BETHPAGE – (Staff Report with assistance from Grok AI) – The Ryder Cup is a biennial golf competition between teams from the United States and Europe, featuring a unique match-play format that emphasizes team strategy and head-to-head battles. Played over three days, typically Friday to Sunday, the event consists of 28 total matches, each worth 1 point toward the team total (with halved matches awarding ½ point to each team). To win the Cup, a team must reach at least 14½ points out of the 28 available; if the score ends tied at 14–14, the defending team retains the Cup. The 2025 Ryder Cup at Bethpage Black Course follows the standard format, split into two types of team play (foursomes and four-ball) and a final day of singles matches.
The inclement weather forecast for Long Island will be a major factor in this competition, with the Europeans usually having the edge in the rain.
The Opening Ceremony, originally scheduled for Thursday afternoon, has been moved up a day to Wednesday, Sept. 24th.
Here’s a clear breakdown of how the matches are structured:
Day 1 (Friday) and Day 2 (Saturday): Team Matches
Each of the first two days features eight matches, divided into two sessions of four matches each, using two distinct team formats:
- Foursomes (Morning Sessions, 8 matches total over two days)
- Structure: Two players per team form a pair, sharing one ball and alternating shots. One player tees off on odd-numbered holes, the other on even-numbered holes, and they alternate strokes until the ball is holed.
- Scoring: The pair with the lowest score on a hole wins it. The match ends when one team is ahead by more holes than remain (e.g., 4-up with 3 holes left). If the match is tied after 18 holes, it’s halved.
- Strategy: Foursomes demand precision and chemistry, as a single errant shot affects the pair. Captains often pair players with complementary styles (e.g., a steady player with a risk-taker).
- Example: If Team USA’s Scottie Scheffler and Collin Morikawa score a 4 on a par-4 hole against Europe’s Rory McIlroy and Jon Rahm’s 5, the U.S. pair wins the hole.
- 2025 Note: The U.S., as the home team, chose to start with foursomes in 2025, leveraging their historical edge in this format (e.g., 6–2 at Whistling Straits in 2021).
- Four-Ball (Afternoon Sessions, 8 matches total over two days)
- Structure: Two players per team play their own ball, and the lowest score among the four players on a hole counts for the team. Each match pits two players from the U.S. against two from Europe.
- Scoring: Same as foursomes—lowest score wins the hole, and the match goes to the team that wins the most holes (or halves if tied after 18).
- Strategy: Four-ball rewards aggressive play, as each player can go for birdies without relying on a partner’s shot. It’s a chance for big hitters or hot putters to shine.
- Example: If Europe’s Tommy Fleetwood scores a 3 and his partner Viktor Hovland scores a 4 on a hole, while both U.S. players score 4s, Europe wins the hole with Fleetwood’s 3.
- 2025 Note: Europe often excels here, as seen in their 6–2 four-ball rout in 2023 at Marco Simone.
Each day, four foursomes matches and four four-ball matches are played, totaling 16 team matches across the two days. Each team’s 12 players are rotated strategically by the captain, with some playing both sessions and others resting (no player can play all eight matches on a single day). The home team captain (U.S. in 2025) decides whether foursomes or four-ball goes first each day.
Day 3 (Sunday): Singles Matches
- Structure: All 12 players from each team compete in individual head-to-head matches, making for 12 total singles matches. Each player plays their own ball against one opponent from the opposing team.
- Scoring: Like the team formats, the player with the lowest score on a hole wins it. The match ends when one player is ahead by more holes than remain or halves if tied after 18 holes.
- Strategy: Captains submit their lineup order blindly, aiming to stack early matches with strong players to set the tone or place anchors late to secure or overturn leads. Singles are high-pressure, as there’s no partner to lean on, and momentum can swing dramatically.
- Example: If Xander Schauffele beats Ludvig Åberg 1-up after 18 holes, the U.S. earns 1 point. A 3-and-2 win (3 holes ahead with 2 left) also yields 1 point.
- 2025 Note: Singles often decide the Cup, as seen in 2012’s “Miracle at Medinah” when Europe overcame a 10–6 deficit by winning 8½ of the 12 Sunday points.
Key Details
- Match Play Basics: Unlike stroke play (where total strokes over 72 holes matter), Ryder Cup matches focus on winning individual holes. Scores are relative only to the opponent in that match, not the field. A team can win a match with a high score if their opponent scores higher.
- Points System: Each of the 28 matches (8 foursomes, 8 four-balls, 12 singles) awards 1 point to the winning team, ½ point each for a tie. The first team to 14½ points wins; a 14–14 tie means the defending team (Europe in 2025) keeps the Cup.
- Captain’s Role: Captains like Keegan Bradley (U.S.) and Luke Donald (Europe) select pairings and lineups, balancing player form, course fit (Bethpage’s long, punishing layout favors power), and chemistry. They also use wild-card picks to finalize their 12-man rosters.
- No Prize Money: The Ryder Cup is about pride, not cash—players compete for their team and continent, adding to the event’s intensity.
This format, unchanged since 1979 when Europe replaced Great Britain/Ireland, creates a pressure cooker unlike any other in golf. Foursomes test teamwork, four-ball showcases individual brilliance, and singles deliver raw, do-or-die battles. At Bethpage Black in 2025, expect the format’s blend of strategy and spectacle to amplify the drama, with every hole a potential turning point in the quest for the golden trophy.
