EUROPE CAPTAIN LUKE Donald has stuck with the personnel that delivered Europe their Friday foursomes rout for the second morning of competition.
Europe’s 3-1 win in the opening session helped set up a 5.5 to 2.5 lead at the end of the first day’s play, and Donald has rejigged only the order of his selection for the Saturday morning foursomes.
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Matt Fitzpatrick and Ludvig Aberg, who hammered Scottie Scheffler and Russell Henley 5&3 in the second match on Friday morning, will lead Europe off tomorrow morning, where they will face Bryson DeChambeau and Cameron Young.
Young has been subbed in to replace Justin Thomas as DeChambeau’s alternate-shot partner, having impressed in a 6&5 fourball win over Aberg and Rasmus Hojgaard.
Rory McIlroy will again team up with Tommy Fleetwood tomorrow morning, and they will again face Harris English and Collin Morikawa, whom they hammered 5&4 in the first foursomes session.
John Rahm and Tyrrell Hatton will joust with established American duo Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele, the only American pair to win their foursomes match on Friday.
Finally, Robert MacIntyre and Viktor Hovland will again anchor Europe, this time against Scottie Scheffler and Russell Henley, a pairing with whom Bradley has kept faith in spite of their heavy Friday morning defeat.
Bournemouth head coach Andoni Iraola shares his coaching influences and reminisces about growing up playing with – and against – Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta and Real Madrid boss Xabi Alonso.
AT FIRST GLANCE, the shop on the corner of Jersey Road could be mistaken for a dying breed in the industry.
A locally-owned convenience store that isn’t one of the titans that have taken hold in England just as they have at home in Ireland.
It is a little before midday and as you cross the road from the Park Grand Hotel, the queue of customers that spills out onto the path begins to snake around the back of the shop, drifting further up a street lined with Range Rovers, Audis, Mercedes and Teslas.
Towering oak trees, their leaves still pristine green, provide a gorgeous protection.
It’s only as you come close enough to the shop to see the faded blue exterior that you realise it is not a shop, and the people are not customers.
“Muslim Hands. The Open Kitchen” reads part of the sign above the door.
“Free hot food for those in need,” is written in red block capitals.
Even in an area like this in west London, these food banks are a necessity for some. The meals being handed out are gratefully received by those who queue quietly and patiently.
Walk just five minutes up the road, past some of the modest semi-detached homes that benefit from London’s soaring property values, and the crooked, broken pavement slowly begins to smooth out.
The houses – some have gates, some have security cameras – get bigger.
The training ground of Premier League club Brentford is now visible over some hedgerows and fences.
A different life, a different world, entirely.
Some of the ongoing training session, the final one ahead of today’s game with Manchester United, can be made out, and there are some booming sounds as the unmistakable Dublin accent of head coach Keith Andrews pierces the air.
Then the music starts.
There are blasts of house, R&B, a little bit of techno, that last about 30 seconds to one minute each time.
It stops, the football instructions can be heard, the players roar and cajole, and then the music starts again.
“[It’s to] generate energy, higher intensity [in] certain phases of a session. So, yeah, I just try and stimulate the players in different ways, so music would have been used pretty frequently throughout the time I’ve been in charge,” he says.
A country music fan, Andrews accepts he must defer to his players when it comes to controlling the speakers. “I’m 45, so you can imagine my taste wouldn’t be aligned to theirs.”
Andrews continues to make his own tweaks in a job he got this summer, when Thomas Frank departed after almost seven years for Tottenham Hotspur.
Over last month’s international break, for example, former Ryder Cup captain Paul McGinley paid a visit to the training ground after a mutual contact put them in touch.
“Mainly for myself, the staff. Again, constant learning is the key. When you get the time in between your schedule, I think it’s important to still take a step back and try and add things to what you’re doing and a different pair of eyes looking at things. Little titbits of information and advice are always… I’m always keen to hear.”
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The most recent Irish sporting hero to arrive two weeks ago was Jonny Sexton, someone Andrews developed a rapport with when he previously embedded himself in an IRFU camp.
Jonny Sexton (left) with Ireland and Lions head coach Andy Farrell. Dan Sheridan / INPHO
Dan Sheridan / INPHO / INPHO
It wasn’t just a flying visit either, as Sexton spent two days with Andrews and his squad in a mutual sharing of information, thoughts and coaching principles, observing training, meetings, and also speaking with the players.
