Young Americans put Europe in its biggest early hole at Ryder Cup

AP photo by Jeff Roberson / Baylor School graduate Harris English hits to the fifth green at Whistling Straits during a fourballs match at the Ryder Cup on Friday in Sheboygan, Wis. English and partner Tony Finau helped the U.S. team lead Europe 6-2 after the first day of competition by winning their match against Shane Lowry and Rory McIlroy, 4 and 3.
AP photo by Jeff Roberson / Baylor School graduate Harris English hits to the fifth green at Whistling Straits during a fourballs match at the Ryder Cup on Friday in Sheboygan, Wis. English and partner Tony Finau helped the U.S. team lead Europe 6-2 after the first day of competition by winning their match against Shane Lowry and Rory McIlroy, 4 and 3.

SHEBOYGAN, Wis. - The Americans haven't opened with a lead this large in the Ryder Cup since Jack Nicklaus and Lee Trevino were playing, and before Tiger Woods was even born.

That didn't seem to be big enough to satisfy U.S. captain Steve Stricker.

Dustin Johnson and Xander Schauffele each won two matches, Bryson DeChambeau smashed a drive that had everyone talking and the United States was relentless Friday at Whistling Straits in losing only one match to build a 6-2 lead.

"It's a great start. We are happy with the start," Stricker said. "But my message to the guys is tomorrow is a new day. Pretend today never happened, and let's keep our foot down and continue to play the golf that we know we can play."

Oh, how Europe would like to forget this day ever happened.

Ryder Cup veteran Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland never made it to the 16th hole while losing both his matches on the opening day for the first time. The lone bright spot for the visiting team was Jon Rahm, living up his No. 1 spot in the Official World Golf Ranking by winning in foursomes with fellow Spaniard Sergio Garcia and keeping Europe in a tight fourballs match long enough for England's Tyrrell Hatton to birdie the last hole to at least salvage a half-point.

Europe has never trailed by four points after the first day since the Ryder Cup was expanded from Great Britian and Ireland to include the continent in 1979, the modern era of these matches that Europe now dominates. Go back to 1975 to find the last time the U.S. team had a four-point lead.

"No doubt, it was a tough day," captain Padraig Harrington said, attributing the difference to a putt here, there and pretty much everywhere. "There's obviously still 20 points to play for."

Suddenly, though, there seems to be a sense of urgency. The Americans were delivering big moments and the big smiles, waving up hands to get the one-sided gallery to cheer even louder, cupping hands to their ears to urge them along.

They are looking for a fresh start after a quarter-century of losing, and the youngest U.S. lineup in history took a big step to creating its own memories.

"They fought hard every single shot out there, from what I saw," DeChambeau said after he and Scottie Scheffler earned a halve in fourballs. "This is a great start, but the job's not over. We have two more days. A lot more golf. And we cannot lose our mindset to win."

photo AP photo by Jeff Roberson / Bryson DeChambeau reacts after making a putt on the 15th hole at Whistling Straits during a fourballs match at the Ryder Cup on Friday in Sheboygan, Wis.

The first point of the 43rd Ryder Cup, postponed one year by the coronavirus pandemic, went to Europe and its new "Spanish Armada" of Garcia and Rahm. Friday's final match ended in a halve when Justin Thomas delivered a late eagle putt for the Americans that allowed him and Patrick Cantlay to come all the way back from a 3-down deficit.

Through the morning chill, the midday warmth, a ferocious wind in the afternoon and even a little rain on the shore of Lake Michigan, the one constant was American red scores filling the boards across Whistling Straits.

"We can come back from 6-2," said McIlroy, trying to summon calm and confidence after losing both matches.

Europe will have to do it without him. McIlroy is not part of the foursomes lineup Saturday morning, the first time he has sat in a Ryder Cup.

Both captains stuck to their plans, and it only worked out for one of them. Even with a 3-1 start in foursomes, Stricker broke up all his American teams as planned and still won the afternoon fourballs session with two wins and two draws.

Johnson and Schauffele never trailed together, while the high-spirited Tony Finau made six birdies as he and Baylor School graduate Harris English trounced McIlroy and Shane Lowry. English, a captain's pick for the team who at age 32 is one of six American rookies, said ahead of this event that he wouldn't feel like his golf career was complete without a Ryder Cup.

A successful Ryder Cup, of course, would be even better.

"You want to do your job and get a point for the team, and I had a great time and partner with Tony," English said. "He played unbelievable golf today, and we kept the pressure on them and we both hit a lot of fairways, hit a lot of greens, and that was the recipe for today. It was getting tough, especially on the back nine. It was a lot of fun out there."

DeChambeau still hasn't won a Ryder Cup match, but he delivered quite a show.

He pounded a drive to where no one had dared to go on the par-5 fifth hole. It cleared a massive bunker complex and stopped rolling at 417 yards, setting up a 72-yard flip wedge for an easy eagle.

"There are two towers behind the green - I can't even describe to you - they are like 250 or 200 yards right of where I'm trying to hit my drive," Scheffler said. "And it's crazy for him to be able to commit to that shot.

"It was great. That was a good spark for us and good momentum for the rest of the day."

DeChambeau and Scheffler were poised for a 1-up victory until Hatton hit 5-iron into a hard left-to-right wind that landed near the hole and settled seven feet away. He made the birdie putt to scratch out a halve and could only hope it was worth more.

"Things like this can turn the tide," Rahm said.

After one day, it already feels like a strong tide, and that makes Saturday and another round of foursomes and fourballs more important than ever ahead of Sunday's singles matches.

Harrington also broke up all his pairings. This was the first time since 1979 that no one from the morning played together in the afternoon from either team.

Cantlay and Schauffele were tough as ever in foursomes, which set the tone for the Americans. They were 5 up through five holes against McIlroy and Ian Poulter, and they closed out their impressive 5-and-3 win with four straight birdies, the last one conceded.

"I don't know if anyone could have beat Xander and Patrick today," McIlroy said.

Only one shot went into the lake - a hook from Tommy Fleetwood on the par-5 16th. And there almost was one player who went into the water. That would be Jordan Spieth, facing an impossible shot beneath the 17th green with the ball on a severe slope in the morning round.

He swung so hard with a 52-degree wedge that momentum sent him backward, scrambling to keep his footing and then running down toward the edge of the bank until he could get his balance.

The shot? Remarkable as ever, plopping down six feet away.

Thomas missed the par putt, though, and the match was over. That was one of the few moments that didn't go the Americans' way.

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