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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Jim Furyk on U.S. Ryder Cup team’s ‘champagne problems’: Hard to figure out who to sit.

The biggest problem when the U.S. Ryder Cup team captains convened each day? No weak link.

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The biggest problem when the U.S. Ryder Cup team captains convened in a room each day to discuss the next round of action?

There wasn’t a weak link.

In a decisive victory, the U.S. topped Europe at Whistling Straits, 19-9, that’s the largest margin of victory since all of Europe joined the Ryder Cup in 1979. After two decades of being pummeled by Europe, the U.S. has now won two of the last three matches.

Golfweek’s Adam Schupak chatted with U.S. Ryder Cup vice captain Jim Furyk about the team’s recent victory at Whistling Straits.

“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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U.S. Ryder Cup captain Steve Stricker sure looks smart — his picks have hit all the right shots

The six picks opened Stricker up to some measure of criticism. It was unwarranted.

HAVEN, Wisconsin — When Steve Stricker was named the United States Ryder Cup captain in February 2019, he was all set to head into the scheduled 2020 Ryder Cup at Whistling Straits with four picks. But four months after the COVID-19 pandemic dramatically altered the golf landscape in 2020, the PGA of America shrunk the automatic qualifiers and gave Stricker two additional selections.

The six picks were the most by any captain in tournament history and opened Stricker up to some measure of criticism, including by those he passed over.

Now with his team holding an impressive 11-5 lead heading into Sunday’s singles matches, it’s fair to say Stricker’s decisions behind his picks – and who he selected – have been spot on.

Stricker only took one seasoned Ryder Cup veteran with those picks in 28-year-old Jordan Spieth, a player who likely would not have been on the team in 2020. Spieth was paired with Justin Thomas at the 2018 Ryder Cup, and the duo went 3-1 in a U.S. loss.

Tony Finau, 32, made his Ryder Cup debut in Paris in 2018 but went 2-1 in his matches. Xander Schauffele, 27, Daniel Berger, 28, and Harris English, 32, are all rookies to the tournament but not to one another nor team competition.

Finau was joined on the 2019 Presidents Cup team by Schauffele and fellow rookie Patrick Cantlay, who played together. Berger was on the 2017 Presidents Cup team, which Stricker captained, and he played with Brooks Koepka.

RELATED: Ryder Cup scoreboard

“You know, some teams that have played together over the years, whether in Ryder Cups or some Presidents Cups, so we wouldn’t put them out there if we didn’t feel good about them, let me just put it that way,” Stricker said.

Scottie Scheffler, 25, was the one true rookie Stricker picked. But, Scheffler had finished second in the WGC Match Play championship and had three top 10 finishes in major championships this year. He also had couple of junior match play titles under his belt and was on the victorious 2017 U.S. Walker Cup team with Collin Morikawa.

With these picks joining two rookie automatic qualifiers in Cantlay and Morikawa, there was a feeling that Stricker’s team didn’t have enough Ryder Cup experience.

He looked at it another way.

“You know, we haven’t been on the winning side (for) too many things, I think two or three times out of the last 12 times – we’re not coming with bad experiences,” Stricker said.

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“I see that as a positive.”

So did the players.

The United States’ recent losing history in the Ryder Cup really meant nothing to them.

“For me, the change of culture,” Finau said of what the new blood on the Ryder Cup team meant before competition began. “We have a whole new team. We have a team with no scar tissue. There’s only a handful of us that has even played in a Ryder Cup, and the few of those, we have winning records. So we actually don’t have guys on our team that have lost a lot in Ryder Cups. So what I mean by this is a big one is we’ve got a whole new team. We’ve got a whole different group of young guys that are hungry.”

With no baggage to carry onto the first tee, Stricker’s picks helped the U.S. team set an impressive pace to the Ryder Cup.

As a group they went 5-1-1 on Friday to give the U.S. its biggest first-day lead in 46 years.

“We’re just off to a good start, and we’re really building some really positive memories and positive experience,” Cantlay said after he and Schauffele won in Friday morning foursomes. “And we’re going to use that later.”

Did they ever.

Unburdened by history and only building in confidence, Stricker’s picks continued to pay off in Saturday’s matches, which included a couple of highlights:

Schauffele: He became the first U.S. rookie since 2012 to open his Ryder Cup career by winning his first three matches. He also went 36 holes of play before trailing, surpassing Phil Mickelson (34 in 1995) for the best stretch over the last 30 years.

