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‘Genetically, they’re all the same’ – How Europe are betting on continuity to pull off upset win

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THERE IS NO week longer than that of the Ryder Cup, where the world’s media assemble and spend four days doing their best to simply keep on talking until the action starts.

Amid this epic quest to find a new way of saying the same thing, a presenter on the Golf Channel yesterday teed up a discussion on the continuity of Europe’s team selection by looking down the camera and saying that Luke Donald’s team are genetically the same as they were in Rome two years ago. 

That’s, er, one way of putting it. 

Eleven of Donald’s 12 players are the same, with Rasmus Hojgaard swapped in for his identical twin brother Nicolai. Beyond that, Donald has obviously remained in situ as captain, and many of his vice-captains have returned, too. This mass continuity is a deliberate European ploy to end their long winless streak away from home: their stats guru Eduardo Molinari recommended a tweak to their points system so as to better ensure a return for those who were victorious in Rome. 

The European thesis: it’s hard enough to win away from home as it is, so why further complicate things with a new captain and untested pairings? 

Their continuity has allowed them do away with these preliminary worries and focus on upsetting precedent. Theirs was the last away Ryder Cup win – Medinah 2012 – and while the US remain favourites to win this week, Europe’s familiarity has helped to narrow the gap of bookies’ expectations.

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Where Rasmus Hojgaard is Europe’s sole Ryder Cup rookie, for instance, the US have four of them: Cameron Young, Ben Griffin, JJ Spaun, and Russell Henley. 

The European motto this week is “Excelsior”, and is stitched into each player’s bag. It is the motto of New York State and means “ever upward”, and so implies a sense of continuity.

If Donald sticks with his pairings from Rome, then Rory McIlroy will play foursomes with Tommy Fleetwood, while Shane Lowry will team up with Sepp Straka. The LIV duo of Jon Rahm and Tyrrell Hatton are a lock to play together again, while Viktor Hovland and Ludvig Aberg will likely reprise their partnership. Justin Rose was last time tasked with steering the rookie Robert MacIntyre around the course, but the Scot may have graduated to lead a pairing on his own and allow Rasmus be chivvied along by Rose. 

Alternate shot foursomes is the format in which pairings are most important, and thus where familiarity is likely to be most rewarded. On a tangible level, a pairing has to decide whose golf ball to use on each hole. The importance of familiarity with one another’s equipment is reflected in the fact that the Americans have been cramming on this aspect, with Bryson DeChambeau reportedly playing with Justin Thomas’ ball at home in the past couple of weeks. The Europeans have much of this work done already. 

Friday’s Foursomes are the event’s bellweather. Since Medinah, the winner of the first set of foursomes has gone on to win the Cup. They haven’t been remotely close: Europe took the first foresome session 3-1 en route to victory in 2014, and then swept the session 4-0 in both Paris and Rome. The US, meanwhile, have won the Cup twice since Medinah, across which they won the first foursome session 4-0 and 3-1 respectively. 

Hence Europe know their task on Friday morning: make a fast start and at least split the points on offer in the first foursomes session. To that end, they won’t be wasting the early holes getting to know one another. 

Bethpage is a monstrous course and with the rough shaved down, it favours long hitters. The good news for Europe is that, while they lose on their overall average driving compared to the Americans, in McIlroy, Rahm, Aberg and Hojgaard, they have four of the five longest hitters across either squad this week.

They’ll have the firepower to hang tough in the majority of foursome matches. 


The victorious European team of 2023. Alamy Stock Photo


Alamy Stock Photo

Though Europe’s players are broadly the same from two years ago, their form lines are not.

To start with the good news, McIlroy, Lowry, Fleetwood, MacIntyre, Rose, and Hatton are all in a better place.  Two years ago, for instance, McIlroy ranked 60th in the putting stats on the PGA Tour, whereas this year he is fifth. In 2023, Lowry was 26th in the ball-striking rankings, and now he’s fourth. 

Aberg, meanwhile, has garnered experience, though not all of it positive. Matt Fitzpatrick has sparked into form in recent months but has fallen a a long way from his peak at the halfway point of the 2021-23 Ryder Cup cycle, while a couple of years ago, Rahm and Hovland each had a claim to be the most in-form golfer in the world. While they have each shown fits of form this year, they are not at the level they were in Rome. Straka, meanwhile, has played very little golf lately having taken time off for family reasons. 

McIlroy, Rahm, and Hovland won 10.5 points between them in Rome, but it’s difficult to see a repeat haul from Europe’s big three this time around. They must hope that what they have lost with Hovland’s downturn can be salvaged by the improved form and quality of others. 

If Europe can win this week, expect this level of continuity to become part of their template for the future, and captain’s stints to be stretched to four years.

From the perspective of this yawning week of preamble, Europe have set themselves up very well for a tilt at what McIlroy calls the hardest feat in golf. 

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‘I’d be dead without Coleen’ – Rooney

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Wayne Rooney says he could have died had his wife Coleen not been there to help him manage problems with alcohol.

