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Monday, September 1, 2025

Ryder Cup 2025: Europe captain Luke Donald explains wildcard picks for Bethpage bear pit


Donald wants to harness that sense of continuity to find the formula that can yield a first away win since the ‘Miracle at Medinah’ in 2012. To do that, the skipper is preparing his team to cope with an expected hostile atmosphere.

“Of course, remembering what we did in Rome is pretty special, having those memories, those feelings, about what we achieved together as a team,” he said.

“But I want to approach this from a different angle, a different set of eyes in terms of this as a different challenge. This is not going to be what Rome was like.

“We’re going into the bear pit.”

So the personnel might be virtually unchanged, but the approach will be altered. “We have to come at this with a really refreshed view of how we’re going to tackle it,” Donald added.

“Twenty months ago, when I was made captain again, this was my first thought. It’s like, what are the things that haven’t worked in the past away Ryder Cups, and how do we correct that?

“I’ve come at it from a different angle of communication with the players, what the environment requires and really doing a deep dive on that and the best practices.

“My goal as a captain is to create lasting memories with these players. We got to do it in Rome, and hopefully, we get to do it in New York, creating a week that they always remember.

“And I thought we did a pretty good job in Rome. So it’s a big task to try and make this week even better.”

Donald would not be drawn on whether he would have preferred his opposite number, Keegan Bradley, to have named himself as a playing captain.

“I’ve always tried to keep my leadership around things that I can influence and that was totally out of my control,” said the 47-year-old European skipper.

“We know, he’s one of their best players. And if he played, he was going to be strong.

“We also knew that if he decided to do that, it was going to be a lot to try and juggle both. But they seem to have many plans in place.

“He’s made his decision. He’s decided that he has plenty of talent to replace him.

“I know Keegan well. He’s a good friend of mine and I understand that he’s going to bring a strong passion, he’s going to try and get his troops pretty fired up.”

Now, though, we enter the phoney war; four long weeks of build-up that will see both teams gain competitive reps on either side of the Atlantic.

Rory McIlroy, Shane Lowry and Tyrrell Hatton play the Irish Open this week. They will join the rest of the team at the BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth the following week.

That is when the majority of Bradley’s line-up take part on the PGA Tour at the Procore Championship in Napa, California.

There will be plenty of talk in the intervening period, with neither side overly keen on being regarded as favourites for the Bethpage showdown.

Donald has already started. “Obviously, on paper, they’re very strong,” he noted. “That home advantage is pretty good. So, I still do believe we are underdogs.”

But, as expected, armed with experience to potentially upset the odds.

Listen to a golf special on BBC Sounds and Radio 5 Live from 21:00 BST on Monday, 1 September with Iain Carter, Oli Wilson and Trish Johnson analysing the teams.

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