“Obviously a phenomenal rugby player, a phenomenal competitor, and he’s on the next chapter of his life, I suppose, where he’s now involved with the IRFU, the different side, and being with the Lions. So his experience is… Some can transfer into our sport, some can’t, I don’t think, but, yeah, just a really good person,” Andrews says, although Sexton may have divided loyalty today seeing as he remains a United fan.
Andrews has been around long enough to know how those who savour and relish the vacuous elements of the game work. Hangers on have never appealed; he spots those looking to take advantage a mile off.
“I think I get the balance of my life pretty good. I’ve got a tight inner circle of friends and family that hasn’t changed. Anyone that’s tried to come into that over the last few months, funny enough, hasn’t got into it,” he says.
Andrews did media work in a different stage of his life but avoids social media completely and also insists that he reads nothing that is written or listens to what is said about him.
“So when comments are thrown at me, I haven’t got a clue. And if anyone tries to tell me, I’m not really interested. So there’s enough that goes on here where I know where we are, where we need to go and how we get there, and I haven’t got the time, that’s the other thing. I did once have the time, but even when I did, I wasn’t interested really,” he says.
It’s why, after earlier in the general live section of a press conference when Roy Keane being complimentary about him is mentioned, Andrews has no intention of biting considering the former United and Ireland captain has also said some pretty derogatory things too. Martin O’Neill is another who holds a grudge from Andrews’ analysis during his time in charge of Ireland, and just this week reiterated that the Dubliner “wasn’t his favourite person”.
“Even though [I was] pretty prominent, I suppose, in media circles because I’ve done TV work, etc. But, you know, in private life and the journey I’ve gone in as a coach, I’ve never felt the need to advertise that,” Andrews says. “I’ve been pretty under the radar around all of that, the hours that I’ve put in, the time I’ve put in. But I feel like it’s put me in a really good place.”
He joined Frank’s staff as set-piece coach ahead of the last campaign and when Brentford went in search of his replacement the appointment of Andrews was met with a mixture of intrigue and bafflement.
“If I was nothing to do with this football club and seeing a headline where a set-piece coach takes over as the head coach of the Premier League [team], I probably would have been surprised,” he says.
“I would have been a bit more tuned into Brentford, even from afar, than most people, I think. So, yeah, internally, was it a surprise? I’m not so sure.”
Andrews is also keenly aware of what it means to be an Irish boss in the most popular league in the world, and while Paddy McCarthy is on the coaching staff at Crystal Palace, he remains the highest profile with other bosses in the EFL – Brian Barry Murphy (Cardiff City), Alan Sheahan (Swansea City), Conor Hourihane (Barnsley), Noel Hunt (Reading),and Dean Brennan (Barnet).
“You’ll know I’m very patriotic. The whole playing side of my career was built around the ambition of playing for Ireland and representing Ireland. And in my coaching career, I coached every age group with the Irish team, so I’m very, very patriotic so it doesn’t get lost on me,” he says. “But equally, I just need to go about my business and try and do as well as I can do. But I’m very proud to be an Irish Premier League head coach.”
Andrews embraces striker Igor Thiago after beating Aston Villa earlier this season. Alamy Stock Photo
Alamy Stock Photo
The road taken by Andrews has been carefully plotted until this point, although the challenge now is to avoid teetering by the abyss and continue to build on a steady body of work.
By 29, he knew he wanted to go into coaching so began working at Blackburn Rovers’ academy while still playing.
He had a career that saw him earn 35 Ireland caps and play enough years in the Championship and Premier League that he could have walked away from game and enjoyed a comfortable, quiet, life if he wanted.
There is a sense of freedom that comes with that, but more powerful still was Andrews’ feeling of purpose. It’s why, even as he briefly dabbled in media, he offered his services free of charge to the FAI for a year and a half to work with the U16s, U17s and U18s.
“I’ve always been very deliberate about roles that I took,” he says. “Learning, developing, travelling to different clubs, sports around Europe to really just learn, basically, and experience different environments that you will always pick up little nuggets.”
He was, of course, the consistent touchstone on Stephen Kenny’s coaching staff with Ireland, and after that, he joined Chris Wilder at Sheffield United before Frank brought him to Brentford.
“Bright, enthusiastic, committed, driven. Great personal qualities,” Wilder tells The 42 of Andrews.
