European captain Padraig Harrington seemed to enjoy his reveal of the eight players who would kick off Friday’s foursome matches at the Ryder Cup, keeping his pairings a secret and playing them together just once over three days at Whistling Straits.
“I wanted everybody on my team to play with everybody in the team and not turn up on a week like this and by the end of the week go, ‘I never saw a player; I never experienced that player and I never got to see what they were like in this situation,’” explained Harrington. “I was very keen on the players to mix with each other and get the full experience of the other 11 players in the team. I knew the partnerships were looking after themselves. Yes, they have to try foursomes, and they did have a go at the foursomes and made sure that they are comfortable with which tee shot they are hitting and which ball they are hitting. They had enough of that. I just didn’t want them to overdo it.” To that end, Harrington will send out Jon Rahm in the first match (facing Justin Thomas and Jordan Spieth. “We would have been aware that J.T. and Jordan were going first, obviously, so we were obviously going to lead ourselves with a strong partnership with Jon and Sergio; the whole world will be watching that one,” he said. In the second match, Paul Casey and Viktor Hovland will square off vs. Dustin Johnson and Collin Morikawa. In the third match, fellow Englishmen Lee Westwood and Matt Fitzpatrick will face Brooks Koepka and Daniel Berger. The final match will feature Rory McIlroy and Ian Poulter vs. Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele. “Everybody would have predicted the last one -- I assume that one wasn’t too hard,” he said. Perhaps the biggest surprise was the omission of Tommy Fleetwood, who went 2-0-0 in foursomes (4-1-0 overall) in 2018. “Very much says a lot about our team, that [Fleetwood] is comfortable after going 4-0 and he’s not there in the foursomes the first morning,” said Harrington. “I want every player on my team absolutely dying to play every match. But I want them to also understand that there’s other people in the team, they have to step aside, and they have done that brilliantly.”