After Solheim Cup shuttle debacle, could traffic issues be a major ‘headache’ for fans at 2024 Presidents Cup?

There are concerns of congestion and delays getting to and from the course.

The shuttle service for spectators at the Solheim Cup last week was an unmitigated disaster for the LPGA Tour, marring the biennial competition’s otherwise delightful playing at the Robert Trent Jones Golf Club in Manassas, Virginia.

On the first day of the competition, fans waited for upwards of 90 minutes for what should have been a short shuttle ride from the parking lots. Could the Presidents Cup be in store for a similar fate?

Presidents Cup tournament director Ryan Hart has been prepping for this week for three years and he says the parking and transportation plan has been vetted and they are ready to go.

“I felt for them,” he said of the Solheim Cup debacle. “It makes you look at your own systems and do a gut check to make sure you’re as buttoned up as you can be.”

Hart and his team will have their work cut out for them. The match between the U.S. men’s 12 best and the International Team, which is made up of the 12 best from the rest of the world excluding Europe, is being held at Royal Montreal Golf Club in Ile-Bizard, Quebec, one of the three populated islands within the city of Montreal. The Jacques-Bizard Bridge connects it across the Riviere des Prairies with Sainte-Genevieve on the Island of Montreal.

The bridge is the only way on and off the island and with more than 30,000 spectators expected to the attend the competition daily, what could possibly go wrong?

“Priority No. 1 when I got this job was to make sure that we had a plan to get our people from downtown and surrounding hotels to the property as efficiently as possible,” Hart said.

But despite all that lead time, the plan to expand the bridge from three to four lanes, which is expected to ease the commute for Ile-Bizard residents, remains under construction. While Presidents Cup officials were assured the project would be completed ahead of the biennial competition, which begins Thursday, Sept. 26, that is not the case. The construction project has been delayed and won’t be completed till at least the first quarter of 2025. Hart said that hurdle has been addressed as best as possible.

“We do this for a living and started tweaking our plan when we were given notice in the first quarter of this year,” Hart said.

Royal Montreal previously hosted the Presidents Cup in 2007 and the RBC Canadian Open in 2014, so the PGA Tour, which operates the biennial competition flipping between U.S. and international sites, has dealt with this bridge issue before.

“Let me tell you, 15 years ago it was horrible,” said one local resident in an interview with CBC. “This time it’s going to be worse with the bridge.”

“I’m already planning to just stay at home as much as I can and try to work from home that week,” another local commuter said.

And the CBC’s best local resident response: “I hope they helicopter them in.”

Hart noted that an F1 race held on the island in June highlighted some potential “pinch points” and elevated their focus to those areas. Workers have been building the site for the event since last October and have a game plan to address traffic concerns for what Hart called the Tour’s biggest global event. (It has a floorplan three times the size of that at the RBC Canadian Open, the Tour’s largest tournament north of the border.)

The tournament built a bus and shuttle drop-off terminal to manage traffic going over the bridge from a 40-minute radius and disperse people to multiple pickup points for shuttle service. There are four points where people can park and shuttle to the tournament, offering both free and paid options. There are also two other pickup spots without parking near metro stops where spectators can hop a free ride (roughly 25 minutes) to the tournament’s main entrance. All lots will have shuttles running on a 20-minute loop.

The first tee shot on Thursday isn’t until 11:35 a.m. ET (gates open at 9 a.m. ET) and shuttle service begins at 7 a.m., so there should be ample time to be there for balls in the air. There’s also a rideshare lot and new taxi-shuttle-HOV lanes – a fast-pass lane – have been added to the route from downtown Montreal since the competition was last held there, and should alleviate congestion.

Due to the bridge delay, tournament organizers did reduce the on-site parking footprint, which is limited to those big spenders who bought hospitality, as well as staffing, according to Hart. Only those local residents with a hangtag pass will be permitted to cross the bridge from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. daily.

But for the 18,000 people who live on the island, Ile-Bizard Mayor Doug Hurley said he expects the traffic congestion to be a headache.

“You’re basically going to suffer,” said Ile-Bizard Mayor Doug Hurley.

Adam Scott reveals who he thinks could be the International Team’s secret weapon at the Presidents Cup, and it’s not who you might expect

Scott gives an inside look to the International team.

In 1983, Australia surprised the sailing world, winning the then Americas Cup using a racing sailboard with a secret “winged keel.” As a sports buff and proud Australian, Adam Scott knows all about one of the greatest upsets and triumphs in sport. Having played in every Presidents Cup since 2003’s infamous tie in South Africa without tasting sweet victory in the biennial competition between the U.S. and the International Team, Scott is anxious for the tide to turn and the International Team to celebrate its own version of an America’s Cup upset. Entering next week’s competition in Montreal as heavy underdogs again, Scott was asked if his side has a winged keel equivalent this year, and if so, what could it be?