Keith Andrews (left) as Stephen Kenny addresses the Ireland players. Alamy Stock Photo
Alamy Stock Photo
“A head coach role was always something that I was working towards, I knew that from pretty early really but I was very deliberate about when that should be,” Andrews says. “I felt like I should earn my stripes. I wanted to earn my stripes and learn the game, devote time to being the best coach I could be and go through different experiences.”
It’s taken him to the Premier League, and the summer saw quite an overhaul at Brentford. Key players like Bryan Mbuemo, captain Christian Norgaard, and forward Yoane Wissa left for United, Arsenal and Newcastle, respectively.
Mbuemo was a record sale – €80 million – and Dango Ouattara was a record signing at around €50m. The arrival of England international Jordan Henderson brings elite-level experience, and Caoimhín Kelleher is now the No.1 with Nathan Collins as captain.
That duo’s woes with Ireland naturally didn’t go unnotticed for Andrews, although with up to 15 of his squad away on international duty, his focus was on the collective.
“Some will come in on cloud nine, some will come in that would be inevitably down after the results or the performances, not playing, all those things you need to factor in. But I think players, by nature, pretty quickly get back onto the club page. I used to say that with the international team, when players would meet up, if things hadn’t been going particularly well at club level, for whatever reason, then this is your haven.
“You need to enjoy being here and relish this environment. So if they have had a tough time, some of the players, when they’ve been away, nothing really changes. We’ll just always welcome them back in and try and support them and be that constant support.”
Taking the time to get a sense of his players on a human level is a necessity. “I think it’s really important to understand different nationalities, cultures, religions. But ultimately, it needs to come from a place of respect. I think we do that. I try to do. That’s who I am. Working with people from different places of the world, different language barriers, but also ties into how players learn as well.
“And that’s really important when you’re coaching, when you’re doing meetings, that you’re very deliberate about how you present what you’re saying, how you’re saying it, because you need to remember there’s a lot of these players where English isn’t their first language.”
Brentford go into today’s game with United in 17th place. They’re on four points, one clear of the relegation zone, yet a win will take them above Newcastle and level with the likes of United, Everton, Leeds and Manchester City, who will all play later in the weekend.
On the touchline against Fulham last week. Alamy Stock Photo
Alamy Stock Photo
Brentford’s sole win from their opening five fixtures was in front of their own fans – against Aston Villa – while after the most recent 3-1 defeat to Fulham last Saturday night, Andrews found himself in a familiar situation regardless of the result. He went home, checked on his dog, a cockapoo named Buddy, and rewatched the first half before going to sleep.
The next morning, he watched the game back a couple of more times from different tactical angles before, as he puts it, “you just try to put everything into a box of why it happened. You see things and you see fixes, you see possibilities of what could have been and what should have been.”
Then attention turned to preparing for United, although the death of his uncle Des, who had been living with Alzheimer’s, brought him back to Dublin for the funeral at the start of this week.
“I was very close to him. His big team was Man United. He would have gone there from God knows how long ago. It was quite a poignant week and the fact we’re playing Manchester United, so the significance of who we’re playing on that front is not lost,” Andrews says.
Like so many families in Ireland, they were split between United and Liverpool, although Andrews isn’t being too guarded about his loyalties.
“Not telling you, but it wasn’t Man United.”
The emotion and sadness of the week from a personal point of view is not something Andrews wants to shy away from.
“I say it all the time about the players and how I deal with the players, it’s always the person first, that’s the most important thing. I genuinely mean that, how you treat people, with compassion, with empathy, with respect, that’s the way I live my life. This week has been a tough week for our family.”
Perspective is, as always, just around the corner.
In tomorrow’s second part of The 42′s exclusive access at Brentford, director of football Phil Giles talks about what constitutes success for Keith Andrews at the Premier League club and why he was the perfect choice to take charge.
Scottie Scheffler’s dominance at the top of the men’s game – insurmountable as the world number one, ruthless wins at the majors and cleaning up on the PGA Tour – have seen parallels drawn with Tiger Woods.
At Bethpage, another similarity between the two American superstars started to emerge: struggling in Ryder Cup pairings.
After losing in Friday’s opening foursomes, Scheffler has now been beaten in all three of his matches in the alternate shot format – winning only three of 41 holes he has played.
Another defeat in the afternoon fourballs means Scheffler is only the third top-ranked player to lose twice on the opening day of a Ryder Cup.
