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Keegan Bradley’s Ryder Cup conundrum is getting more complicated

keegan bradley in a blue shirt and white hat with black pants at the Arnold Palmer Invitational.

Keegan Bradley's final-round 64 at the Arnold Palmer Invitational vaulted the Ryder Cup captain further up the points system.

Mike Ehrmann | Getty Images

Keegan Bradley has an enviable problem. He is playing too much good golf for a Ryder Cup captain.

Bradley did not emerge victorious from Sunday afternoon at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, but of the 49 non-winners in the field on Sunday, his final round was arguably the most impressive. An eight-under 64, including a course-record-setting 29 on the front-nine, the best round of the day by a whopping three shots. By the time the dust settled in the evening, he’d finished T5, good for his third top-25 of the 2025 season, and good enough to launch himself within striking distance of the top 12 in the U.S. Ryder Cup points ranking.

But the joy of Sunday at Bay Hill for Bradley, the player, was the concern of Sunday at Bay Hill for Bradley, the Ryder Cup captain. The “problem,” as it were, is that if Keegan plays much more good golf, he could play himself out of his job as Ryder Cup captain — and into a job as Ryder Cup player.

Bradley’s age was one of his biggest risks when the PGA of America chose him as Ryder Cup captain. At 38 years old, Keegs represented one of the youngest captains in Cup history — young enough to play on the team himself. The idea wasn’t too outlandish: He’d nearly qualified for the Cup in Rome a year earlier, and had shown a penchant for the kind of hot spurts that help vault players of his age into Ryder Cup relevancy.

Bradley downplayed the risk of such an event, suggesting that the captain’s responsibilities didn’t leave much time for the competitive preparation needed to play in the event. (He furthered that point during the Presidents Cup, where he served as a playing assistant captain and expressed concern at the idea of doing the same at the Ryder Cup.)

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But then came an out-of-nowhere victory at the BMW Championship, and then a brilliant performance under the U.S. flag in the Presidents Cup. Suddenly, Bradley was hedging his bets, stating that he would only play on the Ryder Cup team if he qualified for one of six automatic bids under the Ryder Cup points system — and that he would recuse himself as captain if such events transpired.

“It’s going to be really hard for me to make that team, but if I make the team, I’ll play,” he said. “I don’t see myself being a captain’s pick. But I’ll be proud to just be the captain.”

Saturday’s 64 at the Arnold Palmer only fanned the flames of a potential constitutional crisis. While Bradley remains safely outside of automatic bid territory, it wouldn’t take much more than a hot streak spanning the next month to push Bradley’s name into prime position — a fact not even he could deny in his post-round interviews.

“I would love [to have a Ryder Cup singles match],” he said with a laugh, a wink at the suggestion that he could play in the event. “I would love that. It’s always in the back of my mind, but days like this, I can build on for the rest of the year.”

Thankfully, we’re still at least a few months removed from the plausibility of a contested convention for Ryder Cup captain. The competition is stiff for the six automatic qualifiers on the U.S. side, with those spots currently occupied by Scottie Scheffler, Xander Schauffele, Bryson DeChambeau, Collin Morikawa, Mav McNealy and Patrick Cantlay. Three of those guys are the winners of the last four majors, and a fourth (Morikawa) is the fourth-ranked player in the world. But the remaining two spots remain there for the taking, so long as Bradley can stave off figures like Sunday’s winner at Bay Hill, Russell Henley.

A split mind between playing and captaining a Ryder Cup is far from an ideal headspace for a captain, but it is the headspace occupied by Keegan Bradley as winter turns to spring. He has until the end of the BMW Championship, where he will return as the reigning champion, to position himself as one of the Cup’s six automatic qualifiers. If not, he will choose the remaining six “captain’s selections” at the Tour Championship the following week, and bring the team to Bethpage the following month.

For now, though, all he can do is play his best golf. That might make for a complicated summer, but in this case, complicated might be good.

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