Europe sweeps United States in Friday morning foursomes at 2023 Ryder Cup

It was a historic start for the European side in Italy.

ROME – Team Europe came out swinging on Friday morning, sweeping all four foursomes matches in the first session of the 44th Ryder Cup at Marco Simone Golf and Country Club. It marked the first time the Euros have grabbed a 4-0 lead in Ryder Cup history.

The leaderboard was bathed in blue early as Jon Rahm and Tyrrell Hatton secured the first point in convincing fashion over world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler and Sam Burns.

It was a dream start for Luke Donald’s Euro team, who opted to open with foursomes for the first time since 1993 with the goal of getting off to a fast start. The Euros did that and then some. Team Europe hadn’t won 3½ points or more in the opening sessions since 1969, and none of the matches were even close. None of the matches made it to the 18th hole.

“We can’t get complacent at all,” McIlroy said. “This is an unbelievably long American Team. Last week the American girls went up 4-0 in the first session there (at the Solheim Cup) and Europe were able to come back, so we are not taking anything for granted here. It’s a great start but we need to keep our foot on the pedal and keep winning points.”

 Here’s a match-by-match summary.

2023 Ryder Cup Friday afternoon fourball pairings, tee times feature Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas

The Europeans swept the morning foursomes session at Marco Simone.

It was an all-blue morning in Italy.

The Europeans swept the opening session of the 2023 Ryder Cup at Marco Simone Golf and Country Club near Rome on Friday morning, taking the first foursomes session 4-0 at the expense of an American side that seemingly never got off the bus.

The session was so dominant that none of the matches reached the 18th green, and the first two came to a close on No. 15.

Looking ahead to the afternoon, all 24 competitors will see action on Day 1 as the four players from each team who sat in the morning will get their chance to tee it up in the afternoon.

Check out the four matches and pairings, as well as the eight players who will ride the pine pony for the second session of matches at the 2023 Ryder Cup. (Note: Italy is six hours ahead of Eastern Time in the U.S.).

Just hours into the 2023 Ryder Cup, golf fans were already fed up with the TV broadcast

NBC Sports and Golf Channel employees may want to stay off social media for the next few days.

NBC Sports and Golf Channel employees may want to stay off social media for the next few days.

Not even two hours in to the coverage of the Friday foursomes matches at the 2023 Ryder Cup at Marco Simone Golf and Country Club in Italy and television viewers who were awake at 1 a.m. ET for the start were already fed up with the coverage (or lack thereof).

Airing on USA Network, the broadcast missed the introductions and tee shots from the third match of Shane Lowry and Sepp Straka vs. Rickie Fowler and Collin Morikawa and showed more commercials than golf shots.

This year’s broadcast features a score bug in the bottom right of the screen that shows the matches and live results, which is a nice innovation, except when the coverage doesn’t provide context for how those scores came to be.

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Check out the early reaction to the TV coverage of the 2023 Ryder Cup in Italy.

Photos: 2023 Ryder Cup at Marco Simone Golf Club in Rome

Check out some of the best photos from the competition.

The 44th Ryder Cup is over with Team Europe claiming a 16 ½ to 11 ½ victory at Marco Simone Golf & Country Club in Rome, Italy.

The first staging of the event was in 1927 and it featured a team of Americans taking on a group from Great Britain. In 1973, that team grew to include golfers from Ireland. In 1979, it expanded again to include players from across Europe.

The U.S. has not won the Ryder Cup away from home since 1993 and that streak will continue at least until 2027, when the biennial competition returns to Europe at Adare Manor in Ireland.

Check out some of the best photos from the competition.

Circle of Trust: How Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson, Davis Love III and ‘the cool kids’ gained control of the U.S. Ryder Cup process

This week’s Ryder Cup in Italy is a referendum on whether the Task Force has achieved its stated goal.

ROME – After Keegan Bradley learned he wasn’t selected as a captain’s pick for the U.S. Ryder Cup team, he poured his heart out to Golf Channel’s Todd Lewis.

