logo
Schupak: The Keegan Bradley captaincy conundrum heats up

Schupak: The Keegan Bradley captaincy conundrum heats up

Yahoo13-05-2025
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.'
Advertisement
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."
NEW YORK: Keegan Bradley of The United States speaks at a press conference during the Ryder Cup 2024 Year to Go Media Event at The Times Center on October 08, 2024. (Photo by)
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?
Advertisement
'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.
Advertisement
"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.'
Advertisement
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

Ichiro Suzuki steals show with witty Hall of Fame speech in English
Ichiro Suzuki steals show with witty Hall of Fame speech in English

New York Post

time37 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Ichiro Suzuki steals show with witty Hall of Fame speech in English

COOPERSTOWN — Ichiro Suzuki stole the show with his nearly 20-minute speech, delivered in English. Long known to those around him for speaking English well, Ichiro always chose to speak publicly in Japanese, using an interpreter. Now a Hall of Famer, Ichiro chose Sunday to break out a witty speech in front of a crowd of thousands of fans wearing his No. 51 Mariners jersey. Advertisement Afterward, speaking in Japanese again following his speech, Ichiro said he 'always knew' he would deliver the speech in English, in hopes of letting his American fans understand it as well as possible. 5 Ichiro Suzuki delivers a nearly 20-minute speech in English at his Hall of Fame induction ceremony. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post 'I played with him, so I knew he could do that,'' CC Sabathia said of Ichiro's speaking ability. 'It was good for people to get to know his personality and how hard he worked.' Advertisement Brian Cashman had a similar story, saying that when he traded for Ichiro in 2012, he and an interpreter spent over an hour on a phone call with Ichiro and his interpreter to explain what his role would be if he agreed to come to the Yankees. 'It took forever,'' Cashman said. A week later, Cashman introduced himself to Ichiro in person in The Bronx and was surprised. 5 Ichiro Suzuki jokes with fellow Hall of Famers Derek Jeter and Cal Ripken Jr. before his speech. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post Advertisement 5 Billy Wagner and Ichiro Suzuki chat during their Hall of Fame induction ceremony. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post 5 Ichiro Suzuki's wife, Yumiko Fukushima, watches her husband be inducted into the baseball Hall of Fame. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post 'He responded by speaking better English than I did,'' Cashman said. Ichiro, in addition to thanking the Mariners and their fans, as well as his Orix team in Japan that let him come to the majors in 2001, also fondly recalled his time with the Yankees from 2012-14. Advertisement 'I enjoyed my two-and-a-half years in pinstripes and to get to experience the great leadership of Derek Jeter and the organization's proud touch,' Ichiro said. Billy Wagner said he'd been preparing his Hall of Fame speech 'for about 10 years' while waiting to get inducted. He finally got his chance Sunday, when the lefty became the first left-handed reliever to be enshrined in the Hall, in part thanks to his three-plus years with the Mets. 5 Billy Wagner shows off his new Hall of Fame ring. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post And while he's most remembered for his years in Houston — where his first manager was Terry Collins in 1995 and '96 — he noted the role his time in Queens played in his path to Cooperstown. But he also praised the Mets and their former owners, the Wilpons. Advertisement 'For a small-town guy like me, going to a big city, Fred Wilpon and his son, Jeff, and the Mets organization made it easy to come to the field and compete,' Wagner said. 'Because I got to ride in [to the ballpark] with Tom Glavine. They always had a great team surrounding me and that helped me reach this stage today.' Wagner noted that he and Whitey Ford are the only pitchers in the Hall of Fame who are shorter than 6 feet tall. He also noted that he is the only pitcher from a Division III college (Ferrum College) to get to Cooperstown. 'I'm from a very small part of southwest Virginia,'' Wagner said. 'To grow up in a small, rural area, this isn't something you think about.' Advertisement Dave Parker died in June at age 74. He had been preparing a speech for his induction and his son, Dave II, spoke on his behalf. The late Dick Allen's wife, Willa, also spoke on her husband's behalf. … Sandy Koufax, the oldest living Hall of Famer at age 89, was in attendance. … The start of the ceremony was delayed by an hour due to inclement weather. There were an estimated 30,000 fans in attendance.

Long: Bubba Wallace takes pre-race message to heart to claim Brickyard 400 victory
Long: Bubba Wallace takes pre-race message to heart to claim Brickyard 400 victory

NBC Sports

time2 hours ago

  • NBC Sports

Long: Bubba Wallace takes pre-race message to heart to claim Brickyard 400 victory