“Won’t be much of a secret if I put it out there first,” Scott said in a phone interview with Golfweek ahead of competing in this week’s BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth in England.

But he couldn’t resist answering the question and his response was telling of where the 44-year-old Scott’s head is entering a competition that has been a form of unrequited love.

“I’ll go out and say, you know, Min Woo Lee could be it, and Adam Scott could be it too,” said Scott.

Lee, a 26-year-old Presidents Cup rookie, should be a crowd favorite with his length of the tee and youthful exuberance. But Scott is saying don’t sleep on him and in a subtle way he was sending out a message to his teammates that they should get on his back this time and let him take the International side to the promised land. That’s the type of confidence you want to see from your past Masters champion, former world No. 1 and veteran team leader.

Min Woo Lee on the 12th hole during the second round of the U.S. Open golf tournament at Pinehurst No. 2. Mandatory Credit: Katie Goodale-USA TODAY Sports

Scott, who has an 18-25-6 lifetime record in 10 Cups, then gave a refreshingly honest and thorough assessment of his role in the International Team’s failure to win during his tenure.

“If I rate my own performance the last five cups or so, I’d say I underperformed. And if I was being tough on Adam Scott, I’d say you better perform this time or don’t bother about trying to play another Presidents Cup,” Scott said.

When asked to name the toughest loss in the Presidents Cup, Scott picked the 2019 Cup at Royal Melbourne in Australia, where the U.S. rallied on Sunday for a 16-14 victory.

“That was a harsh one,” he said. “The momentum was on our side all week, and really getting flipped upside down on Sunday. But personally, I didn’t play great against Xander (Schauffele). He got up on me early and I started feeling the pressure a little bit, and he never let up. I got so far down that I couldn’t come back. I knew every match was getting important as I played throughout the round, and I felt like I’d let the side down. That one slipped through our fingers. It was months and months and months of trying to figure out how it slipped away because it felt like that was going to be our time. It would have been an epic victory to win there. It’s something that I’m still looking for in my career.”

That long-awaited win against the American side could happen, especially if Scott turns out to be his team’s secret weapon.

Presidents Cup results: Year-by-year history of the biennial bout between the Americans and Internationals

Take a scroll through the history of the Presidents Cup.

There’s something to be said for representing your country or region on an international stage, and that’s what makes events like the Presidents Cup so special.

“When you look at our team, what we’re trying to tap into is the International team represents billions of people all over the world,” said 2022 captain Trevor Immelman. “So we’re trying to tap into that, inspire the youngsters all over, and welcome fans from all of those countries to come on down and support us in some way, shape, or form because we’re their team.”

The best players from the United States and around the world (Europe aside) gather every other year to compete in a series of matches, and even though the Americans have dominated the event, there have been close calls (and a fair share of blowouts) along the way.

As the 15th playing of the biennial bout prepares to tee off at Royal Montreal Golf Club, take a scroll through the year-by-year history and results of the Presidents Cup.

Brandt Snedeker joins United States Presidents Cup team as captain’s assistant

“I was honored to get the call from Jim and thrilled to accept this role.”

Brandt Snedeker, the 2024 recipient of the Payne Stewart Award, is joining Jim Furyk’s United States Presidents Cup roster as a captain’s assistant. Snedeker, who will serve as one of Keegan Bradley’s vice captains next year at the 2025 Ryder Cup, played in the 2013 Presidents Cup (2-3-0 record).

“I was honored to get the call from Jim and thrilled to accept this role as one of his captain’s assistants for the Presidents Cup,” Snedeker said in a statement. “He’s someone I’ve looked up to throughout my career and I know will be a strong leader for the U.S. Team at Royal Montreal. My goal is to add a trusted voice to our players throughout the week and do everything I can to help us pull out the win.”

The nine-time PGA Tour winner joins Kevin Kisner, Stewart Cink and Justin Leonard in the assistant room.

More: Keegan Bradley wants Tiger Woods ‘as involved as he wants to be’ with 2025 United States Ryder Cup team

“I enjoyed competing together with Brandt at the 2012 Ryder Cup at Medinah,” Furyk said in a statement. “He is a fierce competitor, great teammate and one of the most respected players on the PGA Tour. He will provide a steady voice in the team room, and I will rely on him for insight and advice as we lead our 12 players into Montreal at the end of the month.”

