Europe seize high ground and 11½-4½ lead over USA into Ryder Cup singles | Ryder Cup 2025

by Marcelo Moreira

Quite incredibly, this managed to be an even uglier day for the United States of America off the golf course than it was on it. Never in his wildest of dreams could Luke Donald have imagined this scenario for his imperious European team. They will head into the final day of the Ryder Cup leading 11½–4½ and requiring a mere two and a half more points from 12 singles contests for retention. The fat lady is gargling.

There will be analysis – and plenty of it – about American capitulation under the erratic leadership of Keegan Bradley but the scale of what they have run into must also be recognised. Tommy Fleetwood has won within half a point of the US tally on his own. Perhaps Bradley should deploy pairs of golfers again for day three. The Europeans have already made history, courtesy of their largest ever pre-singles lead.

Europe have therefore enjoyed the last laugh over American galleries who have let themselves and this sport down. Thuggish, moronic and personal insults towards Rory McIlroy and Shane Lowry especially dominated Saturday at Bethpage Black. Yet as Europe led their hosts the merriest of dances, thousands of punters streamed towards the exit gates. Resale prices for Sunday tickets, which were $750 (£560) to begin with, have crashed online.

“The job is never done till it’s done,” said a typically pragmatic Donald. “So I’m not going to sit here and be complacent. I know how strong the US are. They will have plenty of fight in them, they had plenty of fight today. Our guys had a lot, too, though.”

An example of how one-sided this Ryder Cup has become can be taken from the clock. When JJ Spaun and Xander Schauffele defeated Jon Rahm and Sepp Straka at 6.20pm, it was the first US point on the board since 10.38am. In between times, McIlroy had backed off a birdie attempt on the 6th green with the utterance: “I am not going to putt until they shut up.”

Shane Lowry reacts to the crowd as Rory McIlroy looks to putt on the 6th. Photograph: Harry How/Getty Images

Security, lots of it, followed McIlroy and Lowry over the back nine of a successful fourball clash with Justin Thomas and Cameron Young. While Thomas did his best to quieten hecklers at times, he also whipped up the audience. Lowry was held back by his caddie at one stage, with scores of offensive punters removed from the crowd. Whether reflective of a wider society or simply a New York Ryder Cup, this was a dismal scene.

McIlroy turned into politician mode when asked to assess what he was subjected to. “When you play an away Ryder Cup, it’s really, really challenging,” said the Masters champion. “It’s not for me to say. People can be their own judge of whether they took it too far or not. I’m just proud of us for being able to win today with what we had to go through.”

Quick Guide

Ryder Cup singles pairings and timings

Show

12.02 EDT/17.02 BST Cameron Young v Justin Rose
12.13 EDT/17.13 BST Justin Thomas v Tommy Fleetwood
12.24 EDT/17.24 BST Bryson DeChambeau v Matt Fitzpatrick
12.35 EDT/17.35 BST Scottie Scheffler v Rory McIlroy
12.46 EDT/17.46 BST Patrick Cantlay v Ludvig Åberg
12.57 EDT/17.57 BST Xander Schauffele v Jon Rahm
13.08 EDT/18.08 BST Jj spaun in sepp straka
13.19 EDT/18.19 BST Russell Henley v Shane Lowry
13.30 EDT/18.30 BST Ben Griffin V Rasmus Højgaard
13.41 EDT/18.41 BST Collin Morikawa v Tyrrell Hatton
13.52 EDT/18.52 BST Sam Burns v Robert MacIntyre
14.03 EDT/19.03 BST Harris English V Viktor Hovland

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There was even a rumpus inside the ropes. Justin Rose not unreasonably felt Bryson DeChambeau and his caddie were fiddling about on his line as he waited to putt on the 15th. The Englishman’s request for the American duo to move brought a furious reaction. The matter rumbled on to the walk to the 16th tee, where DeChambeau had a pop at Fleetwood. The intervention of Fleetwood’s caddie Ian Finnis – all 6ft 7in of him – prompted DeChambeau to beat a hasty retreat. “I was waiting to putt, the boys were obviously working on their read,” Rose explained. “Obviously they going through a lot of calculations and bits and pieces.

“I waited a few seconds and then I felt like they came up again. I questioned whether … I was like: ‘It’s my putt, right?’ Or however I said it. Maybe I didn’t say it as politely as I could have said it in the moment but by no means was there any disrespect or anything like that. Obviously it was taken the wrong way.”

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Rose and Fleetwood defeated DeChambeau and Scottie Scheffler 3&2. This has been an utterly miserable Ryder Cup for Scheffler. On Saturday morning, the world No 1 played with Russell Henley, losing by a hole to Robert MacIntyre and Viktor Hovland. Rahm had combined with Tyrrell Hatton again for foursomes success over Schauffele and Patrick Cantlay. McIlroy and Fleetwood eased to a win against Harris English and Collin Morikawa in the same section.

The final match of the day was in the balance playing the final hole. Sam Burns and Cantlay held out hope of at least half a point from Hatton and Fitzpatrick. Europe had other ideas, both golfers hitting approaches to tap-in range. Fitzpatrick’s effort from a fairway bunker was special and a fitting denouement for those in maroon shirts. Europe took both sessions 3-1.

The Bethpage Black scoreboard spells out the scale of Europe’s lead. Photograph: Mike Egerton/PA

Hovland was due to partner Fitzpatrick in the afternoon before a late switch. The Norwegian has been troubled recently by a neck injury, which flared up during his foursomes match. Should Hovland be unable to play in the singles, the US would also remove a player, with both sides taking half a point. This would clearly edge Europe even closer to victory. Neither Donald nor Hovland will want such a situation to play out. Nonetheless, given the lack of sportsmanship afforded to them from the galleries here, the Europeans do not owe this event anything. They also, it must be noted, need no help.

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