
For situations where there are good or sickness, the 2025 Ryder Cup is getting even more fun after 6pm in the dusk lights on Sunday, as Keegan Bradley (the exciting New Englander), Tommy Fleetwood (Chill Old Englander) and Russell (do the right thing) Henley are all on the final hole of the Travelers Championship, the last Hartford Stop.
Henley shot a single shot on Friday at the ball move he could only see, and he hit a 52-foot birdie chip to give himself a chance to win. Fleetwood requires three putts of 50 feet, while two means the playoffs are worse. Bradley did what the main winner knew what to do. He grabbed the night with a bingo-bango-bongo birdie 3 and won by shooting. He shot hard and rattled at 6 feet to win.
The guess here is that the three will captain the singles roster on Sunday on September 19 on the final day of the ’25 Ryder Cup. If you want to really fix something here, you can see him hitting the ball for the second. He can do it early and shake, rattle and roll for the rest of the day.
You got it, JJ – You are the US Open champion!
Go to the team.
Arnold Palmer was the last captain of the Ryder Cup, and Bradley won his PGA title in a home game in Atlanta. Arnold played and captained the ’63s game, when the event was a well-intentioned golf party, closer to sleepiness than having to watch TV. Now it’s the Super Bowl for professional golf, without a $15 million one-minute advertising space.
Keegan Bradley wins birdie putt in the Travelers Championship
The last out of Italy two years ago, the Ryder Cup has almost been a clumsy sight as the Europeans won the rout, with all kinds of players, caddies and fans fooling themselves. (Another European captain Luke Donald is a notable exception. Keep it elegant!) The ’23 show is loud, about the late 70s roller derby. Don’t blame Bradley. He was not selected for that team, although many believe he has gained the right to be one of the six draft picks for Captain Zach Johnson.
That horror show was in the cradle of Rome’s civilization, in a city with F1 and football culture. The 25th edition of Ryder Cup is held at Bethpage State Park, the birthplace of golf in the United States, and will only be rougher. Bradley has bloody jet fuel. You saw it Sunday night in Hartford, lifting his winning putt, just like the Stanley Cup. In mid-September, he will spill fuel everywhere.
The Bethpage on Long Island is 30 miles from the trading building on the New York Stock Exchange, a location of capitalist aggression. (There are first-year students in New York, the next generation of floor traders who packed Red Bull cans in Gordon Gekko’s lunch box.) Bradley plays golf for St. John’s University in Queens, Red Storm House and 20 pigeon miles from Bethpage’s black. (Also two major international airports.) Do you think that a well-served Bethpage fan will make Rory McIlroy forget about his “red mist” (to sudden, intense anger of Irishism), targeting California golfer Patrick Patrick Cantlay and his New York Giants fan Joe Lacava, in Rome? They won’t, and for anyone, some kind of ridiculous American behavior (don’t re-examine the whole hat thing) is irrelevant to McIlroy’s attention.
Do you think these fans will make McIlroy forget some of the compactness that has been shown since winning the Masters and completing a professional grand slam? For example, he said in Oakmont Friday night: “I feel like I have won the right to do whatever I want.” The voices he heard were disturbing, but he was just talking about appearing in a post-press conference. In other words, the context is narrow and sounds more annoying than before. Bethpage fans don’t care. They will want a beautiful green club coat for Augusta National release in April.
Please enjoy a short sample of Brooklyn’s own Jay-Z, The state of the empire:
This is unfair to foreigners.
When New York comes to you, it comes from every direction.
Each Ryder Cup team has 12 players, with 6 putting the team on a point system and the rest selected by the captain. Bradley said he would only consider playing in the U.S. team if he had points. He is now ranked ninth in the U.S. points list. He needs to play regularly and well in July and August to form a team. Logic will tell you that this is a long photo. I’ll tell you Sunday night in Hartford.
Golf is not doing well. Russell Henley’s last chip. Tommy Fleetwood made three shots in the same hole. Keegan Bradley’s close bird. Two in summer, two and five are here. This summer, you’ll see a lot of KB and Sunshine bands. If you see him, don’t give him a Red Bull. This guy has all been enlarged.
Michael Bamberger welcomes your comments via michael.bamberger@golf.com
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