Rory McIlroy referred to that “Miracle in Medinah” as a happy accident, a Ryder Cup that Europe was never meant to win because the matches favor the home team. In the month leading to Rome, he considered a road Ryder Cup win among the biggest feats in golf.
No need telling that to the Americans.
They found neither the points they needed at Marco Simone
nor answers why they now have gone 30 years since bringing that 17-inch gold
trophy back home with them.
They could only watch another ebullient European celebration
on Sunday, the sing-song tune of “Ohhhh-lay, ole, ole, ole!” ringing in their
heads until the next one.
Two years ago, the Americans felt the Ryder Cup was finally
swinging their way when they handed Europe its worst beating, 19-9, at
Whistling Straits. That now seems forgotten.
“I was so disappointed after Whistling Straits — we all
were,” McIlroy said. “And we wanted to come here to Rome and redeem ourselves.”
This wasn’t quite the “coma in Roma,” but it was close.
Europe began the Ryder Cup by sweeping the opening session for
the first time, led by five points at the end of each day and only gave the
Americans a sliver of hope on two occasions, both short-lived.
“We knew it was in our hands,” European captain Luke Donald
said. “We stuck with the same plan the whole week. Get off to fast starts. Play
as a team. Use the crowd, use their energy. Yeah, the Ryder Cup, there’s always
lots of swings and emotions and changes. At one point, I was looking at the
board trying to figure out how we get to 14 1/2 points.
“But in the end, we got there easily.”
Tommy Fleetwood delivered the clinching point in what turned
out to be a 16 1/2-11 1/2 victory.
The margin should look familiar. Throw out Medinah in 2012,
when Europe rallied from a 10-6 deficit with a Sunday singles in which
everything went its way, and consider the trend.
“We weren’t supposed to win in ’12,” McIlroy had said before
the matches. “Ever since then, the home team has won, each time pretty
convincingly.”
What followed was Europe winning by seven in Scotland; the
Americans winning by six points at Hazeltine; Europe winning by five points in
France; the Americans winning by 10 points at Whistling Straits. And now this.
“There’s no perfect formula to it,” U.S. captain Zach
Johnson said. “The formula this week is they got off to a great start, and that
momentum led them into a pretty nice lead going into today. And our boys fought
like madmen and made it interesting, made them earn it.”
American hopes didn’t last long.
One was Saturday night, when Patrick Cantlay with his
stone-cold demeanor birdied his last three holes, making a 45-foot putt at the
end. Even without the bickering over behavior between McIlroy and Cantlay’s
caddie, Joe LaCava, this felt like momentum for Team USA.
And then Europe leaned on its top players — McIlroy, Jon
Rahm, Viktor Hovland and Tyrrell Hatton — to deliver points early leave Europe
only a half-point away from reclaiming the cup.
VMax Homa polished off his remarkable Ryder Cup debut with
clutch play that ultimately only delayed the celebration. He was 1 up over Matt
Fitzpatrick playing the 18th, knowing that to lose the hole would put Europe
over the top.
Fitzpatrick had an 18-foot birdie putt, all but guaranteed a
par. Homa could barely see his ball in the shin-high grass next to a bunker.
His head spinning, caddie Joe Greiner suggested he take a penalty drop, a bold
move. Homa made it pay off, hitting a tough pitch to a back pin and holing the
7-foot putt.
At that point, the Americans have to win the remaining five
matches on the course for a tie to retain the cup. There was American red on
the board, and even the last two matches that had been in European favor
started to flip.
Fleetwood and joked with the lads at the bottom that he
hoped Europe would have it won before the matches relief on them. No such luck.
And then Fleetwood — with help from Rickie Fowler — ended
it. He was 1 up with three to play, needing to win the reachable par-4 16th,
when Fowler hit it into the water on the right. Fleetwood drove onto the green
about 25 feet away. He lagged it close, Fowler conceded the birdie putt and
Europe had the Ryder Cup back.
“I really didn’t want it to come down to one of us at the
back,” said Fleetwood, in the 11th spot in the lineup. “Just so happened to
play a part — it was a bit bigger than I thought I was going to have when we
saw the draw. But just so proud of being part of this team.”
Johnson is sure to face scrutiny for his six picks, leading
to perceptions they were as much about friendships as good form. The six picks
combined to go 4-12-4 for the week. And only three players — including Brooks
Koepka, the only LIV Golf player in at the Ryder Cup — played in the five weeks
leading up to the matches.
Then again, it might not have mattered. Europe has the magic
touch in these matches, especially on home soil before its raucous fans.
“A good pairing on the European team doesn’t mean playing
with your best mate,” Justin Rose said. “It means representing something bigger
than yourself. And I feel like that’s for me what being a European Ryder Cup
player is all about.”
And now it falls to Europe, who takes possession of the
Ryder Cup for two years until the next matches at rough and rowdy Bethpage
Black in New York. Bethpage is tough stage even without flags and continents
and pride involved. It will be the ultimate road test.
“I’ve said this for the last probably six or seven years to
anyone that will listen,” McIlroy said. “I think one of the biggest
accomplishments in golf right now is winning an away Ryder Cup. And that’s what
we’re going to do at Bethpage.”
Europe was never more confident heading into the night to
start their party, and for good reason. It took down a strong American team
that three of the four major champions this year and every player from the top
25 in the world.
But then, the Americans felt the same way after Whistling
Straits.