Check out official Solheim Cup team photos and where fans can buy what players will be wearing

Check out the official Solheim Cup team photos and where fans can buy what players will be wearing this week.

The 2023 Solheim Cup teams came together on Tuesday afternoon for official photos in the courtyard entrance of the five-star Hotel Cortesin.

Team USA is outfitted for the first time in Dunning apparel, an American brand. Captain Stacy Lewis delegated most of the uniform decisions to assistant captain Morgan Pressel. With temperatures forecasted in the low- to mid-80s all week in Spain, it will likely be the warmest Cup to date on European soil.

“Dunning is truly the only brand in golf that utilizes cool mesh yarns in all of our polos and actually all of our bottoms as well,” said Mike Elliott, CEO of Dunning Golf. “So it not only does it provide maximum performance, but cooling to the body, so it truly is more comfortable.”

Team Europe, meanwhile, will be outfitted once again in Ping apparel. With this marking the first time the Cup is being contested on Spanish soil, players will wear a “Euro Stripe” print, made from a combination of red and yellow, from the Spanish flag, and European blue.

Fans can purchase the official team uniform for Suzann Pettersen’s squad here.

Team USA fans can buy Solheim team gear here.

Here’s a look at the official 2023 Solheim Cup team photos:

Photos: Best (and worst) Solheim Cup team uniforms over the years

Take a scroll through the Solheim Cup team uniforms of the past and present.

Since the event’s debut in 1990, golf fans have seen an array of Solheim Cup uniforms.

The Americans are usually rocking some display of red, white and blue (of course with a little pink and some stars and stripes) while the Europeans are normally in blue and yellow (with their own fair share of wild accent colors). Even for the 1990s the fashion and style for some of the team uniforms is quite out there.

As the 2023 Solheim Cup in Spain approaches, take a scroll through some of the best (and worst) team uniforms in the competition’s 33-year history.

Why is Team Europe captain Luke Donald reading up a storm? In search of a Ryder Cup edge

Donald has been on a tear through the book store that would make “The Art of War” author Sun Tzu blush.

Luke Donald believes in preparation.

He didn’t become world No. 1 by accident, and he’s brought the same tenacity and work ethic to ensuring that he’s not the first European captain to lose on home soil in 30 years when the Ryder Cup is held from Sept. 29-Oct. 1 at Marco Simone GC in Rome, Italy.

Donald has been planning, scripting for various scenarios so he can take each session as it comes but as he put it, “We’ll have a good plan in place.”

His goal is simple for his team: “I think they’ll be in a good frame of mind, feeling like they can win.”

But to get there, Donald is leaving no stone unturned. For Team Europe, it really began with the Hero World Cup, which pitted a team representing Great Britain and Ireland against a team representing Continental Europe in January. Donald, for instance, got exposed to eventual captain’s pick Sepp Straka, learned from past winning captains such as Thomas Bjorn, Paul McGinley and Jose Maria Olazabal, as well as vice captain Edoardo Molinari, who doubles as stats guru, and was able to experiment with how his statistical models impacted pairings and the like.

Donald also has become a voracious reader. He said he typically reads a book about every six months but has been on a tear through a section that would make Sun Tzu, author of “The Art of War,” blush.

Here’s a handful of the books Donald tells Golfweek he’s been thumbing through in the lead-up to the Ryder Cup: “The Culture Code: The Secrets of Highly Successful People,” “Belonging: The Ancient Code of Togetherness,” “The Art of Winning,” and “Legacy: What the All Blacks Can Teach Us About the Business of Life.”

“I felt like I needed to just pick up ideas, pick up one little thing that might make a difference,” he said.

He’s also talked to coaches in different sports, including past European Ryder Cup captains. That may sound obvious but it hasn’t always been a given. Donald phoned Tony Jacklin, the inspirational leader who was at the helm when Team Europe ended its losing skid in 1985 and won for the first time on U.S. soil.

