Houston Chronicle

LIV defections speed up Europe’s roster turnover

- By Doug Ferguson

GUIDONIA MONTECELIO, Italy — LIV Golf defections have cut off European stalwarts from the Ryder Cup, some of them for the first time in three decades. Rory McIlroy said Wednesday they are missing the Ryder Cup more than Team Europe is missing them.

Nowhere to be found at Marco Simone are Lee Westwood, who has been part of every Ryder Cup since his debut in 1997. Sergio Garcia, who began his seamless Ryder Cup career in 1999, attempted a last-ditch attempt to make good with the European tour and get to Rome.

Ian Poulter and his passion. Graeme McDowell and his heroics. All are with Saudi-funded LIV Golf, all of them ineligible to take any role in this Ryder Cup. That includes Henrik Stenson, appointed European captain for this team until choosing to sign with LIV last summer.

“It's certainly a little strange not having them around,” McIlroy said. “But I think this week of all weeks, it's going to hit home with them that they are not here. I think they are going to miss being here more than we're missing them.”

McIlroy caught himself briefly, aware his comments would be interprete­d as another dig at the defectors, especially given the combative tone he has taken against LIV Golf since the rival league started up a year ago in June.

“I'm not saying that's like ... it's just more I think this week is a realizatio­n that the decision that they made has led to not being a part of this week,” he said. “And that's tough.”

Still to be determined is whether they are ever invited back. The European tour and PGA Tour have entered a partnershi­p with the Saudi Arabian national wealth fund that pays for LIV Golf. The proposed commercial entity still has to be finalized and approved.

Among the discussion­s is how to integrate LIV players with their tours.

“The landscape of golf is everchangi­ng and more dynamic, and we'll see what happens and whether they will be part of it in the future,” McIlroy said. “I always thought leading up to this week is when it's going to hit home that they are not going to be here.”

The Americans have already gone through the LIV effect, having played the Presidents Cup last year without Dustin Johnson and Bryson DeChambeau, Patrick Reed being eligible to qualify or having Phil Mickelson available as a vice captain.

Brooks Koepka made it back to the Ryder Cup, though only through an extraordin­ary performanc­e in the majors, his only access to Ryder Cup points. He was runner-up at the Masters and won the PGA Championsh­ip.

“I feel like I'm representi­ng the USA. That's what I've got on the front my hat this week,” Koepka said. “It's not a group of individual­s in that locker room. We’re just all one team, and that’s the way we think.”

Team Europe had eight players at Whistling Straits at the last Ryder Cup who since went over to LIV Golf. Westwood, Garcia, Poulter, Paul Casey and Bernd Wiesberger played in the matches. McDowell, Stenson and Martin Kaymer were vice captains.

How many would have returned to compete is debatable because four of them were in their 40s and sliding toward the end of their careers.

McIlroy is ready to move on, openly supportive of captain's picks used on newcomers like 22year-old Nicolai Hojgaard and 23-year-old Ludvig Aberg, who only finished his college career at Texas Tech four months ago.

 ?? Andrew Redington/Getty Images ?? Rory McIlory, left, and Justin Rose now are part of Europe’s old guard with many mainstays missing.
Andrew Redington/Getty Images Rory McIlory, left, and Justin Rose now are part of Europe’s old guard with many mainstays missing.

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