INDIANAPOLIS — Amid the formality of the NASCAR Cup pre-race drivers meeting, Doug Boles had a message for competitors. The president of Indianapolis Motor Speedway noted that this year marked the 30th anniversary of Dale Earnhardt's 1995 victory at the track, Boles then highlighted Tony Stewart's win here in 2005 and Kyle Busch's victory in 2015 at the Brickyard. 'So the people that win on the fives tend to be iconic people in our sport,' Boles said to the drivers. 'Hopefully, you are already right on your way to being iconic or at the beginning of that. And you look back at the Brickyard 400 … and think it started right here.' Boles' message resonated with a driver. The one who bear hugged him after a 420-mile Sunday drive — in a race extended by two overtimes. 'I heard all that you said in the drivers meeting,' Bubba Wallace told Boles after Wallace scored his third career Cup victory and snapped a 100-race winless streak. 'I thought I'm going to be the guy that wins and makes this an iconic event.' A different viewpoint When Denny Hamlin and Michael Jordan hired Wallace to be the team's first driver ahead the 2021 season, Hamlin said Sunday that 'I believed in his capability, not necessarily the results that (he'd) shown, but I understood his potential.' Unlocking that potential was another thing. 'It was kind of a time where we were wrestling like, 'Man do I want it worse than him or not,'' Hamlin said of Wallace. 'I can't make him want it. … That's gong to have to come from within.' Nate Ryan, Hamlin saw Wallace start to show that increased drive the next year when Kurt Busch joined the team and again when Tyler Reddick came to 23XI Racing in 2023 — teammates providing motivation. Even so, Wallace didn't win. His last Cup victory came in 2022. 'We want to win and we put a lot of resources into doing that,' Hamlin said. 'So he's felt pressure. I think he's felt the pressure not only from me but Michael and everyone.' Although Wallace missed the playoffs last year for the third time in four seasons at 23XI Racing, Hamlin said he saw a change in the driver. 'His valleys weren't as low,' Hamlin said. 'It seemed like on the bad days, he was able to compartmentalize that and then think about the positives vs. everything sucks all the time. 'That's a tough way to live. We're in a business that if you can win 5% of the time you're a Hall of Famer. You're going to lose. This is a losing business. You have to find happiness in some other way than actually winning.' The change happened around the time Wallace became a father. 'Putting family first, that's all that matters,' Wallace said. 'Makes things easier. It gives you something to kind of focus onto.' A new voice With the pressure to succeed, Wallace faced another challenge this season. The team hired Charles Denike, who had no Cup experience, to be Wallace's crew chief. From the beginning, Hamlin touted Denike, a former military officer as a game-changer for Wallace. Wallace started the season strong. Winning seemed likely. But then it didn't come. Even after being among the leaders in stage points early in the season, Wallace found himself in the same place he has been in past summers — at or near the playoff cutline late in the regular season. Entering Sunday's race at Indianapolis, Wallace held the final playoff spot by 16 points on Ryan Preece. Adding to the pressure was the weather that changed the weekend schedule for teams. Rain canceled Friday's 50-minute practice, so NASCAR gave teams a 25-minute session Saturday. Even a 2.5-mile track can be crowded with traffic and not give teams a good read on their qualifying setup. With track position key, qualifying carries a heightened importance. But Wallace told Denike before qualifying: 'I don't completely know what I have in the car.' 'This is superstar qualifying,' Denike told Wallace. 'This is what we show up to do.' Wallace qualified second. He would be a contender in Sunday's race. Quieting the doubts Wallace was strong all race. He had the best average running position (4.93) of any driver Sunday and led 30 laps. Denike's strategy kept Wallace toward the front and gave him a shot to win. That forced others to react. When the third stage began 55 laps from the scheduled end, leader Kyle Larson was told not to save fuel. Crew chief Cliff Daniels wanted Larson to build a gap between he and Wallace, who was running sixth after the restart but had had pitted later than Larson and many others ahead. That meant Wallace needed less time for his final pit stop because he didn't require as much fuel as others. Wallace moved to the lead at Lap 143 as others pitted in what became a 168-lap race after the two overtimes. Although he led, thoughts of losing struck him. Why would he think that? 'I wish I had the answer to that,' Wallace said. 'I think that's my biggest downfall. We're all human, and we're all super hard on ourselves.' He found a way to counter those negative thoughts. 'I'm like, (expletive) right, we can do this,' Wallace said. 'It was kind of like the angel and devil on your shoulder. It wasn't all negative. But to even have that thought, it's like, 'Man, come on, focus.'' Dueling a champion Wallace led when rain in Turn 1 stopped the race four laps from the scheduled distance. Most of the track didn't get wet but Turn 1 had enough rain it took NASCAR stopped the race fro 18 minutes to dry that part of the speedway. When the race resumed, Wallace had Larson aligned next to him on the front row. Wallace and Larson ran side by side into Turn 1 on the restart before Wallace pulled ahead at the exit of Turn 2. 'He was first gear on both (of the overtime restarts),' Larson said, 'but the first one, he was just a little bit faster paced for the restart zone. I stayed second gear and he got a launch and I was able to just kind of barely hang on his right rear quarter and then drag him back and kind of pull my momentum.' But it wasn't enough to get by Wallace. A crash on the backstretch gave Larson another chance with a second overtime restart. Wallace had to outduel Larson — who won this race last year — on another restart to have a chance to win. On the second restart, Wallace took the lead easily by Turn 2 on Larson. The difference was a tactical change Wallace made on his restart that Larson could not counter. 'He brought the pace down so slow I had to be in first gear as well (as Wallace) and just kind of launched with him,' Larson said. 'So I had no momentum that time.' As Wallace race to the finish line, there were no negative thoughts. He credits reading 'The Daily Stoic,' a book that states is designed to help make people happier, along with better parents and professionals. 'It just kind of got me in the philosophical mindset today, trying to understand things from a different perspective,' Wallace said. 'Walking out of the motorhome, I felt different. Walking into the drivers meeting and finding a seat by myself, pulling up my phone and looking at my race notes of what to do, what to expect. Doug (Boles) has been a huge supporter of mine, and I appreciate that. 'So when he was speaking, he mentioned a caveat (about the victories by Earnhardt, Stewart and Busch at this track), and I thought it was interesting. He said, This could be the start of becoming a legend. … I don't think I'm a legend by any means. I've got a lot of work to do, but it all starts with days like today.' Hear from Kyle Larson, Ryan Preece, Alex Bowman, Ty Gibbs, Denny Hamlin and Bubba Wallace following the NASCAR Cup Series race at Indianapolis.

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