The U.S. Ryder Cup Team Can No Longer Be Taken Seriously
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The U.S. Ryder Cup Team Can No Longer Be Taken Seriously

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The U.S. Ryder Cup Team Can No Longer Be Taken Seriously

This past week, Jim Furyk was selected as the 2027 U.S. Ryder Cup captain.

You can forgive American golf fans for the tepid, borderline apathetic response to such an uninspired move.

For one, Furyk served as Ryder Cup captain in 2018 when the Americans were trounced in Paris. Furyk couldn’t do much about an exhausted Tiger Woods laying an egg that week—Woods went 0-4-0 the week after winning the Tour Championship—but it wasn’t exactly a virtuoso captaincy. Furyk broke up the Jordan Spieth-Patrick Reed pairing, tried to match Phil Mickelson with Bryson DeChambeau and greatly underestimated how critical off-the-tee accuracy would be at Le Golf National.

For another, the Americans haven’t won a road Ryder Cup since the early days of the Clinton administration. Luke Donald, coming off of two consecutive successful captaincies, was selected for a third nearly two months ago. Donald has already been on the grounds scouting Adare Manor in Ireland, host of the 2027 match. It feels like Furyk is being fed to the wolves here as the Americans will be massive underdogs.

But the biggest factor of all is that the PGA of America no longer takes the Ryder Cup seriously. Actually, it does take the event seriously—it takes making money off the event seriously.

Winning the event? That isn’t nearly as important.

And, in turn, American golf fans shouldn’t waste the energy getting invested.

The U.S. team is the New York Mets. They should be better based on talent and resources but the people running the operation don’t know what they are doing.

So that American apathy about the Ryder Cup? It’s deserved.

The Europeans are lightyears ahead of the Americans

Over the past 15 Ryder Cups, the Europeans have won 11.

It’s not because of a talent advantage. On paper, the Americans should usually win the match.

So why don’t they?

I think it comes down to two variables.

  • The Europeans have built a detailed system over four decades. Every captain has accumulated extensive experience both as a player and vice-captain. Analytics have been taken seriously for many years. There is a culture of veteran players taking rookies under their wing. When at home, they tailor their course to fit the skillset of their team. The Americans have not done this.
  • The event matters deeply. The Ryder Cup is personal. It mattered to their predecessors like Seve Ballesteros so they feel like there is a responsibility to continue that tradition. It’s more than a golf tournament. The Americans care as well but the obsession with winning is not at the same level.

The evidence here is ample. Just look at the aforementioned decision for the Europeans to make Donald captain again. The Americans haven’t had a repeat captain since Ben Hogan in the 1940s. And the most successful, innovative U.S. captain in recent memory—Paul Azinger in 2008—never got another chance to lead the team.

The best the Americans have done in recent memory is trying to copy the European captaincy model as much as possible but all of that seems pretty half-hearted now given the mind-numbing decision to make Keegan Bradley the captain in 2025.

Bradley had minimal Ryder Cup playing experience and had never been a vice-captain. He was chosen out of thin air, probably because he was a sentimental figure who played college golf in the area. Probably because he would sell more tickets.

He proved to be a decidedly bad captain, getting the course setup wrong and trying to jam the statistically poor pairing of Harris English and Collin Morikawa down our throats (twice).

The U.S. team almost overcame his captaincy with a wild rally in singles. It wasn’t enough. Had the team had another captain with some experience, they probably would have won.

The U.S. team is stuck in a bad cycle

Of course, the issue now is that potential American Ryder Cup captains don’t have much positive experience. Anyone with experience has probably seen a lot of losing.

If the PGA of America doesn’t really care that much about winning, why not really shake things up?

Instead of half-heartedly copying the Europeans, maybe the Americans should take a completely different approach to team golf.

Forget trying to make a recycled veteran the captain. Let’s bring in Nick Saban. Hey, he’s American and loves golf. I bet he would be an amazing CEO. I’m sure College Gameday would let him have the weekend off for the Ryder Cup.

I’m mostly joking … but not completely joking.

I don’t think it’s that crazy. Get someone who is an incredible motivator. Someone who knows how to delegate. Someone who understands the importance of the event.

Maybe it’s someone from within golf but not a previous player/captain.

At least try something because the Ryder Cup is dying from European dominance. The U.S. team and everyone involved can’t be taken seriously.

If it’s already a losing battle, at least do something interesting.

Top Photo Caption: Jim Furyk at the 2025 Ryder Cup. (GETTY IMAGES/Darren Carroll)

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Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean is a longtime golf journalist and underachieving 10 handicap who enjoys the game in all forms. If he didn't have an official career writing about golf, Sean would spend most of his free time writing about it anyway. When he isn't playing golf, you can find Sean watching his beloved Florida Panthers hockey team, traveling to a national park or listening to music on his record player. He lives in Nashville with his wife, Anja, and dog, Hogan.

