2025 Ryder Cup

Golf tournament in Farmingdale, New York, US From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 45th Ryder Cup Matches was a golf tournament in 2025 for the Ryder Cup, a biennial competition between Europe and the United States. It was held in the United States from September 26–28 on the Black Course of Bethpage State Park in Farmingdale, New York. Europe beat the United States by a score of 15 to 13, becoming the first away team to win the event since 2012.

DatesSeptember 26–28, 2025
Captains
Quick facts Dates, Venue ...
45th Ryder Cup Matches
Logo
DatesSeptember 26–28, 2025
VenueBethpage Black Course
LocationFarmingdale, New York
Captains
United States 13 15 Europe
Europe wins the Ryder Cup
Location map
Bethpage Black Course is located in the United States
Bethpage Black Course
Bethpage Black Course
Location in the United States
Bethpage Black Course is located in New York
Bethpage Black Course
Bethpage Black Course
Location in New York
 2023
2027 
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The behavior of the American crowds during the event was criticized, with Sky News calling it "the most abusive Ryder Cup in almost a century of matches" and Rory McIlroy stating that "golf should be held to a higher standard".[1][2] The President of the United States, Donald Trump, attended the event as a spectator, the first time a sitting president has attended the Ryder Cup.[3]

Venue

The 18th hole of Bethpage Black at the Ryder Cup

In 2013, the PGA of America announced that Bethpage Black, a public golf course in Bethpage State Park on Long Island, New York, would host the 2019 PGA Championship as well as the 2024 Ryder Cup (later delayed to 2025).[4] Opened in 1936, Bethpage Black was designed by Joseph H. Burbeck and A. W. Tillinghast.[5] It hosted Metropolitan PGA events such as the New York State Open and was first chosen as a venue for a top-level tournament at the 2002 U.S. Open, which Tiger Woods won.[6][7]

It was the second time the state of New York had been selected as host of the Ryder Cup, after the 1995 Ryder Cup at Oak Hill Country Club, which Europe won 14+12 to 13+12.[4]

Course

More information Hole, Yards ...
HoleYardsMetresParHoleYardsMetresPar
13973634105024594
23893564114353984
32102003124964544
45174735136085565
54784374141611473
64083734154774364
75244794165394934
82101903171791643
94604204184113764
Out3,5933,28535In3,8083,48235
Source:[8] Total7,4016,76770
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Format

The Ryder Cup is a match play event, with each match worth one point. The competition format was as follows:

  • Day 1 (Friday) – 4 foursome (alternate shot) matches in the morning, and 4 fourball (better ball) matches in the afternoon
  • Day 2 (Saturday) – 4 foursome matches in the morning, and 4 fourball matches in the afternoon
  • Day 3 (Sunday) – 12 singles matches

The sessions in which the foursome and fourball matches are played on the first two days were chosen by the home team captain; Keegan Bradley's decision was announced on August 25.[9]

With a total of 28 points available, 14+12 points were required to win the Cup, and 14 points were required for the defending champion to retain the Cup. All matches were played to a maximum of 18 holes.[10]

Teams

Captains

Team USA captain Keegan Bradley (left) and Team Europe captain Luke Donald

Keegan Bradley was named the U.S. team captain on July 8, 2024, becoming the youngest Ryder Cup captain since Arnold Palmer in 1963.[11] Luke Donald was named as the European team captain on November 29, 2023, retaining the role from Europe's victorious 2023 campaign. He became the first European to repeat his captaincy since Bernard Gallacher in 1993.[12]

Vice captains

For the U.S. team, Webb Simpson, Brandt Snedeker, Kevin Kisner, Jim Furyk, and Gary Woodland were selected as the five vice captains by Bradley.[13]

For the European team, Thomas Bjørn, Alex Norén, Edoardo Molinari, José María Olazábal and Francesco Molinari were selected as the five vice captains, all apart from Norén rejoining with Donald from the previous edition of the competition.[14][15]

Team selection

United States

The United States announced their selection criteria on October 8, 2024. The top six players in the Ryder Cup points list will receive automatic selection, and six players would receive discretionary selection by the captain, Keegan Bradley.[16] Points are awarded as follows:

