Europe, Ryder Cup
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United States Ryder Cup captain Keegan Bradley isn't a fan of the event's envelope rule after it resulted in the U.S. losing a half-point during Sunday's singles action.
Tensions at the 2025 Ryder Cup in Long Island, NY boil over as European players face unprecedented fan gears and gestures on their way to victory.
Europe won the Ryder Cup for the second straight time but that does not begin to tell the story of what happened at Bethpage.
Barring something miraculous (for the Americans) and/or calamitous (for the Europeans), this Ryder Cup is a wrap. Europe has won the tournament just four times on U.S. soil (1987, 1995, 2004, 2012), but a fifth conquest appears inevitable.
Rayee Feng, who led Pingry to a high school state championship in the spring, earned a spot on the U.S. Junior Ryder Cup team alongside the nation’s other top young golfers. And when the competition was held last week, at nearby Nassau Country Club, it was the New Jersey native who found herself securing the cup-clinching point
Rory McIlroy repeatedly sparred with unruly American fans during this weekend's Ryder Cup event in New York and called out their behavior.
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.
Rory McIlroy took the most abuse from the New York fans at the Ryder Cup and at times he gave it back. It was loud.
There's no shortage of people with opinions about the United States' disappointing performance at the 2025 Ryder Cup and where the Americans go from here
Because of that, the United States will need a historic comeback on the Black Course at Bethpage State Park in Farmingdale, New York, on Sunday to win the 45th Ryder Cup competition. Europe will enter Sunday’s 12 singles matches with an 11.5-4.5 lead. The largest deficit overcome on a Sunday in the Ryder Cup is four points.