logo
Schupak: The Keegan Bradley captaincy conundrum heats up

Schupak: The Keegan Bradley captaincy conundrum heats up

Yahoo30-04-2025
Tuesday's virtual press conference to announce Brandt Snedeker as U.S. team captain for the 2026 Presidents Cup went swimmingly for one of the better (and fastest) talkers in golf with two exceptions.
For starters, at one point he needed to quench his thirst with a swig of water because he was coughing profusely, or as he put it, 'Man, I'm choking already.'
He rallied and no one had to perform mouth to mouth but the second issue with his press conference was more of his doing — his most interesting response had to do with the Ryder Cup and not the Presidents Cup. It surfaced when Snedeker, who is going to be a U.S. Ryder Cup vice captain in September, was asked about Keegan Bradley potentially being a playing captain at Bethpage Black when the Americans attempt to win back the Cup.
'I think everybody on the team wants Keegan to play great and make the team," Snedeker said. "I think that's something that the players have spoken about quite openly that they think Keegan is one of the 12 best players in the world now on the American side, and he needs to go prove that and play great leading up to the majors in the summer."
There hasn't been a U.S. playing captain since Arnold Palmer in 1963, and there's good reason for that: the job has become too big for both roles – though Tiger Woods might argue otherwise as he showed it can be done at the 2019 Presidents Cup. Bradley, who is 38 but will turn 39 before the Ryder Cup in late September, ranks No. 19 in the world and No. 22 in the current U.S. Ryder Cup standings. Why does Snedeker think Bradley, who won the clinching point of the 2024 Presidents Cup in Montreal, should be on the team?
'The way he played last year at the Presidents Cup really showed that this guy is built for team competitions. He's a great guy in the team room. He played fantastic,' Snedeker explained. 'A big reason why we were able to pull it out in Montreal was the way he played. I think the guys loved seeing his (fire inside). They got to see his competitiveness come through. They're seeing that now as his way as a captain and the amount of care he has for these things comes through with the way he plays and the way he captains and the way he talks about it.'
Since the day in July when Bradley was named Ryder Cup captain, he has frequently said he if he qualifies on merit in the top 6 he will play but he doesn't want to put himself in a position where he has to pick himself. How would that play out? Snedeker, who is joined by Jim Furyk, Kevin Kisner and Webb Simpson as vice captains, shed some light on how it could work.
"With regards to who would be the captain in that scenario, we have four other guys in the room right now that are perfectly capable of it, and I'm sure there will be some collaboration between all of us to take over that role for Keegan even though this is going to be Keegan's team," Snedeker said. "Our job as assistant captains will be to make sure that we carry out his wishes and carry out the team thing the way he wants it done."
But Snedeker also conceded that if Bradley were to make the team, he would have to relinquish many, if not all, of the captain duties to one of his lieutenants.
"I don't think it's possible to be able to do both just with how much stuff goes into being a captain,' Snedeker said. 'I think Keegan will probably lean on Jim [Furyk], obviously, who's going to be in that room as well. There's a bunch of guys that can step up and hopefully fill that void."
Asked whether Bradley would be one of his 12 picks right now if he were in the captain role, Snedeker passed on adding fuel to the fire to this bewildering question.
'Luckily, I'm not,' he said. 'There's a lot of golf (to be played). We have been on a bunch of calls talking about this. The amount of points still left out there for the Ryder Cup team right now is a lot. It's over 40 percent to 50 percent of the Ryder Cup points are still available. There's a lot that's going to change.'
He added: 'He's got to play great golf the rest of the year. I know he will. He's working hard at it. We'll see how it all shakes out.'
It's certainly something to monitor, adding intrigue to this year's selection process and something that could prove pivotal to Team USA's chances to regain the Cup.
This article originally appeared on Golfweek: The next 3 months will determine if Keegan Bradley captains or plays
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Maverick McNealy is playing Tour Championship for the first time harboring Ryder Cup hopes
Maverick McNealy is playing Tour Championship for the first time harboring Ryder Cup hopes

USA Today

time27 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Maverick McNealy is playing Tour Championship for the first time harboring Ryder Cup hopes