World number one Scottie Scheffler secured his qualification in June.[17][18]

More information Position, Name ...
Position Name Points
1 Scottie Scheffler (Q) 37,180.33
2 J. J. Spaun (Q) 14,851.91
3 Xander Schauffele (Q) 13,733.52
4 Russell Henley (Q) 12,276.82
5 Harris English (Q) 10,880.55
6 Bryson DeChambeau (Q) 10,774.98
7 Justin Thomas (P) 10,467.26
8 Collin Morikawa (P) 10,049.44
9 Ben Griffin (P) 9,745.76
10 Maverick McNealy 8,913.65
11 Keegan Bradley 8,435.00
12 Brian Harman 7,466.91
13 Andrew Novak 7,300.48
14 Cameron Young (P) 7,209.64
15 Patrick Cantlay (P) 6,716.39
16 Sam Burns (P) 6,688.29
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Players in qualifying places (Q) are shown in green; captain's picks (P) are shown in yellow.

Europe

Team Europe announced their selection criteria on August 6, 2024. The top six players in the Ryder Cup points list received automatic selection while six players would receive discretionary selection by the captain, Luke Donald. Donald brought back most of his defending championship team, just switching Nicolai Højgaard with his brother Rasmus Højgaard.[19]

There was a significant change to the points qualification, with Team Europe switching to one Ryder Cup points list, rather than the previous two. Major Championships have up to five times as many points distributed as other PGA and DP World tour events, with the points per eligible event below:[20]

  • Major Championships: 5,000 points per event.
  • PGA Tour Signature Events, The Players Championship, and FedExCup Playoffs: 3,000 points per event.
  • DP World Tour Rolex Series Events and PGA Tour Regular FedEx Cup Events: 2,000 points per event.
  • DP World Tour 'Back 9' Events: 1,500 points per event.
  • DP World Tour 'Global Series' Events and PGA TOUR 'Opposite' Events: 1,000 points per event.

The leading players in the final points lists were:

More information Position, Name ...
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Players in qualifying places (Q) are shown in green; captain's picks (P) are shown in yellow.

Prior playing records

More information Name, Age ...
United States team
Name Age Points
rank[18]
World
ranking[22]
Previous
Ryder Cups
Matches Record Points
percentage
Scottie Scheffler 2911272–2–350.00
J. J. Spaun 35260Rookie
Xander Schauffele 313428 4–4–050.00
Russell Henley 36430Rookie
Harris English 3651013 1–2–0 33.33
Bryson DeChambeau 3262126 2–3–1 41.67
Justin Thomas (P) 3275313 7–4–2 61.54
Collin Morikawa (P) 288828 4–3–1 56.25
Ben Griffin (P) 299110Rookie
Cameron Young (P) 2814200Rookie
Patrick Cantlay (P) 33152228 5–2–1 68.75
Sam Burns (P) 29162313 1–2–0 33.33
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More information Name, Country ...
Europe team
Name Country Age Points
rank[21]
World
ranking[22]
Previous
Ryder Cups
Matches Record Points
percentage
Rory McIlroy Northern Ireland 361273316–13–454.55
Robert MacIntyre Scotland 2929132–0–183.33
Tommy Fleetwood England 34373127–3–266.67
Justin Rose England 4541462614–9–359.62
Rasmus Højgaard Denmark 245580Rookie
Tyrrell Hatton England 336253115–4–254.55
Shane Lowry (P) Ireland 38724262–3–141.67
Sepp Straka (P) Austria 32815131–2–033.33
Ludvig Åberg (P) Sweden 25916142–2–050.00
Viktor Hovland (P) Norway 2710122103–4–345.00
Matt Fitzpatrick (P) England 311129381–7–012.50
Jon Rahm (P) Spain 3024733126–3–362.50
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Captain's picks (P) are shown in yellow. World rankings and match records are prior to the start of the 2025 Ryder Cup.

