The Denver Post

Americans seek European success

American team loaded with talent and plenty of major experience

- By Doug Ferguson

SAINT-QUENTIN-EN-YVELINES, FRANCE » The American team at the Ryder Cup is one of the strongest ever.

It features nine players who have combined to win 31 major championsh­ips, nearly half of those by Tiger Woods, who signaled his return last week by winning the Tour Championsh­ip. It has Dustin Johnson, who is back at No. 1 in the world. One of only three Ryder Cup rookies on the team is Justin Thomas, who already has won a major and reached No. 1 in the world. Europe?

That’s the team that usually wins the Ryder Cup, especially at home.

These are not “mops” on the European team, the word Thomas Bjorn used to describe two of his captain’s picks.

Europe has five major champions, four players among the top 10 in the world. It can make a case as one of the best teams since the days of the “Big Five” in the late 1980s when Seve Ballestero­s, Nick Faldo, Bernhard Langer, Ian Woosnam and Sandy Lyle began this run of European dominance.

But it’s not about what they achieved before getting to the Ryder Cup.

It’s about who they become playing under a flag, for a tour, and playing for each other.

“I think that the strength of Europe has been we all get behind one another, and even whatever difference­s we may have, we put them to the side for this week and we’re a cohesive unit,” Rory McIlroy said Tuesday. “And that’s the way we try to be.”

These are two of the strongest teams, the first time the Ryder Cup has ever featured all 10 players from the world ranking.

That only raises the anticipati­on when the matches start Friday on the first tee at Le Golf National before a grandstand that has just under 7,000 seats. Adding to the plot is that the Americans are defending champions for only the third time since 2002.

Ultimately, the Ryder Cup is decided by who keeps the ball in play, especially with the thick rough at Le Golf National, and who makes putts. Europe, however, has a spirit about it that has allowed for a spotless record at home the last 25 years.

Webb Simpson is playing his third Ryder Cup and already has seen 23 players from Europe on those three teams.

But it’s not about names.

The Americans showed that at Hazeltine, the first year after the Ryder Cup Task Force intended to build a model of continuity. It’s the European way, and the U.S. can only hope it will end 25 years of losing the Ryder Cup away from home.

It helps that so many of their young players are friends outside the Ryder Cup, even outside golf. Thomas and Jordan Spieth have been close since they were 14 and picked to represent the U.S. at the Evian Junior Masters — in France, no less. Thomas and Rickie Fowler are neighbors in Florida. Brooks Koepka spent the Saturday night before his first U.S. Open victory on the phone with Dustin Johnson (it wasn’t a long conversati­on).

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