The Ryder Cup only comes around once every two years, and that feels just about right. It’s golf’s rarest event (with the exception, now, of the Olympics), and it also the only one that stirs up this unique blend of emotions, from both players and fans. There’s no money on the line, but patriotism, international pride, professional ego, and the hyper-focused desire to do your teammates proud combine to incite white-hot reactions like this and this and this.
Depending on who you talk to, this biannual event is also one of the most important in world golf. Justin Thomas famously said he’d rather play on a winning Ryder Cup team than win a major. And although the competition only includes the United States and Europe, it certainly feels like the golf world stops for one weekend every two years and focuses on a team of 12 individuals trying to accomplish something historic.
So it’s rare, and it’s important. And as such, the Ryder Cup receives an incredible amount of media coverage. By the time the sun rises on the galleries packed into the first tee grandstands on Friday morning of Ryder Cup week, anyone who’s ever discussed golf in any capacity will have given their opinion on the event. The previews are endless and exhaustive, breaking down the course, the weather, the strengths and weaknesses of each team, and the most likely outcomes.
And even after all that prognostication, there are still surprises.
That’s why the recap business is so much fun. Hindsight is 20/20, and as golf writers don’t have much to discuss that will capture national attention until April, it’s usually closer to 20/10. With that said, let’s look back at some players that defied prediction, and gave us some of the unexpected and underrated performances of the 2016 Ryder Cup.
Players
Brooks Koepka
You had to know I was going here. Soly already covered Brooks on assignment for SB Nation, and he only had Koepka’s Friday performance to go on. Of course, that effort was rather emphatic, as the uber-long Koepka teamed with sweet-putting Brandt Snedeker for a 5&4 demolition of the overmatched European team of Martin Kaymer and Danny Willett.
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Brooks went on to cement himself as one of the best American Ryder Cup rookies in history. He teamed with Sneds again in foursomes on Saturday morning and easily dispatched Matthew Fitzpatrick and potential cyborg Henrik Stenson, winning 3&2 after birdieing three of the last four holes. Then Captain Davis Love III listened to his inner 12-year-old, the same voice that still wants to watch the MLB home run derby, and teamed Brooks Koepka with fellow nuclear weapon Dustin Johnson. Because the golf gods are kind, they drew the biggest guns that Europe had to offer, and were subsequently vanquished 3&1 by Rory McIlroy and Thomas Pieters.
But, he did do stuff like this.
4 iron.
253 yards.
That'll play, @BKoepka. https://t.co/hvrsnijI6u
— PGA.COM (@PGAcom) October 1, 2016
Then Koepka came out on Sunday and cemented a place in Danny Willett’s nightmares, beating the Englishman so comprehensively (5&4 on -6 through 14 holes) that NBC didn’t feel it necessary to show any of his shots besides the closing putt. In his first Ryder Cup, Brooks Koepka played four matches, won three, and never saw the 18th hole in competition – a welcome respite from the heart-stopping heroics that Reed, McIlroy, and others were providing.
He’s exactly what an American sports fan expects a great American athlete to look like – tall, strong, handsome, and, for lack of a better word, quarterbacky. Like Dustin Johnson, Koepka seems like he could slot into a high-level game of basketball, baseball, or football and dominate with ease. Here’s hoping he continues his Ryder Cup dominance in the future.
Brandt “Bobby” Snedeker
Brandt is one of the worst names I’ve ever seen, and a friend of mine suggested we call him Bobby, as it makes him more palatable to discuss. Fine with me. I’ll be the first to admit that I didn’t like Bobby Sneds before this Ryder Cup. His twitchy golfing style and pinched face remind me of some large member of the rodent family, and his toe-down, percussive putting stroke look like something you’d see at a local mini golf course.
Well, I’m a changed man. Bobby Sneds can play for my team any day. The man did not miss a putt in Minnesota, and his accurate iron play and deadly flatstick combined with Brooks’s length to make Cap’n DL3 look like a genius. He was the only player on the United States team with a perfect record, going 3-0-0 after finishing off the fiery Andy Sullivan 3&1 on Sunday. Also, his convulsive post-putt celebrations reminded me of the Bishop from Caddyshack.
And another birdie for Snedeker! 2up.#GoUSA https://t.co/nrn20UroPh
— Ryder Cup USA (@RyderCupUSA) October 2, 2016
Ryan Moore
Lost amid the hysteria of Rory/Reed, Sergio/Phil, and America’s biggest victory since 1981 was the play of Ryder Cup rookie Ryan Moore. As everyone knows, Moore was the final player chosen for the Ryder Cup, riding the momentum of a bare-knuckle playoff brawl against Rory McIlroy in the Tour Championship into one of the most pressure-packed arenas in golf. He was the first recipient of the late captain’s pick created by the so-called “Horschel Rule,” and was saddled with the “hottest player in the world” tag before teeing it up in Hazeltine. Not an easy expectation to carry around, particularly with less than five days to mentally prepare for the fact that he would be playing in his first Ryder Cup.
Despite all this, Moore acquitted himself admirably. He took a 3&2 loss to the Spanish Armada during Friday afternoon fourballs while paired with doppelganger J.B. Holmes, but scratched out a 1-up win over the English duo of Lee Westwood and Danny Willett on Saturday afternoon with the same partner. But it was singles where he really made his mark.
By happenstance, Moore was paired with Westwood again on Sunday. Neither player would have been happy with their performances up to that point, as Westwood had missed a few near-gimmes and Moore had only carded one birdie in the Saturday afternoon match. Moore’s singles match started in disaster, as he thumped his way around to a double-bogey 6 on the easy par-4 first. Remarkably, this Cup rookie kept his composure and quickly won two of the next four holes to get back in the driver’s seat. After losing the 9th, 14th, and 15th however, Moore seemed destined to fall to Westwood and give up a precious point.
Then came the heroics. Needing to win all three of the final holes to claw back and gain a point, on the par-5 16th, Moore fired a fairway wood eight feet right of the flag and canned the eagle putt.
MOORE when he needed it MOST. #RyderCup https://t.co/Va0na1XPlT
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) October 2, 2016
One down with two to play. On the par-3 17th, with a massive water hazard yawning to the right, Moore dialed in a short iron, calmed his nerves and drained another clutch putt. As Westwood’s birdie try slid past, the Horschel Rule pick was looking better and better. The 18th hole was over as soon as Westy’s greenside bunker blast ran out past the hole. Moore was looking at 10 feet uphill for birdie, and the way the other matches had fallen out, this full point would clinch the Cup for the Americans. He lagged it up to within a foot, a
Source: https://nolayingup.com/blog/ryder-cup-recap-underrated-performances