“I’ve always been an outsider in the sport but I have tried to get closer to the guys I thought would be on the team,” Bradley said. “I feel like moving forward I’m going to have to automatically qualify for the Ryder Cup.”

For Bradley, being snubbed for the team was an extension of being left out of the meeting of the “Delaware 23” in Wilmington, Delaware, during the 2022 BMW Championship when Tiger Woods and Rickie Fowler flew in to meet with roughly the Tour’s top-20 players in an effort to remake the PGA Tour.

Bradley isn’t the only one who feels as if the U.S. Ryder Cup has become a little “too clubby,” a bit “too cliquish,” too much of a “boys’ club.” Stewart Cink is the only new blood to this year’s back room for U.S. Captain Zach Johnson, but even he isn’t sure whether he would have been invited to be in the cool club if Phil Mickelson hadn’t been banished from the U.S. Ryder Cup’s inner circle for the things he said before leaving for LIV Golf.

“I have felt a little bit like that, like I was just on the outside of a certain circle,” Cink told Golfweek. “I don’t necessarily feel exactly the same way (Keegan) does, though, because I hesitate – I’ve got to be careful what I say. I didn’t feel like I was outside of any circle.  I felt like there was a specific – OK, I’m not going to go there. I don’t want to say. I’ll just say this. I have felt similarly to the way Keegan says that he feels about being a little bit on the outside, a little bit maybe not in the fraternity necessarily. Just being a little bit of a different personality, plenty of experience, but not necessarily like in the club. It’s hard to get in if you’re not in.”

MORE: One-stop shop for all things Ryder Cup

The fraternity that Cink refers to may be more the Tri-Lambs of “Revenge of the Nerds” fame than the bullying Alpha Betas. After all, at Stanford, Tiger Woods was nicknamed “Erkel,” a reference to the goofball character Steve Erkel on the TV show “Family Matters,” Davis Love III was called Dufus, and Mickelson Figjam – if you don’t know why, Google it. So how did all these dorks end up at the cool table?

It goes back to the 2014 Ryder Cup when the U.S. side was blown out in Scotland, its sixth loss in seven playings of the biennial event, and Mickelson publicly threw U.S. Captain Tom Watson under the bus during the post-match press conference. The result was the formation of a Task Force, which empowered the players and was designed to create continuity in the team leadership. Ted Bishop was the president of the PGA of America at the time and along with PGA CEO Pete Bevacqua assembled an 11-man Task Force, which included past captains Raymond Floyd and Tom Lehman, and active players Davis Love III, Rickie Fowler, Steve Stricker, Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson and Jim Furyk.

“My vision was a reset of the U.S. side,” Bishop wrote in a text. “A succession plan of Captains from the assistant ranks. Never saw more than three picks. The whole idea was to give the players a greater voice but not control.”

Continuity in leadership has been achieved as Task Force members Love, Furyk and Stricker have taken turns as captain. Presumably, it is only a matter of time before Tiger is captain – some say this would’ve been his turn had he not been involved in a single car accident — and Mickelson was expected to take the helm at Bethpage in 2025 until he became persona non grata after joining LIV. It’s ironic that the most influential figure in the formation of the Task Force and this new era of U.S. team golf is now banished from any involvement. That may have re-opened the door for the likes of Cink. Despite being a five-time Ryder Cup member and respected veteran of the Tour policy board, Cink had been on the outside looking in for a post with Team USA. He had admitted that he thought his window for being a U.S. captain had passed.

“In my case, there’s a lot of guys that were captains and assistant captains and it was kind of a cycle of the same – once that Ryder Cup Task Force started, it kind of became like the same guys, just it was a merry go round,” Cink rightly noted.

Johnson brought Cink on board in July as his final selection as a vice captain, the lone newbie in what otherwise is the same cast of characters (Fred Couples, Furyk, Love, Stricker). Even Johnson admits that the Team USA leadership is ready for some new blood.

“I understand that,” Johnson said. “At the same time, it’s like the guys you don’t pick for the team. All are worthy to be a part of it, it’s just how it works out given all sorts of factors. And that’s unfortunate. And there’s a lot of individuals that you know, probably could say the same thing and I get that. I feel honored and humbled that I’m still a part of it to some degree.”