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

 
Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm





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      Robert G

      1 week ago

      I agree with the article. Why in American sports- is it ok to bring in re-treads that were dismissed from their previous teams. If they were winners, probably not fired. Are there some exceptions, yes but most had losing records.

      Furyk
      10-20-4

      He is most likely an awesome person, and respected by his peers, but not a Ryder Cup winner. Your record shows/ speaks for who you are.

      In business, it is imperative to think outside of the box- or you can get left behind. Change is good and necessary.

      Reply

      Dave Sanguinetti

      1 month ago

      What’s wrong with the Ryder Cup ? Read these posts. What is wrong with all of you ! There is nothing but MONEY GRABBING in all of sport today World Fooball for you Ruropeans is embarrassing, all current sports focus is how much or little some player or coach is being paid. Always it is the MONEY that is where the main focus is placed! Who the Captain is or who the players are is completely secondary. It ain’t getting any better– as the new saying goes ” Duh, it is what it is” !!!!!!!!!!!!!!

      Reply

      Harish Mohabir

      1 month ago

      The Ryder Cup is an excellent tournament spoilt by the need to make excessive profits at the expense of the paying public. However, the apathy of the American golfers is also to blame for the continued defeats. They are not team players but rather focused on themselves only. Evidence of this is the defeats in the 4-ball and 4-somes but excelling at singles. Creating a team culture will help. Perhaps a left field choice of captain like a Jerry Kelly or similar may offer a way forward.

      Reply

      mg

      1 month ago

      We have no Lanny Watkins, Paul Azinger, or a Ray Floyd. These guys were ready for battle.

      Reply

      Tom Morris

      1 month ago

      To call Europe’s team “European” is a joke. Most of the “European” Ryder Cup team have played at a University in America and have lived in America for well over a decade. They regularly play the PGA tour, and a lot of them live in the same community in Jupiter, Florida, where they all practice and play at the same club, just like other PGA touring pros. They know each other’s games as well as most people know their Saturday foursome’s games. The Ryder Cup should really be billed as “America vs. America,” but that isn’t as glitzy as “America vs. Europe.”

      Reply

      sean

      1 month ago

      What has where you went to University got to do with it? If your children cross the Atlantic and go to University in UK, Ireland, Spain, France or Germany, do they become European? If you up sticks from Florida to California, do you become a Californian?

      The European have English, German, French, Norwegian, Swedish, Italian etc as their first languages, EUROPEAN languages. They were BORN in European countries, they grew up largely in European countries.

      I live in a different country to where I was born, does that change my nationality?

      This is one of the most stupid comments I have ever seen on MGS.
      It really is as stupid as saying it’s technically Europe v Europe as Yanks originated from Europeans.

      Reply

      birdie dancer

      1 month ago

      #1 is the Question of why ???? in the world are US Colleges giving full ride scholarships to Europeans or any non American citizens to begin with? College Golf is on TV now watch a match…u might notice half the players are from out of country, then u might ask yourself if in your town there’s a kid that needs a full ride scholarship, as opposed to one living in Norway or Spain.

      Vince Vi

      1 month ago

      The Ryder Cup is my favorite event in all of sports. The captain should not have such a significant impact on the players ability to perform in my opinion. At the end of the day, the US players have not made the clutch shots or putts when they needed them most. But Furyk is an uninspiring choice.

      Reply

      sean

      1 month ago

      Americans don’t play international sport in real terms, culturally, Americans focus on individual talent, even in their domestic sports with awards like MVP’s.
      Europe focusses on teams, team ethic and is in tune more with the supporters, probably because of the Football (soccer to you), rugby, cricket backgrounds we all come from.

      Americans also don’t really understand rivalry properly, they can’t separate an opponent from an enemy and they can’t tell the difference between passion and patriotism. That’s why the rest of the world sees US support as both laughable and embarrassing.

      Reply

      birdie dancer

      1 month ago

      Europeans invented “the participation trophy” Sean… Culturally arrogant Europhiles must now accept fact the US has been propping Europe up for the past 80 years Sean. PS American’s can’t separate rivalry??? let’s compare the violence after euro soccer matches compared to US football…. What’s actually embarrassing is watching Europe lose it’s culture while it sits on it’s hands being overrun in the name of woke diversity..

      Reply

      Sean

      1 month ago

      What are you talking about? I’m referencing moronic American fans at golf events and their embarrassing Ryder Cup and Waste Management behaviour against anyone who isn’t a Yank, not the mortuary atmosphere and toe curling chants at US Football matches or the whatabouterry of European football matches, which haven’t been especially violent for decades.

      How has America been propping up Europe? What sort of nonsense is this? Propping up what and how? You’re probably one of these people who thing you saved us in WW2.