“He called me and asked me a couple of things and I was happy to convey what I thought,” Jacklin said. “I think he’s going into this thing with his eyes wide open and he’ll do well.”

Who got snubbed in the Team Europe Ryder Cup selection process?

It’s hard to find much fault with the Ryder Cup selections European Team captain Luke Donald made. Still, some did.

It’s hard to find much fault with the Ryder Cup selections Team Europe captain Luke Donald made on Monday morning as he added some aggressive young talent with some wily veterans.

Having Matt Fitzpatrick, Tyrrell Hatton, Viktor Hovland, Robert MacIntyre, Rory McIlroy and Jon Rahm gives the European side a mighty strong base.

The additions of Nicolai Hojgaard and Ludvig Aberg give the team a younger look at a time when the American squad added experience.

Still, some fans were scrutinizing Monday’s announcement and a story at our sister site For The Win, part of the USA Today Sports network, highlighted the perceived snubs:

Ralph Lauren unveils Team USA uniforms for 2023 Ryder Cup in Rome

The Ralph Lauren Ryder Cup collection will be available for purchase beginning Aug. 16 at RalphLauren.com and other retailers.

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Since 2014, Ralph Lauren has been the official uniform provider for the United States Ryder Cup team as well as the U.S. team’s caddies, spouses and partners.

They will continue with this tradition for the highly anticipated 2023 Ryder Cup, set to take place at the picturesque Marco Simone Golf & Country Club in Rome, Italy.

This partnership marks a convergence of timeless elegance and athletic prowess, as Ralph Lauren’s iconic designs will grace a great group of athletes and supporters.

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Drawing inspiration from the rich heritage of both golf and the Ryder Cup itself, Ralph Lauren’s crafted uniforms are poised to evoke a sense of unity and camaraderie among the competitors while paying homage to the red, white and blue.

Ralph Lauren created a bespoke tailoring experience for an array of professional golfers, caddies and PGA executives at this year’s PGA Championship in Rochester, N.Y. to ensure all U.S. team members are fitted with custom-tailored uniforms and apparel upon arrival in Rome.

Ryder Cup 2023 - Team USA
Ryder Cup 2023 – Team USA. (Ralph Lauren)

The brand will provide the U.S. team with uniforms, outerwear and tailored clothing to be worn during the Opening Ceremony and Welcome Dinner as well as upon arrival and during play.

From the meticulously tailored blazers to the performance-driven polo shirts, each piece seamlessly combines form and function, ensuring that the athletes not only look their best but play as good as they look.

 

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Each garment is constructed with high-quality tech fabrics with moisture-wicking properties, stretch and enhanced airflow. Polo shirts are designed for any swing, while pants are lightweight and flexible.

RL always has key layering and inclement-weather pieces. This event will include a cashmere hoodie, cricket sweater, half-zip pullovers, three-layer rain gear and packable windbreaker for whatever weather Rome has in store. 

There are two products exclusive to the Ryder Cup Official Uniforms including a lightweight tech half-zip featuring a new star ombre embossed pattern and five-pocket tailored trousers embossed with an assortment of motifs synonymous with the competition.

U.S. team captain Zach Johnson and vice captain Davis Love III are both Ralph Lauren ambassadors and these uniforms will hit close to home as they are used to supporting the iconic brand.

The 2023 Ryder Cup is set to be a showcase of high-level competition against the United States and Europe but also a celebration of style and sportsmanship, elevated by Ralph Lauren’s timeless touch.

The Ralph Lauren Ryder Cup collection will be available for purchase beginning Aug. 16 at RalphLauren.com and other retailers.

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Potential future captains for Team Europe at the Ryder Cup after trio of DP World Tour resignations

Here are 10 potential future European Ryder Cup captains, including a few new names and some old blood.

The prospects for future European Ryder Cup teams took a hit on both the player and captain side this week.

For a player or captain to be eligible to represent Europe, they must be a DP World Tour member. Sergio Garcia, Ian Poulter and Lee Westwood resigned their memberships on Wednesday, and while all three may have been fringe players for the 2023 event in Italy, the trio were sure-fire future captains given their respective history at the biennial bash against the Americans.