The Presidents Cup at Royal Montreal will be played Sept 27-29.

https://twitter.com/PresidentsCup/status/1833853011786899915

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Presidents Cup teams heavily represented at PGA Tour’s 2024 Procore Championship

There will be 11 members of the two teams in all at the Silverado Resort.

The first event of the PGA Tour’s 2024 FedEx Fall is the newly renamed Procore Championship in Napa Valley, where both sides of the upcoming Presidents Cup will be heavily represented.

There will be 11 members of the two teams in all at the Silverado Resort, Sept. 12–15, including both team captains.

U.S. captain Jim Furyk will be on site and while he’s not playing, there will be plenty of strategizing between him and three of the guys on his roster: defending tournament champ Sahith Theegala, two-time event winner Max Homa and Wyndham Clark. In addition, two of Furyk’s assistant captains, Kevin Kisner and Stewart Cink, will be playing in the event.

Cink, who recently won his first PGA Tour Champions event, won in Napa in 2000 when it was called the Safeway Championship. It was later called the Fortinet Championship until this season. This year marks the 11th straight season Silverado has hosted a PGA Tour stop.

More: Meet the six Team USA 2024 Presidents Cup captain’s picks

On the International side, captain Mike Weir, one of only six International Team members with 10 or more wins in the Presidents Cup, will be playing as will one of his assistant captains, Camilo Villegas. Players on the International roster teeing it up in Napa are Min Woo Lee, Corey Conners and Mackenzie Hughes.

Other tournament commitments include Webb Simpson as well as Joel Dahmen and three rising stars in the game: Luke Clanton, the top-ranked amateur in the WAGR who posted three top-10 finishes on the PGA Tour in 2024; Neal Shipley, the low amateur at the Masters and the U.S. Open; and Wenyi Ding, formerly of Arizona State and the Pac-12’s Player of the Year last season. All three are playing as sponsor exemptions.

The full list of entries was released Friday evening.

https://twitter.com/PGATOURComms/status/1832163177557074319

The Procore Championship is the first of eight Fall Series events on the PGA Tour. It’s the last event before the Presidents Cup, to be held in Montreal, Canada, Sept. 24–29, at The Royal Montreal Golf Club.

International Team Captain Mike Weir announces captain’s assistant for 2024 Presidents Cup

The International Team coaching roster is complete.

On Wednesday, International Team Captain Mike Weir announced Shigeki Maruyama as his fifth and final captain’s assistant for the 2024 Presidents Cup at Royal Montreal Golf Club in Montreal, Canada, from Sept. 24-29.

Maruyama joins Ernie Els, Trevor Immelman, Geoff Ogilvy and Camilo Villegas on Weir’s staff.

“I am thrilled to announce Shigeki as my fifth captain’s assistant for the 2024 Presidents Cup,” Weir said in a statement. “His record in this event speaks for itself, but more importantly, he adds a trusted voice in our team room and is someone who will inspire these 12 players through his unwavering support and dynamic personality.”

In two appearances in the Presidents Cup (1998, 2000), Maruyama compiled a 6-2-0 record including a 5-0-0 showing in ’98.

“Representing the International Team in the Presidents Cup as both a player in 1998 and 2000 and later as a captain’s assistant in 2013 was one of the most valuable experiences in my golf career,” Maruyama said in a statement. “I am honored that Captain Weir has given me the chance to be part of this special brotherhood once again. I am looking forward to a great week in Montreal and helping to deliver an incredible atmosphere for our players and fans in Canada.”

Maruyama won three times on the PGA Tour, most recently in 2003.

As of August 21, Hideki Matsuyama, Tom Kim, Sungjae Im, Jason Day, Adam Scott and Byeong Hun An hold the six automatic qualifying spots for the International Team. Those spots will become official on Sunday after the BMW Championship.

Keegan Bradley named U.S. assistant captain for 2024 Presidents Cup

“Keegan is a tremendous competitor with a bulldog mentality.”

U.S. Presidents Cup Captain Jim Furyk made the obvious official, announcing Keegan Bradley as his fourth captain’s assistant for the 2024 Presidents Cup.

Bradley, recently named the 2025 United States Ryder Cup Captain, joins Stewart Cink, Justin Leonard and Kevin Kisner as fellow assistants when the Presidents Cup returns to The Royal Montreal Golf Club in Montreal, Canada, Sept. 24-29.

Speaking on SiriusXM PGA Tour Radio on Friday, Furyk eluded that this announcement was imminent. “Maybe I’ve already had conversations with Keegan,” he said with a laugh. “I definitely…maybe want to offer that up to him.”

