Connect with us

Sports

Europe have the captain, players & spirit to slay USA

Published

on

Read the full article on post.

When a 34-year old Luke Donald and a 23-year old Rory McIlroy were exchanging top spot in the world rankings over the summer of 2012, few would have thought that the Ryder Cup that September would be Donald’s last.

Looking to overcome a four point deficit on the final day, it was Donald who was sent out first by European captain José Maria Olazabal and he delivered a win over reigning Masters champion Bubba Watson as the so-called ‘Miracle of Medinah’ gathered momentum.

“Seize the day” springs to mind – for Donald and for Europe. The Englishman never won again on either the PGA Tour or the DP World Tour and it has been the home team that has relatively comfortably triumphed in each edition of the Ryder Cup since. The smallest margin in the five subsequent contests has been five points and the average is closer to seven.

McIlroy has said more than once in recent times that winning an away Ryder Cup is one of the hardest things to do in golf and that it would be high on his list of accomplishments to help repeat the feat, but one can make a strong case that, under Donald’s astute leadership, it can be achieved even in the likely hostile atmosphere of Bethpage this weekend.

It’s all but impossible to find anyone with anything bad to say about Donald’s captaincy – either in Rome two years ago when he was appointed late, only after Henrik Stenson jumped to the LIV Tour, or any time since he was given the role for a second time, something that hadn’t happened for over 30 years.

“Luke is great, maybe the greatest captain ever,” stated Paul McGinley recently in Global Golf Post and Europe’s veteran player this time, Justin Rose, was every bit as glowing in his assessment earlier in the week.

Donald provided the European team with virtual reality headsets to mimic the raucous and possibly abusive New York crowds and while Rose may only have used his for five minutes, he has huge respect for his captain.

Justin Rose of Team Europe gives a thumbs up during a practice round prior to the Ryder Cup 2025 at Black Course at Bethpage State Park Golf Course on September 24, 2025 in Farmingdale, New York.
Justin Rose: ‘I give Luke tonnes of credit for how much he’s invested in himself’

“I’m blown away by the work ethic that he’s given this captaincy cycle, both of them. He came into it in Rome, maybe six months behind where he would have been otherwise and made up for it amazingly. I think his communication style has been incredibly consistent and on point, and I think he takes all the fuss out of it from a player’s point of view.

“Good, clear captaincy sets the tone and paves the way for the players to go ahead and focus on what’s important, which is obviously on the golf course from Friday morning. So there’s probably a million decisions Luke has had to make to give us (the players) no decisions, and I think that that’s ultimately what the job of being a captain is. I give Luke tonnes of credit for how much he’s invested in himself.”

For sure, Donald outperformed his US counterpart Keegan Bradley at the opening ceremony on Wednesday and not just because Bradley made an unfortunate gaffe when recalling being at the 1999 Ryder Cup in Brookline and mixing up Justin Rose with Justin Leonard.

Of course, at the end of the day, the players have to perform and Europe stacks up well on that front too.

It’s an almost identical team to that which won by five points in Rome in 2023 with the only change being Rasmus Hojgaard for his twin brother Nicolai.

Donald’s captain’s picks may have been influenced by the number crunching that showed that rookies away from home don’t tend to fare particularly well, but nobody made such a compelling case that one could think that Donald has erred or been blindly loyal. If camaraderie and team spirit has anything to do with it, Team Europe is in a good place.

The US side is a little harder to read with four rookies, albeit all four are in the top 20 of the world rankings. Are they all brilliant players? Of course. But they are about to face into something new.

Scottie Scheffler of Team United States looks on while playing the 15th hole during a practice round prior to the Ryder Cup 2025 at Black Course at Bethpage State Park Golf Course on September 25, 2025 in Farmingdale, New York
Can Scottie Scheffler turn on the style for the USA?

