New York Post

UNEASY RYDER

U.S. enters as heavy faves, but that only ratchets up pressure

- Mark Cannizzaro mcannizzar­o@nypost.com

KOHLER, Wis. — On paper, it looks like a mismatch. But you know how painful paper cuts can be.

The U.S. Ryder Cup team, as it enters this week’s 43rd edition of this blood-and-guts competitio­n of passion and points, has eight of the top-10 players in the world rankings on its roster. The European side has one.

The average Official World Golf Ranking of the U.S. team is 8.9. Europe’s is 30.8.

The Americans have homecourse advantage at Whistling Straits, 18 holes of television eye candy that sits hard by Lake Michigan.

That home-soil advantage is magnified by COVID-19 travel restrictio­ns that make it almost impossible for the spirited European fans to make the trip to America. So those always audible chants of “Ole, Ole, Ole, Ole’’ should be muted with vastly fewer followers this week.

When you take into account all of those factors, it’s difficult to imagine the U.S. allowing the Ryder Cup onto a plane back to Europe.

Yet, this is a highly uncomforta­ble position for the Americans, because they’re supposed to win this week.

The expectatio­ns pose U.S. captain Steve Stricker’s greatest challenge as he readies his side for the matches, which begin on Friday.

“I feel like on paper, from head to toe, the world ranking, I would say we’re a stronger team,” Stricker said. “But I don’t think our guys feel we’re better. They know deep down how hard it is to beat them.”

They should, considerin­g Europe has won nine of the past 12 Ryder Cups, including four of the past five, the last being a sevenpoint rout in 2018 at Le Golf France outside of Paris.

“We have the best players this year,” Paul Azinger, the lead analyst for NBC Sports who captained the winning U.S. side in 2008, said. “And obviously, they [the Europeans] roll in with the most confidence and maybe the best team.”

If there’s one thing in these matches that always has held as true as a 4-foot Tiger Woods putt in his prime, it’s that the best team hoists the chalice by week’s end, not the team with the best players.

“If it was a computer generating the results this week,’’ European captain Padraig Harrington said, “the Europeans needn’t turn up.”

Brilliantl­y put, as usual, by Harrington, who’s one of the most honest interviews in golf.

Stricker’s most public dilemma with his team has to do with how he handles Bryson DeChambeau and Brooks Koepka, two players who detest each other yet are teammates this week. More important for Stricker is how DeChambeau and Koepka handle themselves — behind the closed doors of the team room and on the golf course.

Harrington offered a good comparison to the Bryson-Brooks friction when he referenced himself and Sergio Garcia, who happened to be one of his captain’s picks.

“We’ve obviously been competitor­s nearly all our career [and] it’s well publicized we wouldn’t necessaril­y have got on,’’ Harrington said. “The Ryder Cup is bigger than that. I think it’s probably been good for both of us.”

Stricker will hope that whatever issues Koepka and Patrick Cantley — who was called out by DeChambeau for walking ahead of him as they battled in the BMW Championsh­ip last month and didn’t even look him in the eye after vanquishin­g him in a playoff — have with DeChambeau, that they will realize that this week is bigger than ego and petty nonsense.

Maybe this week — depending on the result (read: a U.S. win) — thaws the freeze between Koepka, Cantlay and anyone else who may have a problem with DeChambeau. The Ryder Cup can be that powerful a force.

“I can’t speak for the Americans — I don’t know what happens there — but it feels like when we get in the team room, everyone takes their armor off and puts it aside,’’ Garcia said. “You can feel that. Everyone is happy to put their arm around everyone else and try to help.”

Three years ago in France, the U.S. entered with a similar edge on paper to this year, with nine major champions on the 12-man team who had combined to win 10 of the previous 16 majors.

The result: Europe 17.5, U.S. 10.5.

The Europeans crave the underdog role the way many of their fans crave pints of Guinness — despite the fact they’ve owned the Americans in these matches for more than two decades. With so many elements in favor of the U.S. this week, the Europeans will be lapping up the underdog status like hungry dogs.

“That’s our advantage, I guess, in a way, right — that we have delivered when perhaps we shouldn’t have delivered?” Ian Poulter said recently on a SiriusXM PGA Tour Radio interview. “On paper — on paper — the U.S. team should have delivered.’’

Paper cuts sometimes hurt the most and they linger the longest.

As the Mets’ bullpen has started to show more cracks with a heavy workload down the stretch, Aaron Loup has only become more lights out.

The veteran lefty is entering historic territory during the final two weeks of the season after lowering his ERA to 1.00 through 54 innings with another 1 ¹/3 scoreless frames in Sunday’s 3-2 win over the Phillies.

“I try not to pay too much attention to it, to be honest with you, but it would be a great accomplish­ment,” Loup said Sunday before the Mets flew to Boston for a series that begins Tuesday. “I’ve had a great year. To finish under one would be the icing on the cake, I guess you could say.”

It would also put him in select company.

Only eight other relievers have ever finished a season with an ERA under 1.00 and at least 54 innings thrown, according to Baseball Reference. The list includes Blake Treinen (2018), Zack Britton (2016), Wade Davis (2015), Fernando Rodney (2012), Eric

O’Flaherty (2011), Jonathan Papelbon (2006), Chris Hammond (2002) and Dennis Eckersley (1990).

Loup, who has also stranded 21 of his last 26 inherited runners, has allowed just one run over his past 34 appearance­s (30 innings) dating back to July 5. The only run during that stretch came on the only home run he has allowed all season, a solo shot by Nationals slugger Juan Soto.

“We felt he was going to have a good year, but this is a special year,” manager Luis Rojas said. “He’s one of the best relievers in baseball, regardless of lefty/ righty. … He’s been our best reliever. Outside of Jake [deGrom], he’s probably been our best pitcher.”

Loup has been worth every dollar of the one-year, $3 million contract he signed last offseason and reiterated on Sunday that he is interested in re-signing with the Mets to be a key part of their bullpen again next season.

“I would love to come back,” the 33-year-old said. “I’ve had a blast playing here. I’ve had fun with the guys all year long and I’ve had a great year, so I see no reason not to [come back].”

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Friday: 8 a.m.-7 p.m., Golf Ch. Saturday: 9 a.m.-7 p.m., NBC Sunday: Noon-6 p.m., NBC
Dustin Johnson Jon Rahm On the air: Friday: 8 a.m.-7 p.m., Golf Ch. Saturday: 9 a.m.-7 p.m., NBC Sunday: Noon-6 p.m., NBC
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