Kevin Na dishes on his Ryder Cup ‘You didn’t make the team’ call from Steve Stricker

“It’s a captain’s call. I respect his decision. Do I disagree? Yeah, I disagree,” Kevin Na said.

NAPA, Calif. – After Kevin Na finished third at the Tour Championship, he was so bullish about his chances of being selected to the U.S. Ryder Cup team that he said he was going to text U.S. Captain Steve Stricker and state his case.

“I did. I texted and called him,” Na said following the opening round of the Fortinet Championship. “We had a good talk on Sunday.”

Stricker’s call on Monday was not so good. “He called me Monday and said, ‘I don’t have good news,” Na recalled. “You didn’t get picked.’ ”

“It sucks. It’s disappointing. He has a tough job. I don’t take it personal. No one deserves anything. It’s a captain’s call. I respect his decision. Do I disagree? Yeah, I disagree,” he said. “I just have to play better.”

But Na, who ranked No. 19 in the U.S. Ryder Cup point standings, also pointed out, “How much better could I have played?” noting that if Stricker wanted the hot hand on his roster he finished T-2 at the John Deere Classic, lost in a playoff at the Wyndham Championship, notched a T-8 at the Northern Trust, and finished third at the Tour Championship, where he played the final 57 holes bogey-free and tied Jon Rahm for the low 72-hole aggregate.

“It didn’t matter what happened at the Tour Championship. (Stricker) already had his mind set. That’s my personal opinion,” Na said. “I think it would have been great if I played for the team. I think I could have really brought some good energy and I could’ve really contributed and disappointing that I won’t get the chance to do that.”

The knock against Na is that he’s a short knocker, who ranked No. 172 in driving distance last season and that Whistling Straits, the site of the 43rd Ryder Cup next week, is a big ballpark that favors the bombers. Na said what matters most is how you’re playing and he also argued that he could’ve been paired with a long driver in alternate shot (foursomes).

“If I had Bryson DeChambeau as my partner hitting driver, I’d be stuffing wedge in there or short irons. I’m a good putter, a good chipper. I mean, so all these years you’re telling me that the U.S. team has been struggling because they had lack of length? No, if anything it has been putting, guys able to make putts under the gun. But it’s over.”

When Na was reminded that Stricker may have to make a call to the bullpen for a fill-in player for a variety of possible reasons, he said, “They ain’t calling me. I don’t think he told anybody to stand by. I hope everyone’s healthy and I hope everyone plays. We don’t want any issues.”

But…

“There you go. Of course, you’re going to say, but,” he said with a smile. “Of course, I’d love to play. I’d be honored to play. I’ll have my bags packed and be on a plane in an hour.”

Na said he planned to watch the Ryder Cup on TV, and already is pointing ahead to the Presidents Cup and his next chance to represent the stars and stripes in international competition.

“I’m motivated. I’m going to take this fire and try to win in Napa,” said Na, who shot 3-under 69 in the first round of the Fortinet Championship despite a cold putter. “I just got to finish in the top 8 to qualify for Presidents Cup. I don’t know if these fall events count, but that’s my new goal.”

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Scottie Scheffler may just be the most important captain’s pick on this year’s U.S. Ryder Cup team

Scottie Scheffler shines when the lights are the brightest – he’ll do it again at Whistling Straits

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Back on August 29, six players automatically qualified for the U.S. Ryder Cup team – Dustin Johnson, Brooks Koepka, Justin Thomas, Patrick Cantlay, Collin Morikawa, and Bryson DeChambeau. On Wednesday, the final six were finally added to the roster – Jordan Spieth, Xander Schauffele, Tony Finau, Harris English, Scottie Scheffler, and Daniel Berger.

Three of captain Steve Stricker’s picks will be making their first appearance in the Ryder Cup. This decision came with some surprise as Stricker left off several veterans including Patrick Reed and Webb Simpson.

While Jordan Spieth and Tony Finau bring leadership to the locker room, Scottie Scheffler may just be the most important player picked by captain Stricker.