How they will cope with the tension of their opening tee shot or their opening match at a Ryder Cup remains to be seen. Hojgaard is the only European in that boat and he at least experienced it as a buggy driver in 2023!

Of course the home team has the undisputed world number one, Scottie Scheffler, but they had Tiger Woods for years and his record was 13 wins, 21 losses and three halved matches. Even in singles he only took five points out of eight.

The Ryder Cup wasn’t about Woods and it’s not about Scheffler or McIlroy either. It’s about a team – the captain, the vice-captains, the players, the caddies and more.

As Shane Lowry said yesterday referring to the preparations that began straight after the BMW Championship 12 days ago: “The last two weeks, I’ve never laughed so much in my whole life. We’ve just had a great time. We’ve enjoyed getting ready together, preparing together but obviously that’s no good to anyone if I don’t play well and win points. There’s no point in it being good fun if you don’t perform. So yeah, I’m here to do both”.

From Donald down, Europe really seem to have everything sorted and have every to chance to buck the trend and win away from home, something that a US team hasn’t done for over 30 years. Seize the day.


Follow live updates on The Ryder Cup with rte.ie/sport and the RTÉ News app

Sports

Lewandowski and Araujo headers help Barcelona to comeback victory

Published

on

This post was originally published on this site.

image

HEADERS FROM ROBERT Lewandowski and Ronald Araujo helped Barcelona make a 3-1 comeback victory at minnows Real Oviedo on Thursday in La Liga.

The Catalans, who fell behind after a mistake from goalkeeper Joan Garcia allowed Alberto Reina to score the opener from 40 yards out, levelled through Eric Garcia early in the second half.

Substitute Lewandowski nodded Hansi Flick’s side in front and Araujo made the game safe late on as he headed home Marcus Rashford’s corner.

Barcelona, second in the table, trail leaders Real Madrid by two points after Xabi Alonso’s side maintained their 100 percent start with a win at Levante on Tuesday.

Despite missing star winger Lamine Yamal, Barca recorded their fourth consecutive victory across all competitions without the teenager.

“In the second half, I said to my team, we have to continue, we have to play with calmness, to be convinced about playing with the ball, and we did it well,” said Flick.

Oviedo, back in Spain’s top flight for the first time since the 2000/01 campaign, lined up with 40-year-old great Santi Cazorla in midfield, making his first start of the season.

They could not contain Kylian Mbappe as Real Madrid visited the Carlos Tartiere stadium in August, but mostly did a better job against the champions in front of a fine atmosphere.

Rashford started on the left wing after he was benched last weekend for turning up late for a team meeting, and came closest for Barcelona in the first half.

Advertisement

The on-loan Manchester United forward’s vicious effort was tipped away by Oviedo goalkeeper Aaron Escandell, who excelled despite the goals he conceded.

The Spanish stopper tipped away another Rashford effort from range and then thwarted the England international again from the rebound after Raphinha struck the post.

Barcelona were unsurprisingly dominant but Oviedo took the lead in the 33rd minute after a howler from visiting goalkeeper Joan Garcia.

Charging out of his box, he intercepted the ball but then passed straight to Reina, who fired into the empty net from long distance.

“I saw the goalkeeper’s mistake and I went first time, and in the moment I kicked it, I saw it was good,” Oviedo midfielder Reina told DAZN. “My first in the top flight, I’ll never forget it.”

Flick said he would not be blaming his goalkeeper too harshly.

“It’s the style that we want him to play in, and it can happen,” explained Barca’s coach.

“He’s a fantastic goalkeeper… one mistake and they use it, but it’s football.”

Hansi Flick sent on Frenkie de Jong at half-time and the Dutchman helped his side click into a higher gear.

Barcelona levelled through Eric Garcia, netting from close range after Escandell saved Ferran Torres’ effort from Ronald Araujo’s cross.

Escandell continued to frustrate the visitors, saving from Raphinha and Torres, but he could not keep out Lewandowski’s header to send Barca in front.