Garcia leads the European side in total points scored (28.5) and boasts an impressive 25-13-7 record, while Westwood is the most capped player with 11 appearances and is tied for the third-most points scored (24) with Bernhard Langer. Poulter has been a chest-thumping thorn in the Americans’ side with his 15–8–2 record, 6-0-1 in singles.

MORE: McIlroy responds to Ryder Cup stars resigning from DP World Tour

While a player who has resigned membership could hypothetically request to rejoin the tour the following year if they still remain eligible in terms of an exempt category, each individual case would vary and be subject to any further sanctions which may be imposed for subsequent breaches of the Conflicting Tournament Regulation, as alluded to in a DP World Tour statement this week.

With players who made the move to LIV Golf seemingly out of the picture for the near future, here’s a look at some potential future European Ryder Cup captains, including a few new names and some old blood.

Henrik Stenson named European Ryder Cup captain for 2023 matches in Italy

The five-time member of Team Europe debuted in 2006 and most-recently competed in 2018.

The Europeans will have an experienced hand at the helm in Italy.

On Tuesday morning it was announced that Henrik Stenson will be the European captain for the 2023 Ryder Cup at Marco Simone Golf and Country Club in Italy. The 45-year-old from Sweden has been a member of five European Ryder Cup teams, most recently in 2018 at Le Golf National in France, and boasts a 10-7-2 record. As a rookie Stenson made the winning putt for Europe at the 2006 matches at the K Club in Ireland.

The news comes two weeks after the United States announced Zach Johnson, a fellow five-time Ryder Cupper, would captain the American squad.

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Lynch: Dodgy decisions, aging stars and poor play ensure Europe’s Ryder Cup dominance is over

There’s actually a reasonable argument that the seeds of Europe’s struggle were sown more than two years ago.

HAVEN, Wisconsin — A consequence of runaway victories in the Ryder Cup is that the post-mortem commences before the deceased has officially even hit the slab, and so it is with the European team that seems likely destined for defeat Sunday at Whistling Straits.

The social media second-guessing was underway by the end of the first session — which shared a demoralizing symmetry with the two that followed it: USA 3, Europe 1 — and built as steadily as the afternoon breeze off Lake Michigan. Even that roomy scoreline might have suggested matters were more competitive than they actually were.

Predictably, criticism has centered on decisions made in combat by Captain Padraig Harrington.

Why bust up Friday morning’s only winning team (Sergio Garcia and Jon Rahm)?

Why send out Lee Westwood and Matt Fitzpatrick in Saturday’s Foursomes when they produced just a single birdie in that same format on Friday?

Why Ian Poulter, his worst ball-striker, for alternate shot, a format in which his struggles would also doom his partner?

Why sit Shane Lowry, who brought an inspiring, fiery intensity to Saturday’s Four-Ball, for two of the first four sessions?

One cynical fan even wondered why Harrington invested so much of the continent’s hopes in players from a nation that had left the European Union — the six English team members had, through three sessions, combined for just two half-points in eight matches.

While dissenters criticized, loyalists rationalized. As Europe fell ever farther adrift, complaints grew about loud-mouthed, abusive fans. There were some (there always are), but the lopsided score in favor of the home team robbed their bellowing of the usual nastiness.

Objection dismissed.

There were suggestions that the absence of European fans due to the pandemic travel ban was hugely impactful — a sleight of speech that ignores one salient fact: had the entire gallery been from Europe, they would still have had nothing to cheer about. There’s not much reason to whoop if your team is finding the center of the clubface as often as a blind man does a black cat in a dark room.

There’s actually a reasonable argument that the seeds of Europe’s struggle were sown more than two years ago, and allowed to take root during the COVID chaos.