The 39-year-old former Manchester United and England captain says he was “struggling massively” with his drinking during his playing career.

Rooney – who scored a record 253 goals for United and retired from playing in 2021 – has been married to Coleen since 2008.

“I honestly believe if she weren’t there I’d be dead,” he told the Rio Ferdinand Presents podcast.

“I’ve made mistakes in the past which are well documented and whatever but I’m a little bit different at times and she keeps me on that path and she’s done it for 20-odd years.

“I wanted to go out and enjoy my time with my friends and have a night out. It got to a point where I went too far – that was a moment in my life where I was struggling massively with alcohol.

“I didn’t think I could turn to anyone. I didn’t really want to because I didn’t want to put that burden on anyone.

“I just drank for two days straight. Come training and at the weekend, I’d score two goals and then I’d go back and go and drink for two days straight again.

“She’s helped me control that massively. She’s managed me because I needed managing.”

‘I was a binge drinker’

Rooney went into management after his playing career, most recently at Plymouth Argyle, leaving last December.

Speaking to BBC Breakfast three years ago about the importance of his relationship with Coleen, Rooney said: “There could have been times when Coleen could have walked away. But we love each other.

“I was never an alcoholic. I was more of a binge drinker, where, if I got two days off, I’d literally drink for two days and then dust myself down – eye drops, chewing gum, mouthwash – to go into work and then have to run around a pitch and train. I wasn’t giving the best version of me to my club at times.

“I’ve spoken to people. It helped. You let your feelings out. I didn’t do that – I held them in and then it builds up.”

If you have been affected by the issues raised in this article, visit the BBC’s Action Line.

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Elusive All-Ireland ‘not everything for me’ – Horgan

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Patrick Horgan has admitted that missing out on an All-Ireland medal will remain a “bit of a regret” but feels the experiences he was able to enjoy in the Cork jersey over an 18-year career trumps all that.

The 37-year-old called time on his long inter-county career on Tuesday. The four-time All-Star leaves behind a legacy of being hurling’s all-time top scorer in both the championship 32-683 (779) and the league (758).

The Glen Rovers club man’s efforts helped to yield four Munster titles and this year’s Allianz Hurling League crown collectively. But while he came close to landing All-Ireland glory, the Rebels fell short during his 18-year inter-county span, losing four finals, including this year’s decider against Tipperary when Cork had led by six points at half-time.

However, speaking to RTÉ Sport’s Marty Morrissey on Wednesday about his decision to step away from the inter-county scene, Horgan said there were other things that were ultimately more important to him than the fact that the Liam MacCarthy Cup had eluded his grasp.

“Obviously, I’d be silly if I didn’t say it hurt not winning one, probably especially the last one, being in the position we were in,” he said.

“But as a whole – and I said this for a long time – I was nearly hoping we’d win it so I could even double down on this point: It’s not everything. We train a lot and we went on the road, playing a lot of games and I enjoyed every bit of it and I wouldn’t change any of that for a medal.

“If I didn’t enjoy it and won a medal, it wouldn’t be for me or whatever. But obviously it’s a bit of a regret but it’s not everything for me.”

Horgan said Pat Ryan’s departure as Cork manager in the wake of July’s final loss, and his own desire to spend more time with family, especially his young son, were all factors that weighed heavily in favour of retiring.

“(It was) very hard obviously after being there so long and being such a big part of my life,” he said of calling it a day.

“I had it in my mind, I suppose, since the final and how hard that was to take and all that.

“But it’s something I kind of put away for a good few weeks because we were playing championship with the Glen, and after being knocked out last week, I had a bit of time and yeah, there’s a few things, and it was obviously hard to see Pat Ryan go as well and the way he went.

“Even my small fella at home, Jack, he’s going to be getting bigger and I’d be out of the house an awful lot, five, six days a week and it’s not fair on him either and I want to see him.”

He added that he did not have a chat with Ryan’s successor as manager, former team-mate Ben O’Connor, before announcing his decision but backed the Newtownshandrum man to be up to the challenge of taking the Rebel reins.

20 July 2025; Patrick Horgan of Cork during the GAA Hurling All-Ireland Senior Championship final match between Cork and Tipperary at Croke Park in Dublin. Photo by Seb Daly/Sportsfile
“I’d be silly if I didn’t say it hurt not winning one”

“I get on really well with Ben actually and I wish him nothing but the best obviously in the role,” said Horgan.

“It’s a very hard position he’s taken up. But he’s taken on an unbelievable bunch of players and they’re still a great side, nothing has changed there, and a lot of good friends of mine and I hope to God they can get over the line.”

Horgan also emphatically laughed off the rumours that there had been a row in the Cork dressing room at half-time of the All-Ireland final defeat, echoing his former manager Ryan who had branded the stories as “disrespectful” to the players.

“It couldn’t have been further from the truth. Anyone that has ever been in a GAA dressing room would know that it’s probably nearly impossible that some of the stories could have even happened,” Horgan said.

“It’s silly stuff but that’s what happens when you’re playing at the level we’re playing and people want to knock you in some form.”

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