Event summary

Friday's matches

On Friday, President Donald Trump attended the event, the first sitting President of the United States to attend the Ryder Cup.[23]

Morning foursomes

The opening round of four foursome matches started at 7:10 am local time. Pairings were announced on Thursday, September 25.[24][25] The first point was won by Europe, with Jon Rahm and Tyrrell Hatton winning, 4 and 3, against Bryson DeChambeau and Justin Thomas. Europe won the second point of the morning with Rory McIlroy and Tommy Fleetwood winning, 5 and 4, against Collin Morikawa and Harris English.[26]

Europe won their third consecutive point with Ludvig Åberg and Matt Fitzpatrick winning 5 and 3, against Scottie Scheffler and Russell Henley. The Americans got their first point with Xander Schauffele and Patrick Cantlay winning 2-up, against Robert MacIntyre/Viktor Hovland.[27]

Europe had a 3–1 lead after the first session.[28]

More information Results, Overall ...
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Afternoon four-ball

The opening round of four four-balls started at 12:25 pm local time. Pairings were announced at the end of the morning foursome matches. In the third match, Justin Thomas and Cameron Young were dominant making seven birdies in thirteen holes, winning their match 6 and 5, against Ludvig Åberg and Rasmus Højgaard, cutting the Europe lead to 3–2. In the first overall match Jon Rahm and Sepp Straka won 3 and 2, against Scottie Scheffler and J. J. Spaun, extending the Europe lead to 4–2. In the second match Tommy Fleetwood and Justin Rose won 1-up against Ben Griffin and Bryson DeChambeau, pushing the Europe lead to 5–2. In the final match Rory McIlroy and Shane Lowry halved their match with Sam Burns and Patrick Cantlay which gave the European side a 512–212 lead heading into the weekend play.[28]

More information Results, 51⁄2 ...
Europe Results United States
Rahm/Straka Europe 3 & 2 Scheffler/Spaun
Fleetwood/Rose Europe 1 up Griffin/DeChambeau
Åberg/Højgaard United States 6 & 5 Young/Thomas
McIlroy/Lowry halved Burns/Cantlay
212 Session 112
512 Overall 212
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Saturday's matches

Morning foursomes

The foursomes matches for Saturday were announced Friday night after the completion of day one. In the first overall match, Matt Fitzpatrick and Ludvig Åberg lost 4 and 2 to Bryson DeChambeau and Cameron Young, reducing Europe's lead to 512–312. In the second overall match, Rory McIlroy and Tommy Fleetwood won 3 and 2 against Harris English and Collin Morikawa, increasing Europe's lead to 612–312. In the third overall match, Jon Rahm and Tyrrell Hatton won 3 and 2 against Xander Schauffele and Patrick Cantlay, pushing Europe's lead to 712–312. In the final match, Robert MacIntyre and Viktor Hovland won 1-up against Russell Henley and Scottie Scheffler, increasing Europe's advantage to 812–312 heading into the afternoon four-ball session.[29]

More information Results, 81⁄2 ...
Europe Results United States
Fitzpatrick/Åberg United States 4 & 2 DeChambeau/Young
McIlroy/Fleetwood Europe 3 & 2 English/Morikawa
Rahm/Hatton Europe 3 & 2 Schauffele/Cantlay
MacIntyre/Hovland Europe 1 up Henley/Scheffler
3 Session 1
812 Overall 312
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Afternoon four-ball

The four-ball matches for Saturday were announced after the completion of the morning foursomes. In the first match, Rory McIlroy and Shane Lowry took on Justin Thomas and Cameron Young. McIlroy and Lowry were 2-up after winning both the 4th and 5th holes respectively, before Thomas and Young won the 7th and 9th holes to make it all square leading into back nine. On the 14th, McIlroy and Lowry took a 1-up lead before winning the 18th hole to win 2-up. In the second match, Tommy Fleetwood and Justin Rose faced Scottie Scheffler and Bryson DeChambeau. Fleetwood and Rose would win the 3rd hole before Scheffler and DeChambeau would win both the 4th and 5th. Fleetwood and Rose then won the 7th and 8th to lead 1-up going into the last nine holes. Winning the 10th hole gave Fleetwood and Rose a 2-up lead, before Scheffler and DeChambeau would win the 11th hole. Fleetwood and Rose would win both the 12th and 14th, and with the rest of the holes being tied, Fleetwood and Rose won 3 and 2. In the third match, J. J. Spaun and Xander Schauffele won the Americans' only point of the afternoon, winning against Jon Rahm and Sepp Straka. After being 1-down going into the 17th hole, they ended up winning both of the last two holes to win the match 1-up. For the final match of the day, Tyrrell Hatton, replacing an injured Viktor Hovland, and Matt Fitzpatrick faced off against Sam Burns and Patrick Cantlay. Being tied going into the 18th hole, Europe won the hole, winning 1-up.[30][29]