Spieth: By going 1-1 with partner Justin Thomas on Saturday thanks to overcoming a 3-hole deficit in the morning session, the pair has four victories as a tandem in their Ryder Cup careers. Only Arnold Palmer and Gardner Dickinson (five) have more as a Ryder Cup duo.

Scheffler: Rolled in about a 9-foot putt in for birdie on No. 15 and then another birdie on No. 16 to give him and Bryson DeChambeau a victory over Tommy Fleetwood and Viktor Hovland in fourball play.

English: Striped a 234-yard approach to the green on No. 18 to 32 feet, allowing him to make par and force Shane Lowry to do the same to earn a full point after the Europeans had led for 15 consecutive holes.

Through two days the six captain’s picks combined to go 8-5-1 to stake the Americans to a commanding lead heading into Sunday’s singles matches. Now, Stricker’s team needs just 3½ more points to win the Ryder Cup for the second time in three years.

And while Ryder Cup singles play can be the ultimate crucible in the sport, the performance of the captain’s picks over the first two days no doubt has lowered the flame beneath them.

“It’s just a big momentum swing from our match going 1-down and going into 14 and the potential of it being 10-6 again like it was at Medinah (Country Club in 2012), for us to be able to flip that match was huge and to be able to win the last match on Saturday was good momentum as well,” Scheffler said. “Go out tomorrow, everything is a level playing field. I think we have a lot of guys on this team that really hate losing, and so individual matches tomorrow, I think guys are going to be fired up and ready to play. Hopefully finish this thing off.”

Contact Jim Owczarski at jowczarski@jrn.com. Follow him on Twitter, Instagram and Snapchat at @JimOwczarski or Facebook at facebook.com/JOwczarski.

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Ryder Cup: Who’s currently on Team USA, Europe entering 2021?

Entering the new year, check out who is currently qualified to play in the 2021 Ryder Cup for Team USA and Team Europe.

Get ready golf fans, because we’re just a few days away from turning the calendar to a Ryder Cup year.

The pandemic forced the postponement of the 43rd biennial battle between the United States and Europe, originally scheduled for Sept. 25-27 at Whistling Straits in Wisconsin. Twelve of the best American and European male golfers will now play Sept. 24-26, 2021, still at Whistling Straits.

In August, Team USA changed its selection criteria for the 2021 event. All points earned by U.S. players since qualification began in 2019 will be recognized, and the time to accrue points was extended through the 2021 BMW Championship (Aug. 26-29). The top six players on the points list will qualify, with U.S. captain Steve Stricker making the final six picks following the 2021 Tour Championship (Sept. 2-5).

Team Europe will take the top four players on its European Points List, as well as the top five players on its World Points List who didn’t qualify from the European list. Captain Padraig Harrington will make his three final picks the week of Monday, Sept. 13, 2021.

Here’s how the teams currently stand entering 2021.

More: Future Ryder Cup sites through 2037

Team USA

1. Dusting Johnson

2. Bryson Dechambeau

3. Justin Thomas

4. Brooks Koepka

5. Collin Morikawa

6. Xander Schauffele

Full rankings here.

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Team Europe

1. Tommy Fleetwood (European points)

2. Jon Rahm (European points)

3. Rory McIlroy (European points)

4. Victor Perez (European points)

5. Tyrrell Hatton (World points)

6. Danny Willett (World points)

7. Matthew Fitzpatrick (World points)

8. Lee Westwood (World points)

9. Bernd Wiesberger (World points)

European points here. World points here.

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Rory McIlroy: ‘Majority of players’ want 2020 Ryder Cup postponed until 2021

World No. 1 Rory McIlroy said the “majority of players” would like to see the 2020 Ryder Cup postponed until 2021.

Rory McIlroy has a hunch about the Ryder Cup, and it’s one that golf fans around the world aren’t going to like.

In an interview with BBC Sport, the world No. 1 said: “My personal hunch is that I don’t see how it is going to happen, so I do not think that it will happen.”

Wisconsin’s Whistling Straits is scheduled to host the 2020 Ryder Cup Sept. 25-27, but amid the coronavirus pandemic the event would most-likely take place without fans (if held at all).

