Two years ago, at the Ryder Cup at Marco Simone Golf and Country Club in Rome, a controversy brewed.Â
A day before the event, a reporter had asked European captain Luke Donald this:
âSorry to hit you with this on the eve of the tournament, but following exhaustive investigations, itâs come to our attention youâve got an American wife. And the phrase âsleeping with the enemyâ comes to mind. So I just wonder how tricky is it going to be this week for you? I wonder if you talk in your sleep.â
âNot tricky at all,â Donald said. âMy wifeâs parents were born in Greece. She has a lot of strong European roots, and my number one fan. Thereâs quite a few guys on our team that have U.S. wives. Itâs really not a problem. They are 100 percent behind us.â
âShe wants Europe to win?â
âOf course.â
And that was that. From there, the biennial event played on without any heat.Â
LOL. Not quite.Â
As we approach the next playing of the Ryder Cup, we offer 18 controversial moments from the 2023 event. Some you may remember. Some you may not. Each will include a brief introduction, some words from the story this site wrote at the time, and the link to the article.Â
Weâll go in order of occurrence.Â
18. Keegan Bradley wasnât selectedÂ
Keegan Bradley wasnât among six captainâs picks made by Zach Johnson, despite a spirited run and his fervor for the event. Selected instead were Justin Thomas, Brooks Koepka, Jordan Spieth, Collin Morikawa, Sam Burns and Rickie Fowler â and Bradleyâs reaction was captured on Netflixâs âFull Swingâ show. Â
Wrote GOLF.com:Â
Few players have been as vocal in confessing their desire to make this team as Bradley, who was on the squad in 2012 and 2014 but hasnât made one since.
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âI think about the Ryder Cup every second Iâm awake basically,â he said a couple of weeks ago at the BMW Championship. âMy biggest thing right now is trying not to think about it while Iâm playing because itâs important to me. I feel like I could bring some experience to the team. I would personally love to just be on a team with this younger group.â
The story can be found here.Â
17. European Ryder Cup legends and LIV Golf pros were absent Â
Absent from Team Europe were Ian Poulter, Lee Westwood, Sergio Garcia, Paul Casey, Martin Kaymer, Henrik Stenson and Graeme McDowell, who all were playing their golf with LIV Golf.Â
Wrote GOLF.com:
On Wednesday morning at Marco Simone Golf Club, Rory McIlroy was asked a pointed question. McIlroy had been arguably the best player on those teams. Some of his best memories as a golfer came in those team rooms. But heâs been as anti-LIV as any top pro, which has left him in an awkward in-between.
âThis week, of all weeks, do you actually miss guys like Sergio, Poulter, Westwood?â
McIlroy paused.
âI mean, itâs certainly a little strange not having them around,â he said. That wasnât quite a âyes.â
The story can be found here.Â
16. Brooks Koepka and the âfalse confidenceâ quoteÂ
During pre-Ryder Cup press conferences, Koepka had been asked this by the Associated Pressâ Doug Ferguson:
If the Ryder Cup came down to one match on the course to decide it, I suspect if you ask all 24 guys here if they want the ball, theyâd say yes. How many of them do you think really mean it?
Koepkaâs answer:Â
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âVery few,â he said, eventually. âFalse confidence, I think.â
The GOLF.com story can be found here.
15. Wyndham Clark and the Rory McIlroy quoteÂ
Wyndham Clark was feeling confident. Wrote GOLF.com:
On Golf Channelâs Golf Today, Clark had been asked how he would greet a singles matchup with McIlroy, and part of his response include this:
âI have the utmost respect for Rory â he is one of our great ambassadors of our game. He is obviously one of the best of all time and he is still going so he can be that. I have tons of respect for Rory and because of that respect, I also want to beat him. I like to think I am better than him and I want to prove that.â
And folks jumped on it. But itâs here where weâll ask just this: Is he supposed to say heâs not better?
On Wednesday, Clark had a similar thought.Â
âIf I say I think heâs better than me and heâs going to beat me,â he said, âthen Iâm going to get ridiculed because people donât think I have any self-belief; and then if I have self-belief, which I do in myself, people take it out of context either way, so it was kind of a tough question.âÂ
The story can be found here.
14. The U.S. was crushed in the opening sessionÂ
While most Americans were sleeping, the Euros raced to a 4-0 lead after the first session.Â
Wrote GOLF.com:
Well, we hope your Thursday evening sleep was restful.
Because by the time you awoke on Friday morning, the Europeans had already commandeered control of the Ryder Cup.
Itâs hard to say precisely when the blue wave crashed over the Americans in Friday morningâs alternate shot matches, but it didnât take very long. By the time the first foursomes group â Jon Rahm and Tyrrell Hatton vs. Scottie Scheffler and Sam Burns â crossed the ninth hole, the Europeans had claimed commanding leads in all four of the morningâs matches. By the time the morning was done, the Euros had claimed a clean sweep of the morning slate, holding their first 4-0 lead in the Ryder Cupâs 44-event history.