Ryder Cup: Meet Team USA | Meet Team Europe

In 2021, Scottie Scheffler did not finish outside the top 20 in a major championship – that record includes three top 10s. At the Dell Technologies Match Play at Austin Country Club back in March, he made it all the way to  the championship match.

After beating Xander Schauffele in a playoff, Scheffler advanced to the round of 16. He would go on to beat Ian Poulter, a European Ryder Cup monster, 5 and 4, Jon Rahm, the number one golfer in the world, 3 and 1, and Matt Kuchar, past match play champion and Ryder Cup vet, 1 up, before losing in the finals.

What does this all mean? Scheffler shows up when the lights are the brightest. He’s not afraid to stare down the best players in the world and compete until the bell rings.

Prime example: The Round of 16 at the Match Play. Ian Poulter drained a 40 footer for birdie to potentially move two down headed to No. 12. Then Scheffler did this.

Cold blooded from the youngster.

Over his last 36 rounds, Scottie ranks inside the top 20 in strokes gained off-the-tee, tee-to-green, and total. He was 36th in driving distance (305.0 yards) last season on Tour, while having the fourth best driving accuracy number on this Ryder Cup team (64.14%). Lastly, he was 7th in birdie average during his 2020-2021 campaign.

What I’m trying to say is this: his game fits Whistling Straits perfectly, he’ll be put in a situation to contribute, and he’ll answer the call.

He’s done it all season long.

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Forward Press Podcast: Previewing the Team USA’s captain’s picks for Whistling Straits

The gang gathers together to discuss who the six U.S. Ryder Cup captain’s picks should be for Whistling Straits.

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Welcome to episode 103 of Forward Press, a weekly podcast from Golfweek.

In this edition of the Forward Press Podcast, Golfweek’s Steve DiMeglio, David Dusek and Adam Schupak all got together to discuss who they think the six captain’s picks should be for Steve Stricker and the U.S. Ryder Cup team for Whistling Straits later this month.

As always, you can download the Forward Press podcast and listen on all of your favorite platforms, including: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Spotify | Castbox | Radio Public.

Did you like what you heard? You can catch up on previous episodes of the Forward Press podcast here.

U.S. Ryder Cup team to gather at Whistling Straits for 2-day practice session. Why it could give them an edge.

It’s not unusual for a U.S. Ryder Cup captain to host a reconnaissance session.

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The U.S. Ryder Cup team won’t make the same mistake twice.

This time, local knowledge won’t be a problem. U.S. Captain Steve Stricker is scheduled to host a two-day practice session at Whistling Straits, Sept. 12-13, with as many of the 12-man squad as possible.

“There’s a bunch of guys who haven’t played the golf course,” said U.S. assistant captain Davis Love III. “We might get everybody but at least as many as 10 guys will be up there to play a two-day practice round during this week off (on the PGA Tour).”

The reason for doing so is quite simple, Love explained.

“They had us over a barrel in Paris because we didn’t have enough practice rounds at (Le Golf National),” he said of the course that the European Tour played regularly as the annual site of the French Open. “The other team knew the golf course way better.”

But Love said that won’t happen again.

“We’re going to focus on breaking down the course over the next couple of weeks until we get there,” he said. “It’s important for us to gather local knowledge and pass it on to the guys that don’t have the intimate knowledge as guys like DJ.”

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Whistling Straits has hosted the PGA Championship in 2004, 2010 and 2015, and several members of both sides will have played it before, but there’s still much to learn, Love said.

“In 2016, even though Hazeltine was a course we’d played in major championships, did we really know the course that well?” Love said. “Tiger helped us learn what questions to ask and what to look for. It’s not everybody hit 7-iron on this hole and it’s a 6. He said, ‘Let’s talk to the head pro, the best caddie, the top players among the members.’ Tiger showed us how to get ready for the course in ’16. We learned a lot of why he beat us all those years.”

