The Columbus Dispatch

Stricker helps US win as a team

- Tim Dahlberg

SHEBOYGAN, Wis. – Of course he cried. The odds of Steve Stricker not having tears running down his face after leading the U.S. to a dominating Ryder Cup win were about as long as the chances of Europe roaring back on Sunday to beat the Americans.

He cried before a shot had been hit and cried again when there were no more left to be hit. Later on, he cried some more, and a lot of people at Whistling Straits cried tears of happiness alongside him. This wasn't just a win but a rout. The Ryder Cup was safely back in American hands and the way this U.S. team performed, it looks like it may stay for a long time.

It may not have happened if not for a hometown captain who showed a supremely talented group of players how to win the way the Europeans always won – as a team. “Without him, who knows how this week would have went,” Collin Morikawa said.

Just how much did players want to win it for their captain? Bryson Dechambeau and Brooks Koepka offered to put aside their feud and play with each other if it would help get a few points.

“That's how much it came together,” Stricker said. “That shows a lot about this whole team.”

It shows even more about their captain, a popular and self-effacing 12-time winner on the PGA Tour who didn't need a Ryder Cup captaincy to validate his career. He got one anyway and delivered the biggest blowout ever in biennial matches against Europe in the 19-9 win.

Sure, the U.S. came in favored because it had the best players, though in past Ryder Cups that never seemed to matter. The Europeans were usually better as a team because previous U.S. coaches and players never seemed able to figure out what it meant to be a team.

Not this time. Not when they were led by a captain who had a couple of beers before the opening ceremony so he wouldn't start crying when he introduced his wife and two daughters to the assembled crowd.

Stricker cried anyway, but that just made them want to win for him even more.

“He's so passionate. He's a softie, he cares so much,” Koepka said before play began. “It'd be nice to see him cry on Sunday.”

Stricker spent three years getting ready for three long days, believing more than anything that the Americans' chances would be even better if they were better prepared than the Europeans. That meant adding a half-dozen assistant captains to look after every detail, and making sure that even Tiger Woods, recuperati­ng in Florida, had a voice on this team.

But there were no rah-rah speeches in the team room like at past Ryder Cups. The 54-year-old didn't create pods of players based on psychologi­cal evaluation­s or bring in celebritie­s to have their say.

Instead, Stricker and his assistants had a simple plan: Put your best in the best position you can and let them do the rest.

“This is the greatest team of all time right here,” he said. “These guys are unbelievab­le.”

 ?? ASHLEY LANDIS/AP ?? Team USA captain Steve Stricker poses with the trophy after the Americans won the Ryder Cup on Sunday at Whistling Straits Golf Course in Sheboygan, Wis.
ASHLEY LANDIS/AP Team USA captain Steve Stricker poses with the trophy after the Americans won the Ryder Cup on Sunday at Whistling Straits Golf Course in Sheboygan, Wis.

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