      WYBob

      1 month ago

      By picking Jim Furyk it feels as if the American side has already raised the white flag. His last captaincy led to a 17.5 – 10.5 shellacking in Paris for a myriad of reasons (discussed extensively at the time). If the USA loses at Adare Manor I can hear the excuses already (hard to win in Europe, course set up, green speed, yada, yada, yada) but they no longer hold water. IMHO if the Americans want to get seriously competitive in the Ryder Cup going forward the first step is to wrestle control of the U.S. team away from PGA America. They can’t seem to get out of their own way when it comes to the Ryder Cup. Set up a committee similar to the US Olympic Committee and staff it with former winning Ryder Cup and Presidents Cup captains plus other leading American golfing thought leaders. The second step is to go back to the POD System and let each POD chose it’s wildcard picks. In 2027 each POD would have two automatic qualifiers and then be able to select 2 additional players. After selection to a POD, the first selected player would join the two automatic qualifiers to pick the 4th member of the POD. That way each of the three PODs would have buy-in on the composition and competitiveness of their POD. Hold a draft where each Pod drafts its two players similar to how other pro leagues hold a draft. It’s time to build the USA Team based on who is currently a “beast” on the tour, and not reward complacent players resting on reputation. The players know who is playing exceptional golf in the months and weeks leading up to the Ryder Cup. Take advantage of that. Just a chip shot from the fringe.

      Reply

      Gary T

      1 month ago

      I’m European, and I love the Ryder Cup. While it is nice to see us spank the US regularly, it would be nice to watch a really competitive three days of golf every now and then. Honestly, if I were somebody in charge of the US team, I would do everything I could to get Tony Robbins involved for the week. I have no idea whether he’s ever played golf, but I imagine he’d get the absolute most out of the US players.

      Reply

      Eric Marshall

      1 month ago

      Having witnessed the temperament of Keegan Bradley at the Rocket Classic last year (I was a ShotLink spotter) I knew he was poorly suited as a team leader and predicted right then that the USA didn’t stand a chance. They need a charismatic player who can bring the players together as a TEAM. The Europeans ALWAYS manage this and show true team spirit – something the USA team completely lacked! In my humble opinion, someone like Peter Malnati would make a much better captain!

      Reply

      Robert Stout

      1 month ago

      Yeah, we’re always great on paper… if you watch the GC consistently, you’ll notice how McGinnley just KNOWS that we’re gonna get out a$$e$ kicked, bet he just let Brandel spew. Sorry but our
      teams are made up of a buch of prima donnas that don’t know how to play as a team.

      Reply

      Jon Silverberg

      1 month ago

      I have been playing at Bethpage for decades. The people I know who were assigned to Bethpage during the practice days have told me that watching the Europeans and the Americans prepare was like night and day, especially their work on the greens. The Europeans concentrated on learning the green topology and worked hard at it. The Americans and their caddies appeared to believe that they knew how to prepare for golf already, and that the details of the venue weren’t particularly important. Enough said.

      Reply

      Andrew the Great!

      1 month ago

      “Furyk couldn’t do much about an exhausted Tiger Woods laying an egg that week” ~ YES he could! He could’ve been a man about it, and NOT picked a clearly not-prime Tiger for the team, AND, he could’ve been a man about it and NOT picked a clearly not-prime 48-year-old Phil for the team (he used him in just ONE of the four team sessions), AND, he could’ve had at least half a brain and not put an ineffective (and probably tired) Tiger out in both of Saturday’s sessions.

      His “captain’s picks” were atrociously safe and criticism-insulating (like a manager pulling the starter who gave up 5 hits and 1 run through 8 innings, to bring in the closer because “that’s what the book says” and then the closer blows the save), which made his picks stupid and SHOULD have been disqualifying this time ’round.

      And no, this is not Monday Morning Quarterbacking. I was b*tching about Furyk’s picks the moment he made them.

      Reply

      David Alderman

      1 month ago

      The Ryder Cup has become a joke at least from the American perspective. Anyone who thought we would win doesn’t watch much golf. The Europeans care with a passion that the Americans are lacking. Lastly, the Ryder Cup was awful to watch. American fans are the worst! I recommend the next Ryder Cup in the US take a page from the Masters. Ditch the cell phones, toss unruly @-holes, bring some dignity back to the event!

      Reply

      robert stout

      1 month ago

      totally agree!!

      Reply

      Mike Bissette

      1 month ago

      Typical American response when they fail. Oh, we don’t care. lol Until next event. Then you care until the losing starts. Then it’s flip the script and turn coat and play it down. All ego, with little substance, Americans in general right there. Just another reflection of the collective consciousness of the USA. More of a joke every day.