Love thought he had his final go-round last fall as U.S. Presidents Cup captain, his third stint in that role overall, but he and Johnson are tight and so he agreed to do one more tour of duty.

“I’ve heard a lot of chatter about ‘Oh, no, here we go, Davis Love again. What about some new guys?’ ” Love said. “And then I had one friend of mine say, ‘I’d quit worrying about it, you guys are winning.’ ”

Indeed, since the Task Force installed Love as Ryder Cup captain for 2016, Team USA has won five of its last six Cups between Presidents and Ryder Cup, with its only loss at the 2018 Ryder Cup in Paris.

One person who didn’t participate in the Task Force was Paul Azinger, the winning captain in 2008, who shared his vision with the PGA brain trust individually. Azinger didn’t want to bestow too much credit to the Task Force, noting he wasn’t sure what it had really done other than mimicking the Team Euro blue print and said, “As long as past captains and future captains are being asked to be assistants. That’s the formula,” he said.

The Task Force awakened changes that were long overdue but it may have given too much control to certain players and left them open to charges of favoritism to certain players such as Justin Thomas, who received one of the six captain’s picks. This week’s Ryder Cup and the U.S. bid to win on European soil for the first time in 30 years – when Tom Watson of all people was captain – is a referendum on whether the Task Force has achieved its stated goal.

As Azinger pointed out, “It’s gotten a little cliquish,” but then he added, “that’s fine as long as they win.”

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Predictions for the Friday foursomes session of the 2023 Ryder Cup

Who will take an early lead in Rome?

The 2023 Ryder Cup gets underway Friday morning with a foursomes session. If you’re unfamiliar, foursomes is alternate shot. In the afternoon, the teams will battle in a fourball (best ball) session.

There are several star-studded tandems going out in the opening matches at Marco Simone Golf and Country Club in Rome, including Xander Schauffele/Patrick Cantlay, Rory McIlroy/Tommy Fleetwood and Jon Rahm/Tyrrell Hatton.

A surprise for the Americans: Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas are sitting for the first session (Brooks Koepka and Wyndham Clark are the other team members not participating in Friday foursomes).

Ryder Cup: Tournament hub

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The Golfweek staff has taken a look at the matchups and has made predictions for all four:

Sam Burns was sitting on the porcelain throne when Ryder Cup Captain Zach Johnson invited him on the team

Words don’t really do it justice.

ROME — Sam Burns won’t be sitting during the first session of the Ryder Cupin fact he will be playing in the opening match of the opening session – but he was sitting when he learned he had made the U.S. team. And not just anywhere. He was sitting on the toilet.

Speaking to SiriusXM’s Taylor Zarzour, Burns recounted – TMI alert – how U.S. Captain Zach Johnson called him with the good news that he was one of six captain’s picks for the U.S. 12-man team.

Johnson sent him a text Sunday night after the Tour Championship letting him know that he should expect a call the following day. After a restless night of staring at the ceiling, Burns was waiting to for his phone to ring and told his wife, Carolyn, that they should get out of the house to pass the time. When they got back, Burns felt the call of nature, and – of course – that’s when his phone rang.

“Literally as soon as I sit down, Justin (Thomas) started texting me, like, ‘Have you heard anything yet?’ While I’m responding to him, Zach called me,” Burns recounted.

Burns, who received a call that he didn’t make the team two years earlier, said he was “mid poop” when Johnson invited him to be a member of his team and he started crying.

“While I’m on the phone, I’m trying to wipe, I’m trying to tell Carolyn, she came around the corner and I gave her a thumbs up,” Burns said. “That’s real life right there.”

Indeed, it is.

Words don’t really do it justice. You can watch Burns tell his story from the throne here.

Pairings announced for Friday foursomes at the 2023 Ryder Cup

Here are the four Friday foursomes matches.

ROME – The wait is almost over.