In May of 2019, the European Tour’s tournament committee ratified Harrington’s request to reduce his number of captain’s picks from four to three. Later, as the qualification process for both teams was compromised by schedule changes forced by the pandemic, the captains took differing tacks. Steve Stricker got six captain’s picks instead of the usual four, half of his team. Harrington could have pushed for more picks too, but opted against, despite the European Tour schedule being more ravaged than its U.S. counterpart.

He believes forcing guys to qualify is preferable, and that being picked creates more pressure. A defensible outlook, sure, but an optimistic one when a pandemic is upending the schedule and limiting the amount of travel and starts being made by players. In the end, Harrington’s picks have arguably been less disappointing than his automatic qualifiers, particularly those who occupied the final two spots on that list.

Westwood made the team thanks to three second-place finishes (in Dubai to end 2020, and back-to-back weeks in March at the Arnold Palmer Invitational and The Players Championship). In 14 events since, he has one top-20 finish, and that was a T-18. Fitzpatrick won that event in Dubai nine months ago, but has had only one impressive finish since April.

Would they be here if Harrington had fewer automatics and more picks? Possibly. After all, his options were slender. Justin Rose is in middling form. Victor Perez the same, and untested. It’s barely an exaggeration to say Europe’s non-playing vice-captains had more merit than some in its starting lineup.

Harrington has all the attributes one expects in a worthy Ryder Cup captain: an impeccable playing career that brought him three major titles, deep experience in this team competition, the unqualified respect of his players, and a (sometimes manic) attention to detail. Those are traits that often lead to a winning captaincy. Unfortunately, he also has a so-so squad that arrived in beggarly form and that is for the most part performing poorly. That almost guarantees a losing captaincy.

All is not lost, obviously, but the chances of a comeback for the Old World on Sunday are awfully faint. Defeat should not come as a shock. The European empire has held almost unbroken sway for two decades, but this week was always going to be a struggle. Circumstances favored Stricker building a team from America’s next generation. Tiger Woods is sidelined, Phil Mickelson was gracefully ushered to the back benches and old-timers Matt Kuchar and Bubba Watson didn’t qualify. Stricker faced just one tough call, and made the right one: to leave Patrick Reed (and his inner circle) at home.

Harrington, however, had no choice but to bet on the last stand of Europe’s aging generation, to hope for one last stirring lap from thoroughbreds who are, in Ryder Cup terms at least, much more likely to stumble into the glue factory than streak to glory. Not only did the trusty old nags fail to perform, even his show pony — Rory McIlroy — has been woefully disappointing.

For 20 years, American players have heard how they need to be more like the Europeans if they want to own the Ryder Cup again. Regardless of what happens Sunday, that existential crisis is now firmly Europe’s to ponder. They have two years to figure out the generation of players who will build a new empire. Because the old one is over.

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Exclusive: U.S. team coaches claim unfair Ryder Cup treatment, demand what Euro coaches get

Swing instructors and putting coaches working with U.S. team members must pay their own way this week.

HAVEN, Wisconsin — In the run-up to the 43rd Ryder Cup, concern about discord in the ranks of Team USA was focused on the feuding Bryson DeChambeau and Brooks Koepka. But while the bros have kept it civil this week, there is no shortage of tension around the U.S. squad.

It’s just coming from the swing coaches.

Swing instructors and putting coaches working with American team members at Whistling Straits must pay their own way this week, while coaches working with European players have their expenses covered. Europe also permits coaches access to the team rooms at both the golf course and the team hotel, a courtesy not extended to instructors on the American side. All of which has led to a groundswell of grievance among coaches, who have been demanding better treatment by the PGA of America.

“The American coaches pay our own airfare, our own hotel and our food. There’s a hotel we had to stay in to be in whatever bubble they tried to create and it’s about $350 a night after taxes,” said one teacher who works with a prominent member of the U.S. team. “There was even one night when the area where we were supposed to eat to stay in the bubble had been rented out, so we did not have a place where we were allowed to eat.”