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The story can be found here.Â
13. There were a lot of commercialsÂ
Folks were upset by the commercials. Wrote GOLF.com:
The USA Network, responsible for covering the first 10-plus hours of the Ryder Cup on Friday, delivered an onslaught of advertisements to viewers in those opening few hours, enraging the golf internet and resurrecting the never-ending debate about the state of golf viewing in the U.S.
As the night inched toward dawn, things didnât get much better. One by one, viewers logged online to voice their displeasure with the pace of the NBC-run telecast, the technical gaffes that preempted key moments in matches, the moments that werenât shown at all, and, most pressingly, the overall number of advertisements shown.
The story can be found here.Â
12. Koepka and the âchild quoteâ
After Koepka and partner Scottie Scheffler lost a match to Jon Rahm and Nicolai Hojgaard, Koepka singled out Rahm in a comment.Â
Wrote GOLF.com:
When asked how he felt after the round, Koepka unloaded, saying, âI mean, I think me and Scottie [Scheffler] birdied, what did we say, 14, we birdied 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, and then lost by two. So yeah. I mean, I want to hit a board and pout just like Jon Rahm did. But, you know, it is what it is. Act like a child. But weâre adults. We move on.â
Itâs unclear what specific incident, if any, Koepka is referring to, though Rahm is known to have a fiery demeanor and has shown frustration on the course in his career before.
The story can be found here.Â
11. Odd pairingsÂ
Were the pairings questionable during the morning session? Perhaps. Wrote GOLF.com:
Johnson had earned the criticism. He was the chief architect of a disastrous start to the Cup for the Americans, aligning some of the stranger foursomes pairings weâve seen in recent Ryder Cup history. For the first several hours on Friday, he watched hopelessly as that octette of largely inexperienced Ryder Cuppers were swallowed up whole by a dominant group of Europeans, with only one of the Cupâs first four matches extending beyond the 16th hole. The Americans didnât lead for a single hole, in a single match, until about an hour into Friday afternoonâs fourball pairings.
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The story can be found here.Â
10. Team sickness?Â
Were the Americans under the weather? Maybe. Wrote GOLF.com:Â
After his Ryder Cup team had absorbed a historic first-day beating, U.S. captain Zach Johnson was left with the unenviable, some might say impossible, task of explaining what went wrong. When asked in particular whether he made any on-the-fly tweaks to his afternoon four-ball pairings after the U.S. was shut out in the morning foursomes session, Johnson gave a curious answer. Â
âWell, we have contingencies and things of that nature based on a lot of things,â he said. âI would say that weâd love to have everything drawn out way, way ahead of time, but thereâs certain things you cannot control, and we are trying to control the controllables in our team room, and Iâll leave it at that.â
âSo you donât want to answer?â a reporter said.
âNo, not particularly,â Johnson said. âThe bottom line is thereâs been some unforeseen things that weâve had to navigate around, which is really unfortunate, in the sense of health. Itâs not an excuse, because we have depth, but Iâll just say, Iâm grateful we have a team doctor.â
The story can be found here.Â
9. The 9-and-7 defeatÂ
On Saturday morning, Koepka and Scheffler lost 9 and 7 to Viktor Hovland and Ludvig Aberg, the worst 18-hole loss in Ryder Cup foursomes history.
Wrote GOLF.com:
Koepka and Scheffler, the presumptive American all-star pairing, shot a preposterous (and generous) alternate-shot score of seven-over par in just 11 holes together on Saturday morning, gift-wrapping another point to the European pairing of Viktor Hovland and Ludvig Aberg. After a heart-pumping display of shotmaking in their fourball match against Rahm on Friday evening, the two golfers looked entirely out of their depth in alternate shot, hitting it all over the yard in a match that was never really close â and that ended on the 11th hole.
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The story can be found here.Â
8. Jordan Spieth and Zach Johnson talk Â
During the Saturday afternoon matches, Spieth and Zach Johnson talked on the tee on the driveable par-4 16th hole, then Spieth swapped out his driver for a 3-wood â and he hit his ball into water and the Americans lost the match, 3 and 2.Â
Wrote GOLF.com:
âI have no idea what that was,â said Hunter Mahan, the six-time PGA Tour winner, who also was on the world feed call. âIâm really confused on why we just pulled a 3-wood.â Mahan added: âIâm not sure I made myself clear how dumbfounded I am by that decision.â
NBC Sportsâ analysts were just as mystified. Â
âZach Johnson, the first time weâve ever seen him do anything like that,â Brad Faxon said of the captainâs decision to insert himself in the proceedings.
Added Faxonâs boothmate, Paul Azinger: âHeâs three down with three to go. He really wants to make a 1, and he took a club he canât come close to the front of the green with. I donât understand it. Birdieâs not going to do much for you.â
The story can be found here.Â
7. HatGateÂ
You probably remember this one. A report had surfaced that Patrick Cantlay believed players should be paid to play the Ryder Cup and that he was not going to wear a team hat to demonstrate his frustration â then Marco Simone fans started to wave their hats at him.Â
Wrote GOLF.com:
The assembled media members went into overdrive chasing questions raised by the report. Some of it was difficult to parse. Thereâs only one locker room, after all. How far away could they have been sitting? Does a team room that exists for less than a week have enough time to fracture by Saturday morning? How does Cantlay feel about Ryder Cuppers not being paid? And what was up with the hat, anyway?!
