Keegan Bradley Calls for Rule Change in Ryder Cup
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Ryder Cup, American and Verbal Abuse
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Europe, Ryder Cup and United States
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Thriving across 11 one-on-one matches, the U.S. unintentionally proved the point its team has been forced to relearn every two years: The Ryder Cup is about the collective, not the individual.
Golf legend Tom Watson called out United States fans for the way they treated the European team during the Ryder Cup.
Trump's remarks come after McIlroy's comments Sunday, when he said the abuse from fans at the Ryder Cup 'got to me a few times.'
The top players on the United States and Europe will go head to head as the Americans aim to avoid a historic loss
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In rematch vs. 'Fleetwood Mac,' US Ryder Cup pairing of English and Morikawa gets the same result
It might be fair to say nobody was going to beat a Ryder Cup duo on a roll — one that's so good, it has its own nickname, "Fleetwood Mac."
Even before things completely fell apart for the United States on the first day of play at the Ryder Cup on Friday, NBA legend and golf superfan Michael Jordan could tell the Americans were in trouble.
Entering the second day of the Ryder Cup trailing on its own soil, the United States was in need of a spark to forge a comeback at Bethpage Black. But to the surprise of many, captain Keegan Bradley decided to stick with the pairing of Collin Morikawa and Harris English for their match against Rory McIlroy and Tommy Fleetwood.
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Biggest Ryder Cup blowouts: Where Europe's 2025 runaway lead over USA would rank in golf history
In 1967, when the United States faced only Great Britain, Team USA ran away with a 23.5-8.5 victory. That 15-point margin remains the largest blowout in Ryder Cup history and came during a stretch of dominance so complete that Great Britain eventually expanded to include Ireland and all of Europe.