Team Europe took a 1112–412 lead heading into Sunday singles: the highest lead on any side in Ryder Cup history since Europe's introduction in 1979.[31]

More information Results, 111⁄2 ...
Europe Results United States
McIlroy/Lowry Europe 2 up Thomas/Young
Fleetwood/Rose Europe 3 & 2 Scheffler/DeChambeau
Rahm/Straka United States 1 up Spaun/Schauffele
Hatton/Fitzpatrick Europe 1 up Burns/Cantlay
3 Session 1
1112 Overall 412
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Sunday's singles matches

Sunday pairings were announced at the conclusion of day 2. Viktor Hovland withdrew from his match against Harris English before the start of play due to a neck injury, resulting in his match not being played and halved, giving both teams a 12 point.[32] The overall score moving to a European lead of 12–5.[33]

The day saw many Europeans leading early but their leads disappearing with the US Team making comebacks. In the first match, Cameron Young birdied the 18th hole to defeat Justin Rose 1 up and give the American team its first full point on singles, with Europe still leading 12–6.[34] In the second match, Justin Thomas also birdied the 18th hole defeating Tommy Fleetwood 1-up, to give American their 2nd full point, with Europe still leading 12–7. In the sixth match Xander Schauffele defeated Jon Rahm 4 and 3 to cut the European lead down to 12–8. Europe would win their first and only full point of the session when Ludvig Åberg defeated Patrick Cantlay 2 and 1, putting Europe 1 point away from retaining the Ryder cup at 13–8. The third match was halved by Bryson DeChambeau and Matt Fitzpatrick, with DeChambeau making an improbable comeback despite being 5 down after 7, leaving Europe with a 1312–812 lead.[35] The fourth match featured the world number one Scottie Scheffler against world number two Rory McIlroy, with Scheffler defeating McIlroy 1-up. This was the first time the top two players in the world rankings had faced each other in a Ryder Cup singles match.[36] Scheffler's win narrowed Europe's lead to 1312–912. In the seventh match J. J. Spaun defeated Sepp Straka 2 and 1, cutting the European lead to 1312–1012.[28]

Europe retained the cup when Shane Lowry birdied the 18th hole to halve his match against Russell Henley, making the score 14–11.[37] Ben Griffin won the ninth match 1-up over Rasmus Højgaard with Europe holding a 14–12 lead. In the tenth match, Tyrrell Hatton and Collin Morikawa halved the match, ensuring that Europe would win the Ryder Cup, while in the final match Robert Macintyre and Sam Burns also halved, making the final score 15–13.[38]

More information Results, Timetable ...
Europe Results United States Timetable
Justin Rose United States 1 up Cameron Young 2nd: 12–6
Tommy Fleetwood United States 1 up Justin Thomas 3rd: 12–7
Matt Fitzpatrick halved Bryson DeChambeau 6th: 1312–812
Rory McIlroy United States 1 up Scottie Scheffler 7th: 1312912
Ludvig Åberg Europe 2 & 1 Patrick Cantlay 5th: 13–8
Jon Rahm United States 4 & 3 Xander Schauffele 4th: 12–8
Sepp Straka United States 2 & 1 J. J. Spaun 8th: 13121012
Shane Lowry halved Russell Henley 9th: 14–11
Rasmus Højgaard United States 1 up Ben Griffin 10th: 14–12
Tyrrell Hatton halved Collin Morikawa 11th: 1412–1212
Robert MacIntyre halved Sam Burns 12th: 15–13
Viktor Hovland halved Harris English 1st: 12–5
312 Session 812
15 Overall 13
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Note: † Viktor Hovland withdrew due to a neck injury.