      Reply

      Brian Jergenson

      1 month ago

      To Mike Bissette: Not all of us Americans are what you just described ! I love watching the Ryder Cup whether we win or lose. But here’s what I think is a BIG problem. MONEY. The players have to get paid, the PGA has to make as much money as they can. So it’s just all about making MONEY. I watched Jacklin & Nicklaus walk off arm in arm when I was a kid. They didn’t sell all the merchandise then, and they didn’t sell $750 tickets including all your food & drinks for the day. Then it all turns in to a wrestling match yelling and swearing at the players. They should either fix it or get rid of it, because last year was a disaster, and if it can’t get back to normal it just shouldn’t be played at all.

      BH

      1 month ago

      Enter Mike, the typical Euro… “All Americans are the same” blah blah…

      PA

      1 month ago

      Was just watching Full Swing and thinking they should make Jordan captain.

      Reply

      birdie dancer

      1 month ago

      “the team” needs someone who has actual experience leading a winning team. which 99.9999% of pro golfers are awful at and have no experience doing. “the team” needs a non-golfer coach/capitan who has extensive experience in creating a winning culture implementing processes that will continue winning consistently.. a coach with gravitas like a Nick Saban or others of his professional caliber.

      Reply

      Andrew the Great!

      1 month ago

      Exactly right, and you and I and many others have been saying this for a long time. But the clowns who run the PGA of America have zero wits about them, so they keep doing stupid sh*t. Nick Saban and Mike Krzyzewski, for example. Does NOT have to be someone from within the golf ecosystem.

      Reply

      KJC

      1 month ago

      Now that’s a shake up. Think Dream Team, Money Ball, Doge. Put a system in place with ongoing oversight. Until then, I won’t be watching.

      Reply

      Gary T

      1 month ago

      ‘Doge’? That’s the answer! Get Elon to spend the week in the US team room, and racing around the venue in a golf cart (made by Tesla, obviously). Probably best to tell him to leave the chainsaw at home, though!

      Gary

      1 month ago

      It matters to Europeans to win a Ryder Cup. A major, and a Ryder Cup win are career goals for a Euro. Americans just want to make the team. That’s what it feels like. Americans have the President’s Cup and we fail to take advantage of it. Use the President’s cup to build Captains and younger players. It’s a great opportunity for a “farm system”. We can learn pairings and team development. We also need to buy into the kind of system Europe uses, not only with analytics, but the European teams use full time staff to handle accommodations, travel, food etc. None of that should be on the captains. We can easily build out a process with President’s Cup, full time staff and development. Our Captain selections has always been sort of a choice based on legacy vs. actually being the best person for the job. Azinger offered to work full time in leadership for the Ryder Cup, but I don’t believe the PGA bought into the idea. Let him build the framework, people and process he wants to create a system for success. That’s what Europe did.

      Reply

      Andrew the Great!

      1 month ago

      All that would be great, but it would require buy-in from the clowns who run the PGA of America. And if we’ve learned one thing about the PGAoA over the years, it’s that they are truly run by clowns who have not a brain cell among them.

      Reply

      Kenny Kraut

      1 month ago

      You nailed it, Sean. I used to live and die with every shot of Ryder Cup weekend. My stomach would churn, over the excitement and being invested in a US win. My stomach now churns from feelings of dread and shame.

      Reply

      CB

      1 month ago

      The American Ryder Cup crowds can no longer be taken seriously. They are mostly idiots who can’t keep their mouths shut. But at least it’s fun to watch on mute.

      Reply

      Rich

      1 month ago

      And I’m sure they’ll be really torn up to hear you say that. Fans are usually the ones who demand to be “taken seriously”…

      Reply

      Red Pill Pharmacy

      1 month ago

      Correct. The vast majority of Americans are shameless barbarians, unwashed philistines with fat bellies, skin vandalized by tattoos, and brains scrambled by pharmaceuticals and propaganda.

      Americans are unworthy opponents without a shred of class. On this basis, the Europeans should bow out of the Ryder Cup.

      Reply

      robert stout

      1 month ago

      tell us how you really feel

      Tim

      1 month ago

      You are nothing but a clown. Professional golfers today are mostly whiners and the Euro’s have more of them than anyone. Have you seen McIlroy , Rose, Hatton, MacIntyre, Rahm, Garcia or others throwing tantrums on the course? So who has no class? These are all of your heloes and a bunch of children when things don’t go their way.

      Brian Jergenson

      1 month ago

      To Red Pill: We’re not all what you discribed us as, but I am 65 and have a fat belly ! But I do agree with you on this. Americans got what, $500,000 last year to play. And they still looked like they didn’t give a sh#t about even being there !
      And if the only way the PGA of America can make money for themselves is raise the ticket prices every two years and then attempt to run a Ryder Cup (which we already know they can’t) then maybe the United States should back out of the Ryder Cup. But what happened last year at Bethpage should NEVER be allowed to happen again.

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