on No. 8 to finish the front nine 1 over, but still square with Canter with nine holes left to play.  McGowan added another birdie and bogey on Nos. 13 and 14 before ending his round with a birdie on 16 and one on 18 to slam the door on any chance of a playoff, something McGowan called “magical” after the round.

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Why this 12-under 60 on the Euro Tour won’t count as an official course record

Laurie Canter’s 60 is good enough to lead the Italian Open by four but it’s not going down in the record books any other way.

Laurie Canter shot the lowest round of his European Tour career, the lowest round in event history and matched the lowest score to par ever recorded on the that tour.

But his 12-under 60 does not count as a course record because the European Tour restricts such rounds going into the record books if lift, clean and place is in effect.

Canter started on the back nine in the opening round of the Italian Open on Thursday and posted five birdies to make the turn at 31. He then birdied the third and fourth holes and eagled the sixth to bring 59 into play. And he almost got there, closing with birdies on Nos. 7, 8 and 9 to shoot a 60 at Chervò Golf Club in Brescia, Italy.

Italian Open: Leaderboard

After rain soaked the course, lift, clean and place was put into effect. But on the European Tour, record scores do not count as record scores if they are recorded under such conditions. Thus, Canter’s 60 is good enough to lead the Italian Open by four over Dean Burmester and Joachim Hansen, but it’s not going down in the record books any other way.

In fact, the European Tour has never had an “official” 59 because of the rule. Golfers have broken 60 on the European Tour but each time it has happened, it was under lift, clean and place, which is also sometimes called “preferred lies” or “placing on the fairways.”

So bummer for Canter, but that’s still a heck of a round.

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