Crowd conduct

Europe faced a crowd described as "jingoistic", "hostile" and "unruly".[39][40][41] Golf Magazine and Golf Monthly both stated that fans had "crossed the line" of acceptable behaviour.[42][43] McIlroy was subjected to "lewd, obnoxious and insulting taunts",[44] with MC Heather McMahan removed from the event on Saturday after joining in with an explicit chant sung by the crowd.[45] The taunts at one point led McIlroy to unleash his own response by flipping off the crowd and repeatedly yelling "f-bombs" at offenders.[46]

Organisers did note that no arrests were made, but that some fans had been removed from the event.[45] Keegan Bradley—captain of the United States team—defended the crowd, calling them "passionate", and rejected suggestions by media that the team had provoked the crowd.[47]

Following the event, McIlroy called the crowds "unacceptable", noting that his wife had been hit by a beer on Saturday and that "golf should be held to a higher standard than [this]".[48][49] Media criticised the American crowds,[50] with Sky News calling it "the most abusive Ryder Cup in almost a century of matches",[51] The Guardian calling it a "reflection of Trump's all-caps America",[41] and Golf Magazine stating that crowds were "more nuanced than an angry mob, but not by much".[52] The crowd's behavior was compared to that of the 1999 Ryder Cup in Brookline, Massachusetts, where Colin Montgomerie and his wife received abuse. On that occasion, Montgomerie's opponent Payne Stewart intervened on his behalf and had police remove some of the offenders from the crowd.[53][54]

Individual player records

Each entry refers to the win–loss–tie record of the player.[55]

Europe

More information Player, Points ...
PlayerPointsMatchesOverallSinglesFoursomesFourballs
Ludvig Åberg242–2–01–0–01–1–00–1–0
Matt Fitzpatrick2.542–1–10–0–11–1–01–0–0
Tommy Fleetwood454–1–00–1–02–0–02–0–0
Tyrrell Hatton3.543–0–10–0–12–0–01–0–0
Rasmus Højgaard020–2–00–1–00–0–00–1–0
Viktor Hovland1.53†1–1–10–0–11–1–00–0–0
Shane Lowry231–0–20–0–10–0–01–0–1
Robert MacIntyre1.531–1–10–0–11–1–00–0–0
Rory McIlroy3.553–1–10–1–02–0–01–0–1
Jon Rahm353–2–00–1–02–0–01–1–0
Justin Rose232–1–00–1–00–0–02–0–0
Sepp Straka131–2–00–1–00–0–01–1–0
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United States

More information Player, Points ...
PlayerPointsMatchesOverallSinglesFoursomesFourballs
Sam Burns130–1–20–0–10–0–00–1–1
Patrick Cantlay1.551–3–10–1–01–1–00–1–1
Bryson DeChambeau1.551–3–10–0–11–1–00–2–0
Harris English0.53†0–2–10–0–10–2–00–0–0
Ben Griffin121–1–01–0–00–0–00–1–0
Russell Henley0.530–2–10–0–10–2–00–0–0
Collin Morikawa0.530–2–10–0–10–2–00–0–0
Xander Schauffele343–1–01–0–01–1–01–0–0
Scottie Scheffler151–4–01–0–00–2–00–2–0
J. J. Spaun232–1–01–0–00–0–01–1–0
Justin Thomas242–2–01–0–00–1–01–1–0
Cameron Young343–1–01–0–01–0–01–1–0
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Note: † Viktor Hovland withdrew due to a neck injury. The match was not played, resulting in a halved match and 12 point for Hovland and Harris English

Broadcast

The 2025 Ryder Cup was televised in the United States by USA Network, Golf Channel, NBC, NBC streaming site Peacock, the Ryder Cup's YouTube page and had radio coverage on SiriusXM Radio.[56][57] In the United Kingdom and Ireland, the event was broadcast by Sky Sports and streamed on Sky Go, with radio coverage on BBC Radio 5 Live.[58]

References

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