“I think the majority of players would like to see it pushed back until 2021 so that they can play in front of crowds and have the atmosphere that makes the Ryder Cup so special,” explained McIlroy. “The players are the ones that make the Ryder Cup. If they are not on board with it and don’t want to play then there is no Ryder Cup.”

The 18-time PGA Tour winner and four-time major champion has some experience playing without fans after participating in TaylorMade Driving Relief, a charity skins match for coronavirus relief. McIlroy and Dustin Johnson took down Rickie Fowler and Matthew Wolff at the famed Seminole Golf Club in Juno Beach, Florida.

Said McIlroy in a previous interview last month: “A Ryder Cup without fans is not a Ryder Cup.”

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U.S. Ryder Cup captain Steve Stricker names Zach Johnson, Davis Love III as 2020 vice captains

Steve Stricker, captain of the 2020 U.S. Ryder Cup team, has named event veterans Zach Johnson and Davis Love III as vice captains.

When Steve Stricker was named the U.S. Ryder Cup captain early last year, he promptly named Jim Furyk as a vice captain.

On Monday, Stricker added two more.

This fall, two-time Ryder Cup captain Davis Love III and two-time major champion Zach Johnson will join Stricker’s staff as the U.S. attempts to regain the little gold trophy held by the Europeans, the PGA of America announced in a statement. Stricker also will name one or more vice captains in the future.

Europe was won nine of the past 12 matches.

“It’s important to surround yourself with quality individuals who you can lean on and who have the best interests of the team in mind,” Stricker said in the release. “Jim and I have talked about this a lot in the last year and now we are happy to add two Ryder Cup veterans in Zach and Davis to the conversation with the goal of putting this team in a prime position to win.

“Both Zach and Davis share a passion to compete at the highest level and are strong communicators, which is important, especially when we’re in the heat of competition.”

The 2020 Ryder Cup is scheduled for September 25-27 at Whistling Straits in Kohler, Wisconsin, although the COVID-19 global pandemic could force a change. The PGA Tour is planning to restart June 11 with the Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas.

Love was the Ryder Cup captain in 2012 when the Europeans stormed back from a 10-4 deficit to win 14½-13½ at Medinah Country Club north of Chicago. Love also captained the USA’s ship in 2016 at Hazeltine National Golf Club in Minnesota, where the Americans won, 17-11. Love played in the Ryder Cup six times and was a vice captain in 2010 and 2018.

“Steve has been such a consistent presence on this team, both as a player and as a vice captain, and now it’s his time to lead,” Love said. “He has a terrific vision for what he wants our U.S. team to not only accomplish, but represent, all year long.

“I’m confident in the program he has in place and am anxious to get to work.”

Johnson, who played in the Ryder Cup five times, was a vice captain in 2018 when the U.S. was routed, 17½-10½, at Le Golf National in Paris. Johnson also served under captain Tiger Woods in the 2019 Presidents Cup, where the Americans won, 16-14, at Royal Melbourne in Australia.

“In a domestic Ryder Cup,” Johnson said, “it’s important to defend ‘our turf,’ and to do so on behalf of Steve – in his home state at Whistling Straits – is a great opportunity for our team to make a statement.”

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European captain Padraig Harrington: No fans, no Ryder Cup

Ryder Cup veteran and 2020 European captain Padraig Harrington doesn’t think the event should be played without fans.

Remember the Rory McIlroy vs. Patrick Reed match from the 2016 Ryder Cup at Hazeltine?

It was an electric atmosphere, one in which you could feel the emotion of the players and the spectators through the TV.

Now, imagine that match without fans.

“Nobody wants to see the Ryder Cup played without the fans being there,” said 2020 European captain Padraig Harrington on BBC Radio. “There’s no doubt that it makes the tournament so much better. I think the common consensus now is the Ryder Cup will not be played unless the fans are there.”

“Non-golfers and golfers around the world watch the Ryder Cup because of the tension that’s created by the spectators,” he added.

The 2020 event is still slated for September 25-27 at Whistling Straits in Wisconsin, one week after the U.S. Open in golf’s revised schedule. The three-time major champion and six-time member of Team Europe also said discussions with Ryder Cup organizers about postponing the event took place before the plan was set in motion to keep its slot on the fall schedule.

Harrington still hopes the Europeans get the chance to defend their title later this year and he knows the joy the event will bring. That said, he also knows there’s a bigger picture to be seen and “there are bigger things, too, than the Ryder Cup.”

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