“Keegan is a tremendous competitor with a bulldog mentality and we are looking forward to having his voice in the team room in Montreal,” said Furyk in a statement on Wednesday. “He has a strong passion for match play competition and I know he will be an asset to our players in 2024, as well as 2025, as he leads them into Bethpage Black for the 2025 Ryder Cup.”

Bradley, 38, represented the U.S. team in the 2013 Presidents Cup at Murifield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio, compiling a 2-2-1 record. The Vermont native also played for the United States in the 2012 and 2014 Ryder Cups, where he amassed a combined 4-3-0 record.

Keegan Bradley on the final day of the U.S.’ 2013 Presidents Cup win at Muirfield Village.

Bradley owns six career wins on the PGA Tour, with his most recent victory coming at the 2023 Travelers Championship. He won his first major championship at the 2011 PGA Championship, where he defeated Jason Dufner in a playoff at Atlanta Athletic Club.

Ever since the U.S. lost the 2014 Ryder Cup in Scotland and reacted by creating a task force to try to reverse America’s losing record, the next Ryder Cup captain has served a stint as an assistant captain for the U.S. Presidents Cup.

“I was ecstatic to get the call from Jim and looking forward to doing all I can to help our team in Montreal,” said Bradley. “With the Ryder Cup on the horizon next year, this will be a great experience for me to understand the other side of the team room and how that camaraderie and coaching helps our guys play their best.”

PGA Tour releases fall 2024 schedule, which has eight events, including new one in Utah

Most notably: there’s a new event in southern Utah and new name for the northern California tournament.

Time flies when you’re having fun.

The PGA Tour’s 2024 schedule has just four regular-season events left and then there’s the three-event FedEx Cup Playoffs. Then there’s a week off before the start of the fall schedule.

On Monday, the Tour officially released what it calls the FedEx Cup Fall for 2024, an eight-event swing for the back end of the year.

Most notably: there’s a new event in southern Utah and new name for the northern California tournament, as the Black Desert Championship joins the slate, while Fortinet’s title sponsorship of the event in Napa, California, has ended after three seasons. It was the Safeway Open prior to that.

There’s another week off before the Presidents Cup, and one more in early November before the final stretch.

The Tour states that: “The 2024 FedExCup Fall will finalize top 125 eligibility for the next season, providing exempt status for full-field events, as well as a spot in the Players Championship.”

2024 PGA Tour’s fall schedule

Sept. 12-15 Napa Valley Golf Championship
Sept. 26-29 Presidents Cup
Oct. 3-6 Sanderson Farms Championship
Oct. 10-13 Black Desert Championship
Oct. 17-20 Shriners Children’s Open
Oct. 24-27 Zozo Championship
Nov. 7-10 World Wide Technology Championship
Nov. 14-17 Butterfield Bermuda Championship
Nov. 21-24 RSM Classic

Then it’s the ‘silly season’:

  • Hero World Challenge, Dec. 5-8
  • Grant Thornton Invitational, Dec. 12-15
  • PNC Championship, Dec. 21-22

More from the Tour regarding the 2024 regular season:

“Players who finish No. 70 or better in the FedExCup standings through the 2024 Tour  Championship are exempt for the 2025 season, with players ranked Nos. 1 through 50 also being exempt into all Signature Events for 2025. Players ranked No. 51 and beyond will carry their FedExCup Points from the Regular Season and first FedExCup Playoffs event into the FedExCup Fall and will continue to accumulate FedExCup Points to finalize eligibility for the 2025 season. As part of the Aon Next 10, players ranked Nos. 51-60 through the FedExCup Fall earn their way into two early-season 2025 Signature Events, the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am and The Genesis Invitational.”

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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Trevor Immelman Q&A: What to watch at Tour Championship, the big chair at CBS and Ryder Cup storylines

Immelman reflects on his first year as lead analyst for CBS and dishes on Tour Championship, Ryder Cup storylines.

This PGA Tour season has not disappointed fans in the least bit.

We saw Viktor Hovland steal the BMW Championship with a record-setting and career low round. Nick Taylor’s drought-ending bomb of a putt to win the RBC Canadian Open. Rickie Fowler returned to the top of the leaderboard at the Rocket Mortage Classic.

Trevor Immelman was there to call it all.

The 2008 Masters champion has been perched in the CBS Sports super tower off the 18th green as lead analyst alongside Jim Nantz for a full season now, and we caught up with him to discuss his year in the big chair, storylines for the Tour Championship and how he would go about picking players for the Ryder Cup.