ATLANTA – Maverick McNealy is looking to make a lasting impression at the Tour Championship this week so that U.S. Ryder Cup Captain Keegan Bradley has no other choice but to take him as one of his six picks, which will be named on Aug. 27 for the 12-man team that will take on Team Europe at Bethpage Black. McNealy, who finished 10th in the Ryder Cup rankings, could feel the weight of the world on his shoulders this week at East Lake Golf Club given that he's already trying to win the season-ending 30-man championship for the FedEx Cup and a $10 million first prize, but that's not how he looks at it. 'Pressure is a privilege,' said McNealy. 'I've trained my whole life to play good golf under pressure. It just makes the good shots more fun.' McNealy is an interesting study in perseverance. He was the rare No. 1-ranked amateur golfer when he finished at Stanford who debated whether he would turn pro or be a career amateur making his way in the business world. He is the son of Sun Microsystems founder Scott McNealy, and could have pursued his own Silicon Valley dreams. Instead, he chose one of the toughest meritocracies, drafting a nearly 1,300-word explanation he posted on the Stanford athletics website why he would be joining the play-for-pay ranks in 2017. Ever since, it's been a slow but steady climb to his first PGA Tour win at the 2024 RSM Classic in November and a career-best No. 10 in the Official World Golf Ranking earlier this year. (He entered this week at No. 19.) Of course, there have been hills and valleys in his journey, but McNealy never doubted he would get to the winner's circle. His former caddie of seven years, Travis McAlister, has witnessed him grow into the player he has become. 'Everyone wants something fast and everything microwavable. No one wants to bake anything anymore,' McAlister said. 'With Mav we had to bake it a little bit.' McNealy's a throwback in a sense that he is a baked product. He had to get stronger, find the right equipment and tweak his swing with instructor Scott Hamilton, who has turned him into a much better iron player. (McNealy's improved from 159th in 2022-23 to 118th last season to a career-best 44th in Strokes Gained: Approach the Green this year, the first year he's gained strokes in that category.) McNealy has never been afraid of hard work. Stanford coach Conrad Ray recalled on the 'Better Than They Found It' podcast how as a walk-on for the Cardinal, McNealy shadowed Patrick Rodgers and adopted many of his training habits. 'He was like Patrick Rodgers' little puppy dog. He'd watch Patrick practice and he'd watch Patrick think about his game. He'd watch Patrick journal,' Ray said. 'One of the things that I still to this day, I encourage my guys all the time, but very few have the discipline to be able to do that. But very few take the time to journal about their games. And that was like Patrick's, gosh, it was like his superpower in some respects. "And Maverick started doing that. And that just discipline to the process was something that I think was infectious.' McNealy has made sacrifices big and small on his path to becoming an elite player – he'd love to drink more coffee but he's afraid about what it would do to his putting stroke – and qualify for East Lake for the first time in his career, one of seven first-timers in Atlanta. McAlister, for one, is confident he can handle the Ryder Cup pressure. 'He won't be overcome with it,' McAlister said. 'If you're one of the 11 other guys on the Ryder Cup team, you want Mav as your partner and you want Mav putting your golf ball.' McNealy was paired with Bradley at the first two signature events and got his version of a tryout in front of the coach. 'It's right where I wanted to be,' McNealy said, breaking into a smile, 'there's no other pairing I'd rather have had.' Last week's third-place finish at the BMW Championship could go a long way to solidifying McNealy's selection on the team. One more top-5 finish at the Tour Championship likely would make it a no-brainer depending on what some of the other competitors still harboring Ryder Cup dreams do. It's possible that Bradley could come down to choosing whether he should be the first playing captain for Team USA since Arnold Palmer in 1963 or taking McNealy. But McNealy said Bradley should go with his gut feel. 'He's poured his heart and soul into it,' McNealy said. 'I guarantee everyone top to bottom supports whatever move he makes. I'm going to comport myself like I'd be a good asset to the team.'

Alcaraz and Djokovic could get early U.S. Open tests. Venus draws No. 11 seed Muchova
Alcaraz and Djokovic could get early U.S. Open tests. Venus draws No. 11 seed Muchova

NBC Sports

time28 minutes ago

  • NBC Sports

Alcaraz and Djokovic could get early U.S. Open tests. Venus draws No. 11 seed Muchova

NEW YORK — Carlos Alcaraz and Novak Djokovic will face potential difficult American opponents when they begin their quest for another U.S. Open title. Venus Williams, meanwhile, returns to the event at age 45 against No. 11 seed Karolina Muchova, a past French Open finalist who has reached the semifinals in New York the past two years. That was one of the early highlight matches after the draws were conducted for the men's and women's singles tournaments. A pair of recent U.S. Open champions could be tested early. Alcaraz, the No. 2 seed, starts against Reilly Opelka. Opelka, a former top-20 player before injuries, is 6-foot-11 with a powerful serve that he rode to the fourth round in New York in 2021. Alcaraz won his lone U.S. Open title the following year and has gone on to add four more Grand Slam titles. Djokovic owns a men's record 24 of them, including four at the U.S. Open. Seeded seventh, he will face Learner Tien, a 19-year-old left-hander who upset Daniil Medvedev en route to the fourth round of this year's Australian Open. Now playing infrequently outside of the majors at 38 and having fallen to No. 7 in the rankings, Djokovic could have to beat 2024 U.S. Open runner-up Taylor Fritz, the No. 4 seed, in the quarterfinals, then Alcaraz in the semifinals and No. 1 Jannik Sinner, the defending champion, in the final. Williams was given a wild card by the U.S. Tennis Association into a tournament where she won two of her seven Grand Slam singles titles, and will be the oldest player to compete in singles at Flushing Meadows since 1981. But she faces someone who has shown the ability to raise her game in the biggest tournaments. Muchova, after falling in the 2023 French Open final, got to the semis in New York later that summer and again last year. No. 3 seed Coco Gauff, who won her first major title in the 2023 U.S. Open, will first face Ajla Tomljanovic, the Australian who beat Williams' younger sister, Serena, in her final match in 2022. The potential quarterfinals on the men's side are Sinner vs. No. 5 Jack Draper, and No. 3 Alexander Zverev vs. No. 8 Alex de Minaur in the top half of the bracket. The bottom half could be Alcaraz vs. No. 6 Ben Shelton, and Fritz vs. Djokovic. The women's quarters could be defending champion and No. 1 seed Aryna Sabalenka vs. No. 7 Jasmine Paolini, and No. 4 Jessica Pegula vs. No. 5 Mirra Andreeva on the top half. The other side could see No. 2 Iga Swiatek vs. No. 8 Amanda Anisimova in a rematch of Swiatek's romp in the Wimbledon final, and Gauff vs. No. 6 Madison Keys, the Australian Open champion.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store