On Wednesday, at the end of the opening ceremonies of the 44th Ryder Cup, European Captain Luke Donald and U.S. Captain Zach Johnson announced their teams for tomorrow’s opening foursomes session at Marco Simone Golf & Country Club.

To no surprise, the American side is running out some tried and true teams, including Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele, but Johnson elected to sit the duo of Justin Thomas and Jordan Spieth.

“I think it’s an ideal situation where you don’t necessarily want to play everybody all five sessions. I’m not saying that’s what we’re going to do, but you’re taking everything into account,” Johnson said. “Not only that, but the eight guys I have down on paper are the ones that we feel best put us in the position to get off to a great start.”

World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler will pair with his best buddy Sam Burns, who is a Ryder Cup rookie, in the opening match.

“You’ve got some experience in there, and you’ve got some chemistry in there as well,” Johnson said. “Those guys want to get after it, and I’m confident that they can do that.”

The following Americans are sitting during the opening session: Brooks Koepka, Wyndham Clark, Spieth and Thomas.

The European side, which contains players from eight different countries, is led by the likes of Rory McIlroy, Jon Rahm and emerging star Viktor Hovland. Rahm will try to set the tone in the first match with partner Tyrrell Hatton.

“They’re both world-class players, to start, both fantastic ball strikers. They are very passionate,” Donald said. “I think Jon feeds off a playing partner with similar kind of fire and passion. He wants to feel like he’s out there with a teammate that’s really engaged with him. Tyrrell really fits that bill.”

McIlroy will be the bookend, teaming with Englishman Tommy Fleetwood in the anchor match.

In between, Donald is sending out Hovland, who won the FedEx Cup last month, with Sweden’s Ludvig Aberg, the 23-year-old who was playing college golf not long ago.

“Ludvig’s driving, the few tournaments he played on the PGA Tour, he was the No. 1 driver in all of golf, ahead of Rory McIlroy, ahead of Scottie Scheffler in the rankings,” Donald said. “We know driving is important this week and in foursomes, if you’re in the short stuff, it’s going to make life a lot easier.”

Irishman Shane Lowry will partner with Austrian-born Sepp Straka.

The following Europeans are sitting during the opening session: Matt Fitzpatrick, Justin Rose, Robert McIntyre, Nicolai Hjogaard.

The U.S. won the Cup in 2021 at Whistling Straits by a score of 19-9, and needs 14 points to retain the Cup. Here are the first four matches scheduled for Friday morning.

Q&A: Stewart Cink on his tattoo (who knew!), being an airplane snob and whether he’s ever gone to a tanning salon for his bald head

Read our deep dive with Cink here.

This is the Stewart Cink Q&A you didn’t know you needed.

For starters, who knew Cink had a tattoo? But in all seriousness, as one fellow longtime golf writer recently told me, Cink is one of the most underrated thinkers and talkers on golf and life. I don’t disagree and you’ll find out why below.

Cink, the winner of the 2009 British Open, also talks about how he developed a game plan for the playoff with Tom Watson at Turnberry, knowing full well only his wife and family would be rooting for him.

Cink, who played on five Ryder Cup teams (2002, ‘04, ‘06, ‘08, ‘10), is making his first appearance as a U.S. Ryder Cup vice captain for his good friend Zach Johnson this week, and he recounts how Johnson asked him to be his final vice captain for the 44th Ryder Cup.

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Photos: Check out the shoes the Ryder Cup golfers are wearing at Marco Simone

Who’s winning the shoe fashion battle at the 44th Ryder Cup?

There are some serious fashion statements being made at the Ryder Cup.

Golfers from both sides showed off their fancy duds with their wives and girlfriends at the Wednesday night gala.

The fans are already out in force sporting the Red, White and Blue of Team USA or the blue and gold for Team Europe.

There’s plenty of Ryder Cup gear available for fans on-site or rooting on from home.

And we can’t forget about the shoes at the 44th rendition of the biennial matches, taking place this year at Marco Simone Golf & Country Club in Rome, Italy.

The Americans lead the all-time standings at 27-14-2 but since 1979, Europe holds an 11-9 edge.

But who’s winning the shoe fashion battle? You decide.

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