The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

STEVE SCOTT

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The “greatest US team ever assembled” – proclaimed by the Golf Channel’s Brandell Chamblee to general agreement from the US golf media – has been roundly humbled at Le Golf National.

The new revolution of the Ryder Cup TASKFORCE!, instigated by Phil Mickelson’s public mutiny at Gleneagles, did even worse than Tom Watson’s military discipline. These humiliatio­ns on this side of the Atlantic were supposed to have ended, because the US no longer “prepared to fail”.

Instead, they were ambushed. From Friday afternoon, when Europe swept the foursomes 4-0, the old failings of the US team were exposed.

Thomas Bjorn’s strategy was Europe’s old faithfuls, and he was rewarded for that by his experience­d wildcards bringing him 9½ points, more than half the winning total.

But the US failings are old faithfuls too – a belief that the superiorit­y of their players does not require them to have to prepare effectivel­y or do anything much to adapt to the different conditions in Europe.

They wrongly assume that the Europeans will be intimidate­d – “I pity anyone who plays us” said Dustin Johnson of a potential partnershi­p with Brooks Koepka – and they concentrat­e on taking down Europe’s top men like Rory McIlroy and Justin Rose only to find that Thorbjorn Olesen, Tommy Fleetwood and Francesco Molinari are serious players as well.

It’s the exact same hubris as we used to see before Europe began to turn this contest around in the 80s.

The truth is that the Ryder Cup has settled into a phase where home advantage is massive – but for the special case of Medinah in 2012, every edition since 2004 would have gone to the home team. The US will still be favourites on their own manor in 2020 at Whistling Straits.

The question is whether they can learn lessons to challenge to win in Rome in 2022.

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