“His foursome play is just atrocious and there’s really no explanation because you see the guy winning tournament after tournament after tournament,” American writer Alex Miceli told BBC Radio 5 Live.
“There seems to be no question that he will finally figure it out – but here we are in 2025 after the first matches and he still hasn’t figured it out.”
Scheffler, 29, did not play foursomes on his Ryder Cup debut in 2021 but suffered two heavy defeats in 2023.
Scheffler and Sam Burns lost 4&3 to Jon Rahm and Tyrrell Hatton on Friday in Rome, before he and Brooks Koepka suffered a record 9&7 mauling by Viktor Hovland and Ludvig Åberg on Saturday – which left Scheffler in tears.
The loss at Bethpage means American world number ones have lost five straight Ryder Cup foursomes matches – Scheffler following Woods in 2010 and Dustin Johnson in 2018.
How world’s best struggle in foursomes
Europe have regularly looked to a talismanic figure – starting with Seve Ballesteros in the 1980s through to Rory McIlroy in the present day – to be a figurehead driving their Ryder Cup bid.
The United States have never been able to find that leader – not even Woods.
The 15-time major champion elevated golf to a new stratosphere in the late 1990s and early 2000s, meaning he still remains the game’s pre-eminent superstar.
But curiously Woods featured on just one victorious Ryder Cup team and won only 39% of his matches.
In foursomes, he won only four of 14 matches and lost nine.
Why? One theory is Woods – and now Scheffler – are unable to transfer their single-mindedness into a format where they are reliant on their playing partner.
Woods was seen as a lone wolf in his pomp. In the singles, he won four and lost two of his six matches.
While Scheffler is seemingly more comfortable in the team setting, the Texan has also performed better when he is concentrating on his own business.
He has not lost in either of his two singles matches so far, beating Rahm as an unheralded rookie in the 2021 win at Whistling Straits before earning a half against the Spaniard in Rome.
“I’d like to think that I’m not difficult to pair with people,” said Scheffler in his pre-tournament news conference.
“I’ve had different partners over the years and have had some success. I would definitely not put myself in that category.”
Another hypothesis behind Woods and Scheffler’s foursomes struggles is their team-mates being unable to cope under the weight of expectation.
Four-time major winner Scheffler, always keen to underline his bloke-next-door persona, has less of an intimidating aura as Woods.
But he does possess the same lofty standards where his golf game is concerned.
However, since 1999, the top-ranked player in the Ryder Cup field has won just 38% of their matches.
“They put a lot of pressure on themselves and as much as Scheffler says he doesn’t think about it, I think that’s garbage and he thinks about all of it,” added Miceli.
“Tiger didn’t care so much [about that] but Scottie is a different kind of individual.
“He thinks he needs to lead but doesn’t want to be seen leading. It’s a huge conundrum for him, I think.”
Scheffler & Henley ‘failed to fire’
Getty Images
Of course, Scheffler is far from solely responsible for the foursomes defeats.
His partner Russell Henley did not cover himself in much glory during Friday’s 4&3 beating by European pair Aberg and Matt Fitzpatrick.
Henley is fourth in a world ranking system skewed by the omission of LIV golfers, but looked shaky on his Ryder Cup debut.
Even Scheffler – whose game is based on consistent driving and metronomic irons – could not dig them out of trouble.
“Scheffler and Henley certainly failed to fire but the European performance was perfect,” said former European Ryder Cup player Oliver Wilson, who is analysing the Bethpage action for BBC Radio 5 Live.
“They made the Americans earn everything and they really couldn’t come up with the goods.
“The Americans put on a little spell at the end there, they had a little bit of life coming but it just wasn’t enough and it was far too late.”
Scheffler was bullish afterwards, saying he felt his pairing did “some good things”.
“We just didn’t hole enough putts early. We had some chances. I think the putts just didn’t fall,” he added.
On Friday afternoon, Scheffler was unable to make amends in the fourballs alongside debutant JJ Spaun as they were beaten 3&2 by Rahm and Sepp Straka.
Again, Scheffler blamed his failings with the putter – the weakest part of his game – even though he did rally with a couple of late birdies.
Scheffler and his long-time buddy Henley have been given the chance to redeem themselves in the Saturday foursomes, with US captain Keegan Bradley insisting Scheffler remains in “great spirits”.
Trailing by three points, the hosts are relying on some statement performance. Especially from their standout talent.
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