The costs for instructors for Ryder Cup week are not insignificant. Three teachers told Golfweek their outlay would be between $4,000 and $5,000, but added that there’s a hidden cost of lost income from not working with other clients at home. One instructor said that was another $5,000 for him. Another suggested, “This is a $10,000 to $20,000 week all in for a lot of guys.”

Which potentially puts instructors in the position of needing to have an awkward conversation with their players about reimbursement.

“All coaches have different deals with their players,” one instructor explained. “A lot of coaches work on percentages, but there’s no purse at the Ryder Cup. If you’re not on a contract with travel and billing, you have nothing to gain being here, even though with the best players in the world it’s expected we would be here. To be reimbursed it would be a conversation out of the norm to our player.”

“The situation it puts us in is we either eat the $5,000 or we complain to our player,” he added.

Access is the other area of contention in Wisconsin. While support staff for European players have access to both team rooms, instructors for U.S. players are welcome at neither.

“I literally just tried to meet my player out back of the team room and couldn’t even get close to the building to meet him,” grumbled one coach.

The access issue extended to the golf course, too. Only after a number of coaches complained did the PGA of America grant them inside the ropes access on tournament days.

“We were not going to be allowed inside the ropes Friday, Saturday and Sunday, which would again have broken the bubble by putting us in the crowd,” a coach said incredulously. “They rectified that one.”

A request for comment by the PGA of America was not answered by publication time.

The range of issues that are causing anger among coaches created tension between them at organizers at the PGA of America.

At least one player on the U.S. team insists instructors ought to be treated as they are by the Europeans — welcomed as members of the team with appropriate access. And that starts with paying their costs.

“They’re making, what, $100 million off this but can’t cover that?” the player asked sarcastically.

Asked if he thought the group of instructors — roughly 20 people in all — would have their costs paid by team members, the player shrugged.

“It depends on the player whether they pay it,” he said.

That player’s instructor says there is a simple remedy to the backroom dissent in Team USA: “We send our invoices for travel and hotel, same as the European side.”

And if he were to send such an invoice to PGA of America headquarters next week, what are the chances it would be paid?

“None,” he said. “They wouldn’t even receive it.”

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First point on the board for Europe? Inspiring Ryder Cup team video highlights rarity of the experience.

European Ryder Cup Captain Padraig Harrington is using this video to pump up his team. Take a look.

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HAVEN, Wisc. – Team Europe might as well have just scored the first point of Ryder Cup week with its hype video.

European Ryder Cup captain Padraig Harrington showed his team a 2 minute, 33 second video titled, “We’re the 164,” that gave goose bumps to his team and has since been posted to social media.

There have been 5,780 people who have climbed Mount Everest, 570 have been to space, 445 won the World Cup, 353 European track and field Olympic gold medalists, and 225 men who have won a major. Only 164 men have had the privilege to wear the Team Europe crest in Ryder Cup competition.

The point being, as Lee Westwood, put it, “You have a far greater chance of going into space or climbing Mount Everest than you have representing Europe in the Ryder Cup.”

“When you sort of break it down like that, it’s a pretty small group and it’s pretty cool,” said Rory McIlroy. “That’s a pretty small group of players. I’m No. 144; I think Lee (Westwood, who made his debut in 1997) is No. 118. But then you just look at all the players before you, and you look at Bernd Wiesberger who’s making his debut this year who’s No. 164.”

In the video, numerous former European Ryder Cup stalwarts recite their numbers from Tony Jacklin (No. 64) to Sam Torrance (No. 94) to Darren Clarke (No. 115).

“It was very powerful. I didn’t know my number,” said Sergio Garcia, who is No. 120. “I’ve always known that being a part of the Ryder Cup team is very difficult, but I didn’t know that only that little amount of players have made it. So that showed you how difficult it really is.

“That’s why every time I’m a part of a team or the rest of our teammates, that’s why we give it the respect that it deserves, because it’s so difficult to be a part of it. It’s an honor, and we treat it like that.”

The video ends with the faces of nine former captains saying, “Make it count.”

If you’re a fan of Team Europe, your goosebumps have goosebumps.

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