It’s not because I think it’ll lead to an abject U.S. performance, that’s for sure. Again, I’ve gone on the record multiple times saying that I’d rather see the Americans win the cup in a nail-biting finish than watch Europe win in a landslide, – though a narrow European win is the ideal scenario – because final day drama makes for the greatest entertainment and above all, that’s what the Ryder Cup is. It’s entertainment.
And, love him or hate him, Keegan Bradley will bring an entertainment value all his own. As much as Davis Love III, Jim Furyk, Steve Stricker and Zach Johnson are consummate professionals and deserving of respect, they’re somewhat vanilla and all cut from the same cloth.
Bradley breaks the mold. He’s eccentric, he’s impassioned, and he’s shown that he’s willing to get confrontational when the situation calls for it – or at least when he thinks it calls for it – as evidenced by Miguel Angel Jimenez and himself getting in each other’s grills at the WGC Matchplay a few years back.
While there are only three days of actual play, the Ryder Cup has grown into a monster, filling column inches for months beforehand and after the fact, and each and every time the respective captains open their mouths in the leadup, us scribes get scribbling. But rehashing the same generic lip service over and over again gets tiresome, so I’m hoping Bradley offers something different.
By his own admission, he’s not part of the clique. He rubs people up the wrong way, and I’d predict that he won’t shy away from making unpopular choices when it comes to his captain’s picks.
Nor his vice captains.
Imagine he selects his old sidekick Mickelson as a vice captain. Imagine Luke Donald selects Jimenez as one of his. Imagine that he plays well between now and then and gives himself a pick? Imagine he doesn’t play well but still gives himself a pick?
Imagine him selecting Patrick Reed and not Jordan Spieth. Imagine what he’d say to Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele if they’re whining about the lack of reimbursement for their presence.
Imagine he drums up the New York crowd and encourages them to do what they do best; be loud, be obnoxious, be totally over the top.
As a Ryder Cup player, he was effective, he whooped, he hollered, he celebrated victories wildly and he took his losses hard. He was everything that a Ryder Cup player should be. So here’s hoping he brings a flavour of that to captaincy.
For better or worse, he’s an entertaining choice. And it is entertainment, after all….