In some ways, the specific details and their respective veracity were irrelevant to the assembled masses. To fans, Cantlay tends toward the unknowable and, to casuals, has gotten more attention for viral slow-play clips than consistent top-tier golf. In other words, he can be an easy target. The idea that an American villain was debasing the sanctity of the Ryder Cup out of personal greed? They could work with that.
This U.S. Ryder Cup team hire? âItâs more of an asset for usâBy: Nick Piastowski
The story can be found here.Â
6. The skirmish on the 18th greenÂ
This was related to HatGate. After Cantlay holed a putt on the 18th green, Americans waved their hats, including Cantlayâs caddie, Joe LaCava â and chaos followed.Â
Wrote GOLF.com:
For the first time since the first balls had gone in the air on Friday, the Americans had a tangible piece of hope. But the celebration lasted only seconds until it was nearly interrupted by a fistfight.
The first offender was Cantlayâs caddie Joe LaCava, who had been the first American to rip his hat from his head in celebration. He stood at the center of the green for a few long seconds after Cantlayâs putt sunk, waving back toward the Americans on the far side of the green. Normally that wouldnât have been an issue, but McIlroy was surveying a birdie putt of his own roughly five feet to LaCavaâs right to halve the match.
McIlroy stood up awkwardly, appearing to share some choice words with LaCava about his position on the green, who turned away. Back behind the green, Euro teammate Shane Lowry exploded on his behalf, screaming for LaCava to get out of McIlroyâs way.
âShut the fâk up, Shane,â LaCava yelled back, a retort that elicited only further screaming.
The story can be found here.Â
5. The parking lot scuffleÂ
This was related to the scene on the 18th green. On Saturday night, McIlroy was caught on camera in a shouting match in the Marco Simone parking lot.Â
Wrote GOLF.com:
As darkness and quiet quickly enveloped the property, players, caddies and their families began to file out. Marco Simone is a swanky place, but everyone is staying off-site this week, about 30 minutes away. And while players are largely kept behind closed doors for much of the week, their exit was not concealed from NBC cameras, one of which caught McIlroy in a heated exchange over what took place on 18. As seen in the video, McIlroy points and shouts in a spirited manner multiple times.
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The story can be found here.Â
4. Xander Schauffeleâs dad weighs inÂ
Xander Schauffeleâs dad, Stefan, also had a thought on Ryder Cup pay for play.Â
Wrote GOLF.com:Â
After Saturdayâs round, a reporter asked Cantlay that question directly. Heâd declined to answer. âItâs not about that,â he said. âItâs just about Team USA and representing our country.â The subtext was clear: This wasnât the time nor the place. âThatâs all Iâve got to say about that,â he concluded.
But if Cantlayâs approach was to handle matters behind closed doors, Stefan (who weâll reference by first name here, just for clarity) favored the opposite.
âI think if the PGA of America is a for-profit organization, they need to have the players share in that profit,â he said. âInstead of being so damn intransparent about it, they should reveal the numbers. And then we should go to the table and talk.â
The story can be found here.Â
3. Fowlerâs concessionÂ
During Sunday singles, Fowler conceded a 2-foot, 8-inch putt to Tommy Fleetwood, giving Fleetwood the win and ending the Ryder Cup. Should Fowler have made Fleetwood putt it? Maybe.Â
Wrote GOLF.com:
There are at least two ways to assess Fowlerâs gesture: (1) It was the honorable and sporting thing to do; Fleetwood was highly unlikely to miss a putt inside three feet, or (2) Rick, come on, man! Yeah, it was close, but nerves make golfers do funny things. For the Ryder Cup-clinching point, you gotta make Tommy Lad earn it!â
Brad Faxon, a two-time Ryder Cupper on the call for NBC, was squarely in the second camp.
âThat will not be conceded,â he said incorrectly. âNo chance.â    Â
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The story can be found here.Â
2. The U.S. lostÂ
The U.S. lost on European soil again. The Americans havenât won an away Ryder Cup since 1993.Â
1. Why?
After the loss, GOLF.com wrote this:
If the performance wasnât bad enough, Johnson seemed out of his depth even in trying to explain it, largely declining to acknowledge the European advantage or the Americansâ sleepwalking start to the event. Even after it was all over on Sunday evening, Johnson neglected to address any of the specific strategic or competitive differences that led to the Europeansâ lopsided victories, chalking up large amounts of the tournamentâs outcome to good fortune and ⊠the infinite possibility of the universe?
âThis is a moment where you literally just have to accept that the European team played really, really good golf,â Johnson said Sunday. âAnd that is really my freshest reflection right now, is that Lukeâs team played great, and my boys rallied and fought.â
The story can be found here.Â