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Home advantage for a largely inexperienced U.S. team versus European passion will be one of the compelling storylines in this weekโs Ryder Cup between two star-studded teams at Whistling Straits.
The Americans will have six Ryder Cup rookies on their 12-man team who will strive to reclaim the trophy against a close-knit and battle-tested European side that have mostly dominated the biennial match play competition over the last four decades.
Despite a slew of new faces, the U.S. do not lack for talent given an average world ranking of nine compared to 30 for Europe, but American struggles to play as a unit at the Ryder Cup have become an all too familiar refrain.
โThe fact that the Americans have only won five times in 38 years has us all wondering can this juggernaut of an American team โฆ beat that team,โ NBC Sports golf analyst and former U.S. Ryder Cup captain Paul Azinger said on a conference call.
โBecause (Europe are) going to show up as a bonded team, and our guys are going to show up โ I donโt know how theyโre going to show up. Theyโre going to show up as the best players.โ
World number two Dustin Johnson, playing in a team-high fifth Ryder Cup, headlines a U.S. squad whose rookies include British Open winner Collin Morikawa, Olympic champion Xander Schauffele and PGA Tour Player of the Year Patrick Cantlay.
A possible distraction ahead of Fridayโs start could be the well-documented frosty relationship between Bryson DeChambeau and Brooks Koepka, who U.S. captain Steve Stricker has said will likely not be paired together during the three-day event.
The narrative that the Americans lack the chemistry enjoyed by Europe will likely remain a common theme this week, perhaps even more given Koepka told Golf Digest the Ryder Cup threw off his routine and that he might not be cut out for team sports.
Even if the U.S. team are able to find the right formula and silence questions about chemistry, they will still have their work cut out against opponents who have managed to consistently form a cohesive unit and typically thrive in the team format.
โLook, Iโll believe this forever โ the Europeans are bonded by blood. Theyโre bonded naturally. This means everything to them,โ said Azinger. โItโs sad really that this American side has gotten beaten like that, but (Europe) bring an intangible with them. Itโs a fact.โ
โSENSE OF FREEDOMโ
Europe will have seven returning players from the 2018 team that triumphed in Paris, led by Spanish world number one Jon Rahm, Northern Irishman Rory McIlroy and Englishman Tyrrell Hatton, their only top-20 representatives along with Norwayโs Viktor Hovland.
Also in the team are Spaniard Sergio Garcia, a veteran of nine Ryder Cups and Europeโs all-time leading points scorer, and Englishman Ian Poulter, who is known as โthe Postmanโ given his knack for delivering crucial points in the competition.
Still, despite being the defending champions and having five players with four-plus Ryder Cup appearances, Europe are again being perceived as clear underdogs due in part to the current form and lofty ranking of their opponents.
โThe European side seems to take this underdog role and mentality and use it to their advantage, whether theyโre playing at home or in the U.S.,โ said NBC Sports analyst and former U.S. Ryder Cup player Justin Leonard.
โWith that comes a sense of freedom, of well weโre not really expected to win, so letโs go out and play freely. And I think you see that time and again at every Ryder Cup.โ
Europe, led by captain Padraig Harrington, undoubtedly face a challenging task on American soil where the U.S. have lost only four times since the matches began in 1927.
The Americans took a recent trip to Whistling Straits, a links-style layout sculpted along two miles of Lake Michigan shoreline, to get a feel for the setup but Azinger said Mother Nature could make for a much different course this week.
โIf the wind blows, I think theyโre going to lose any advantage, really mainly on the greens,โ he said.
โEverybody can handle the wind tee to green, but on the green somehow Europe makes all those putts in the wind.โ
The Ryder Cup was postponed last year because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
REUTERS