Five minutes after being brought on the Polish veteran produced an excellent header from De Jong’s cross which cracked against the underside of the crossbar on its way in.

Jules Kounde made a vital interception at the back to help keep Barca ahead before Araujo sealed the three points in the 88th minute when he nodded Rashford’s corner beyond Escandell.

“The changes were at the right time, with Frenkie and also with Lewy,” said Flick.

Lewandowski has largely been used as a substitute this season after starting the campaign with an injury.

“I’m patient, I’m not in a hurry, the season is long and we have a lot of games,” said the 37-year-old striker.

Oviedo’s goalscorer was content, despite the defeat.

“All footballers dream of nights like this, to play against these players and with these fans,” added Reina.

“It was a nice night, which didn’t end well but we enjoyed it as much as we could.”

Barcelona host Real Sociedad on Sunday at the Olympic stadium, after Real Madrid visit rivals Atletico Madrid on Saturday in a derby clash.

– © AFP 2025

Continue Reading

Sports

Murphy holds off Trump to reach British Open quarters

Published

on

Read the full article on post.

Shaun Murphy fought off a spirited fightback from world number one Judd Trump to reach the quarter-finals of the British Open in Cheltenham.

England’s Murphy, who won the Masters in January, looked comfortable with a 3-1 lead but gave up successive frames before wrapping up a 4-3 win against his compatriot.

Trump also suffered a premature exit at last week’s English Open, losing in the last 16, and he is yet to reach a semi-final this season.

Murphy faces fellow Englishman Mitchell Mann in the last eight after he beat Barry Hawkins 4-2.

World number 91 Mann has only previously featured once in the quarter-finals of a ranking tournament – reaching that stage of the Northern Ireland Open in 2021.

Defending champion Mark Selby laid down a marker to his rivals with a comprehensive 4-0 win over China’s Chang Bingyu.

Meanwhile, Mark Williams beat English Open champion Mark Allen 4-3 in the third round before returning for the evening session to win 4-1 against China’s Lei Peifan.

England’s Selby and Williams will square off in the quarter-finals in a repeat of the 2023 final, when the Welshman came out on top to claim his second title after also winning in 2021.

Stan Moody, 19, came through a back-and-forth battle with Ali Carter to win 4-3 and meets Louis Heathcote, who beat Wales’ Liam Davies 4-2.

Moody, ranked world number 55, showed experience and composure beyond his years to reach his second ranking quarter-final.

Related topics

Continue Reading

Sports

Murphy pips Trump as Allen loses out to Williams

Published

on

Read the full article on post.

A sensational break of 123 in the decider helped Shaun Murphy make Judd Trump a high-profile casualty in the fourth round of the British Open.

After Murphy dismantled Neil Robertson in the afternoon session, he started strongly up against world number one Trump and quickly established a 3-1 advantage.

Trump, who had seen off Cork duo Aaron Hill and Leone Crowley in earlier rounds, fought back in trademark fashion, but Murphy had the last laugh with a supreme 123 break to clinch the decider and progress into the quarter-finals at the Centaur.

Defending champion Mark Selby also eased through with a 4-0 success over Chang Bingyu and Mitchell Mann, who almost failed to arrive for his second-round tie with Gao Yang on Wednesday due to a flat tyre, continued his fine week in Cheltenham with a 4-2 victory against Barry Hawkins.

Louis Heathcote won by the same score against Liam Davies, whilst Mark Williams secured a 4-1 triumph over Lei Peifan to set up a meeting with Murphy.

Earlier in the day, Williams had fought back from 2-0 and 3-2 down to beat Antrim’s Mark Allen in a deciding frame. Allen, who claimed the English Open title on Sunday, hit the hight break of the match – a 106 in the opening frame – but he couldn’t get the frame he needed today.

Elsewhere, Robbie McGuigan was outclassed 4-0 by Ben Mertens.

Continue Reading

Trending