To illustrate how offbeat the Ryder Cup is from professional golfers’ norm, just recall what happened on the first tee at midday during last Saturday’s second round.
American teammates Justin Thomas and Daniel Berger came to the raucous amphitheater at Kohler, Wisconsin’s Whistling Straits to stoke up the grandstand fans, as if they needed any incitement after being there full throated since well before sunrise. Thomas and Berger, both sitting out the afternoon better-ball matches, got the assembled folks even more pumped by going into a nearby cooler and tossing out beers. When it appeared that the two emergency bartenders were left without beverages, two more came flying back to the tee box. After a brief pause, Thomas turned his hat backwards and Berger pierced the side of the beer can, with both chug-a-lugging as the crowd went berserk. Thomas spiked his can.
Justin Thomas and Daniel Berger just pounded beers on the first hole at the #RyderCup pic.twitter.com/WV2ThXl9zy
— Mike De Sisti (@mdesisti) September 25, 2021
“It looks like they are having a good time and enjoying the experience,” U.S. Captain Steve Stricker, a Wisconsin native, said. “We get ridiculed for being too tight and all that, and then we do something like that where it looks like our team is together and having a good time and trying to get with the crowd.”
The U.S. won on Sunday in a rout, 19-9, the largest margin of victory since 1975, led by Dustin Johnson’s 5-0-0 record and Collin Morikawa’s clinching half point. It was only the sixth victory in the last 30 years for the U.S., with Europe taking nine wins during that span.
What Makes The Ryder Cup Different
The Ryder Cup atmosphere is completely foreign for what professional golfers experience for 99 percent of their seasons. Usually, it’s an individualistic, flat-lined, 72-hole stroke play competition that can become monotonous unless the scenery includes azaleas and pimento cheese at Augusta, links-style golf in the UK, classic, big-boned U.S. courses, bomb-a-thons with Bryson DeChambeau or hang onto your seats with Jordan Spieth.
“Maybe there’s a little lull in the middle of the round, but the end and the beginnings are just pure adrenaline,” U.S. star Patrick Cantlay said.
“The most animated I’ve been in my career has been at Ryder Cups,” European stalwart Rory McIlroy said. “It just brings something out of you that you don’t get playing individually.”
The team aspect is unique for format and mindset. No longer focused solely on your own breathing and to stay in the moment, teammates’ energy, the fans’ cheering (or booing) and a search for the greater good of the representing country or continent become priorities in an event where the only monetary reward is for players’ charities. In addition, the format’s popularity is rooted in American team sports – particularly the NFL’s Packers and NBA’s Bucks in Wisconsin – and the fact that most recreational golfers play the sport more often in better-ball competition or by playing Nassau formats more closely associated with match play.
Sports. pic.twitter.com/nlwf5DkbuB
— Dan Rapaport (@Daniel_Rapaport) September 24, 2021
Plus, the attending fans are different animals, particularly with the three-year gap in Ryder Cups because of the pandemic. Clad in red, white and blue with a variety of suit jackets, Viking horns on helmets, cheese heads (in Wisconsin) or other outlandish attire, cheering for one side is completely encouraged vs. the demurer “golf clap.” The chants of “U – S – A” from the Yanks are countered with the soccer chant “Olay, Olay, Olay” from the Euros. It’s like a college football Saturday when the University of Wisconsin welcomes the fourth quarter with House of Pain’s “Jump Around” or Clemson enters the field by touching Howard’s Rock and descends the hill in Death Valley to get the Tiger fans rocking. To Europeans, it’s as close as they’ll get to the euphoria of playing in a World Cup soccer competition. For golf, it’s the rare arena where you can be booed or cheered for a bad shot or fully supported among the attendees and not feel as if some ancient rule has been broken.
That’s why the golf competition has drawn intense interest from the best of team sports. Basketball great Michael Jordan has attended every Ryder Cup since 1997 – 12 in a row – and has spent time as a roving motivator and cigar smoker. Swimmer Michael Phelps, surfer Kelly Slater and long-distance NBA marksman Steph Curry, all golf nuts, have regularly been in the gallery.