It’s not unusual for a U.S. Ryder Cup captain to host a reconnaissance session. Love recalled Dave Stockton suggesting he play Kiawah in 1991 in case he picked him – he didn’t. In 1995, Lanny Wadkins organized a side trip to play Ryder Cup site Oak Hill during the week of the B.C. Open. Other Ryder Cup captains have held practice sessions for the overseas match around the British Open – Tom Kite hired a Gulfstream to take players to Valderrama in Spain to prepare; Tom Lehman did it for K Club and Jim Furyk did it for Le Golf National.

The difference is the timing – less than two weeks before the biennial competition begins – and the number of players.

“If Stricker pulls off 10 or more, he’ll have the most,” Love said.

Love, a two-time Ryder Cup captain, brought players to Medinah in 2012 and Hazeltine in 2016, but he invited 20 players ahead of time, well before he’d know for sure who was going to be on the team.

So, while many members of the European side will be busy competing at the BMW Championship in England, the U.S side will be gathering at Whistling Straits in Wisconsin on Sunday, Sept. 12 and Monday, Sept. 13 to prepare for the Ryder Cup so that by the time the biennial competition begins, the hard work will be done.

“This time we’re going to know our 12,” he said. “I told Brooks Koepka that Sunday night at The American Club two weeks outs might be one of the great weeks of your Ryder Cup experience.”

Home-field advantage, Love noted, should mean more than just a partisan crowd,

“I’m lobbying to stay for four days,” Love added. “we’re going to have more practice rounds than them, more rounds in major championships than them and our captains will know the course better than them.”

Did Kevin Na play himself onto the U.S. Ryder Cup team? ‘I think I’m looking strong for a pick’

Kevin Na’s third-place finish at East Lake may have tipped the scales in his favor for making his first U.S. Ryder Cup team.

Kevin Na didn’t win the FedEx Cup, but his third-place finish may have tipped the scales in his favor for making his first U.S. Ryder Cup team.

“I couldn’t have played any better,” Na said. “I had one bogey for 72 holes, last three rounds bogey-free (57 holes in a row). … That’s pretty good.”

Na, 37, started the week eight strokes behind Patrick Cantlay at 2 under but fired four rounds in the 60s at East Lake, including a final-round 67, and shot 14 under, which tied Jon Rahm for the low 72-hole aggregate at the Tour Championship in Atlanta.

“I was trying to win that secret leaderboard, where everybody started from even par, to get Captain Stricker’s attention, so I could get a captain’s pick,” said Na, who ranked 19th in the U.S Ryder Cup point standings.

Na reached the par-5 18th in two and coaxed his eagle putt near the hole for a finishing birdie that was worth $1 million – the difference between third and fourth place in the FedEx Cup. Na, one of the shorter hitters on the PGA Tour (No. 172 in driving distance), said he drove it beautifully all week, which set up birdie opportunities. It taught him an important lesson.

“No matter what golf course I play, if I’m on, I can play,” he said. “This is a golf course that I always felt like it didn’t really suit my game. Hitting 2 to 3 clubs more than everybody else on every hole, greens are firm, if you miss the fairway for me there’s no chance out of the rough for me.”

Tour Championship
Kevin Na tees off at the 2nd hole during the final round of the Tour Championship. (Adam Hagy-USA TODAY Sports)

Na, who won the Sony Open in January, is playing some of the best golf of his career at the right time. He has made a strong case for one of six captain’s picks allotted to Steve Stricker to round out the U.S. 12-man team, which will be announced on Wednesday. Can Stricker really justify not taking the player who finished third in the FedEx Cup and did everything but win during the last six weeks?

“I did the best I could,” said Na, who said he plans to text Stricker. “I have two runner-up finishes in the last six starts, another Top-10 at a playoff event and maybe win or second here (in the 72-hole stroke-play aggregate.) So, I mean, from where I started to finish third in the FedEx Cup, eight shots back, I think I’m looking strong for a pick.”

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