Jordan Spieth, Tony Finau headline Steve Stricker’s U.S. Ryder Cup captain’s picks

Jordan Spieth will play in his fourth Ryder Cup later this month.

Getty Images

The 2021 U.S. Ryder Cup team is set. Captain Steve Stricker rounded out his squad with six captain’s picks made live on Golf Channel on Wednesday, giving the Americans the 12 players it will take to Whistling Straits later this month.

Collin Morikawa, Dustin Johnson, Bryson DeChambeau, Brooks Koepka, Justin Thomas and Patrick Cantlay already earned spots on the team via the points standings that were finalized after the BMW Championship on Aug. 29. That left one more event — last week’s Tour Championship — for any of the potential picks still alive in the FedEx Cup Playoffs to audition. Now, three days later, we have our names.

Joining the aforementioned six, Tony Finau, Xander Schauffele, Jordan Spieth, Harris English, Daniel Berger and Scottie Scheffler were all added to the team on Wednesday.

Four of the names — Finau, Schauffele, Spieth and English — weren’t much of a surprise. That group ranked 7th, 8th, 9th and 10th, respectively, in the points standings. Finau won the Northern Trust 2 1/2 weeks ago, Schauffele is the fifth-ranked player in the world, and Spieth, now a four-time Ryder Cupper, has rebounded with a big year (a win and nine top 10s) after going winless from 2018 to 2020. English won twice last season and on Tuesday was one of five players nominated for PGA Tour Player of the Year.

After those four, however, there was some debate regarding who would make up the final two spots. But the resumes of Berger and Scheffler won out. Berger, 12th in the standings, won the 2021 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am and finished the season with 14 top 25s. He ended the year with a T11 at the Tour Championship.

Scheffler, 14th in the standings, had eight top 10s and 16 top 25s in 29 starts this season. He tied for 22nd at the Tour Championship. The 25 year old ranked 7th on Tour in birdie average (4.39), a feather in his cap that comes in handy in match-play events.

“We feel the players we picked, fit Whistling Straits to a ‘T’,” Stricker said during the press conference.

One player who was in the mix for a selection — and, at 11th, was the highest-ranked player not picked — was Patrick Reed.


team europe poses

How Europe, alone and outmatched, stole the Solheim Cup on U.S. soil

By:


Zephyr Melton



Reed is 7-3-2 in the Ryder Cup and has been one of the Americans’ strongest, most passionate players over the last three meetings, but he only recently left the hospital due to bilateral pneumonia. He finished 25th at the Tour Championship — his first start in over 3 1/2 weeks — and said he wouldn’t have been there if this wasn’t a Ryder Cup year. There’s also that incident from the 2018 Ryder Cup in Paris, in which Reed was critical of captain Jim Furyk. In the only team event since, the 2019 Presidents Cup, Reed took heat from the Australian crowd due to a controversial penalty the week before, and his caddie/brother-in-law Kessler Karain was banned from Sunday’s singles matches after a physical altercation involving a fan the day before.

Others not picked but in the conversation were Webb Simpson (13th in the standings), Jason Kokrak (15th), Sam Burns (16th), Billy Horschel (17th), Kevin Kisner (18th) and Kevin Na (19th). Phil Mickelson, the 20th-ranked player in the standings, was announced as a vice captain last week.

It will be the first Ryder Cup for Morikawa, Cantlay and captain’s picks Schauffele, English, Berger and Scheffler.

The U.S. had previously put its team together with eight automatic qualifiers and four captain’s picks, but last summer, due to Covid-19 wiping out some of the season, the PGA of America announced it would use six captain’s picks instead. When the 2020 Ryder Cup got pushed to 2021, they stuck with the six-pick decision.

Europe will finalize its nine automatic qualifiers at the conclusion of Sunday’s BMW PGA Championship, and captain Padraig Harrington will make his three captain’s picks the following week.

The Ryder Cup is Sept. 24-26 at Whistling Straits in Kohler, Wis.

subscribe

Golf Magazine

Subscribe To The Magazine


Subscribe

Josh

Josh Berhow

Golf.com Editor

Josh Berhow is the managing editor at GOLF.com. The Minnesota native graduated with a journalism degree from Minnesota State University in Mankato. You can reach him at joshua_berhow@golf.com.

We will be happy to hear your thoughts

Leave a reply

Golf Products Review
Logo
Shopping cart