Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Europeans rally to tie Solheim

- TALES AZZONI AP SPORTS WRITER

Tomas Setterhill realized pretty quickly there was something different about Ludvig Aberg.

As a coach and head pro at Eslov Golf Club in southern Sweden, Setterhill had seen plenty of talented young golfers come and go but one thing struck him as he took Aberg under his wing from the age of 9.

“He didn’t get down on himself,” Setterhill recalled. “You see many juniors who, when they make a bogey or double bogey, they get angry. But Ludvig just kept playing.”

That composure remained with Aberg through high school in Sweden, through college in the United States as he rose to the No. 1 amateur ranking and it’s still there now, while he’s winning titles in his first few months as a pro and as the world’s most talked-about young golfer.

Now comes the real test of that temperamen­t: Amid the tension and raucous atmosphere of a Ryder Cup, a stage he has reached quicker than any player in history.

Look through the years and golf’s biggest team event can bring the fire out of even the most mild-mannered of golfers. Two years ago, Patrick Cantlay — one of the sport’s more emotionles­s players — was cupping his hand to his ear and raising his arms to inspire more noise from the galleries at Whistling Straits as the United States powered to a record win over Europe.

Heck, David Duval, who once referred to the Ryder Cup as an exhibition, showed how much the event meant by repeatedly shaking his fists and whipping up U.S. fans at Brookline in 1999.

Will Aberg be similarly roused in Rome next week?

“I think you’ll see him interact with the fans and teammates,” said Peter Hanson, a two-time Ryder Cup player from Sweden who spent this week with Aberg in Spain in his long-time role as his mentor. “We’ve been talking about being comfortabl­e in an uncomforta­ble situation. It’s something we work really hard on.

“I’m so impressed how he handles all these new tasks and environmen­ts all the time … He seems to just thrive when you shine the light on him.”

Indeed, the 23-year-old Aberg doesn’t seem fazed at all.

“I would say that I’m pretty good at staying in the moment, staying in the present and not get too high up, not get too far low and not get too far ahead of myself, too,” he said.

“One of the reasons why I was able to stand out in college in amateur golf is that I was able to have my emotions intact, and that’s what I’ll try to do.”

Given how the golf world is talking about Aberg — and don’t forget, he hasn’t even played a major yet — there’s a widespread feeling he might be a generation­al player, and a Ryder Cupper who Europe will be leaning on for years.

Standing at 6-3, his main strength is the distance and accuracy of his drives. His longest drive is 376 yards and he led the PGA Tour for strokes gained off the tee in the seven events he played after turning pro, starting at the Canadian Open in early June.

“From where he hits the golf ball off the tee, I feel like if he’s half-decent with his irons and wedges and putter, he’s going to be a force to be reckoned with in the world of golf,” said Justin Rose, who will be a Ryder Cup teammate next week.

As Rose suggests, the rest of Aberg’s game remains a work in progress, but he has still built up an impressive body of work since joining Texas Tech University four years ago. He was the best college player in the United States for two consecutiv­e years, won eight times — a record for the Red Raiders — and was a landslide leader of the PGA Tour University ranking that ensured him a place on the tour, when ranked as the No. 1 amateur.

As a profession­al, he has missed just one cut in 10 events and has four top 10s, including a win at the European Masters in Switzerlan­d. Europe captain Luke Donald made Aberg one of his six captain’s picks a day after that victory in Crans-Montana, where he played alongside the young Swede and was in awe of his maturity and unflappabi­lity.

In his only tournament since, and with the spotlight firmly on him, Aberg led after 54 holes at last week’s BMW PGA Championsh­ip, the biggest event on the European tour, after outscoring playing partners Rory McIlroy and Viktor Hovland — the world Nos. 2 and 4, respective­ly — in the first two rounds.

That a tied-for-10th finish felt like a massive disappoint­ment says plenty about the expectatio­ns being foisted on a player already up to 80th in the world.

“I was on the bandwagon before,” McIlroy said last week, “and I’m certainly at the front of it now.”

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