LAST FALL, IN THE MOMENTS AFTER he’d delivered the clinching point for the U.S. Presidents Cup team, Keegan Bradley stood off to the side of the 18th green at Royal Montreal Golf Club and mulled the impossible decision already looming.
Bradley had just secured a back-and-forth 1-up win over Si Woo Kim, putting the finishing touches on his 2-1-0 week as an emotional leader in an American victory. Bradley was ecstatic. He was relieved. And he was exhausted. It felt unfair to ask him to look ahead — but this was perhaps the best time to evaluate the potential challenge awaiting the next year’s Ryder Cup captain. Just minutes removed from the fires of team match-play competition, did Bradley think he’d be up for the dual task of playing and leading the U.S. team?
“Jeez,” he said. “After going through it? I don’t know if I could, honestly. I would love to. But I couldn’t imagine doing [U.S. captain] Jim [Furyk]’s job and playing. I don’t know how you could physically do it.”
He paused, reluctant to let the idea go completely.
“I will have great assistant captains and … I’ll cross that bridge later. I’m going to have to do some special stuff to get on that team.”
Bradley outlined the stresses of that morning: He’d felt so sick in the team room he couldn’t eat; he thought he might throw up instead. He’d never felt quite that way, he said. Not contending at majors, not holding leads at big tournaments. It felt like there was a current of electricity running through his body.
“Being a captain’s pick, you don’t want to let the guys down and you don’t want to let the captain down. It was just really heavy,” he said.
Through the roller coaster months that followed — Bradley’s string of top-15s to start the year, his T8 at the PGA Championship and T7 at the Memorial, his win at the Travelers Championship, his rise inside the top 10 in the world — I kept going back to that moment, to that word “heavy,” and wondering if really heavy meant too heavy. On Wednesday we got our answer: Bradley left himself off the 12-man U.S. team despite a top-12 resume. It was a moment of selfless leadership. But there was a painful subtext to the announcement, too:
Keegan Bradley got robbed.
THE DREAM WAS NEVERto be Ryder Cup captain. Not yet, at least. Not when Bradley’s every golfing moment this past decade-plus has been devoted to the idea of being a Ryder Cup player, in part because of how much he lives for those big-time match-play moments and in part because he’s been chasing redemption after heartbreaking losses in 2012 and 2014.
“I think about it every second,” Bradley said ahead of team selection in 2023. “I would like to sit here and lie to you guys and say I’m not thinking about it, but periodically throughout the round, it will pop into my head. It’s impossible for me not to think about.”
When he just missed that team — likely No. 13 on Zach Johnson’s 12-man list — he admitted it nearly broke him. But it also fueled him; Bradley doubled down, he kept winning and he played his way into a second career prime. That was what made it particularly tricky when he was selected as the U.S. team’s next Ryder Cup captain last summer. The captaincy was a huge honor. It also came as a shock, because Ryder Cup captains aren’t Ryder Cup players.
“I don’t think I’ll ever be more surprised of anything in my entire life,” Bradley admitted on the day he was introduced as captain. But he laid out a second goal, too: “One thing that is important to me is I want to play on the team. I feel as though I’m still in the prime of my career and can make this team.”
In the months that followed he won the BMW Championship, played his way onto the Presidents Cup team and starred in Montreal. That made his playing candidacy for Bethpage feel more real. But the demands of the week also made it clear just how hard that would be. The dream felt closer but also further away.
On Wednesday, as he left himself off the team, he spoke to those coexisting, clashing emotions.
“I think I sort of knew in the back of my mind that I just wanted to be the captain,” he said. He also added this:
“I grew up wanting to play Ryder Cups. I grew up wanting to fight alongside these guys. It broke my heart not to play. It really did. You work forever to make these teams, but ultimately I was chosen to do a job. I was chosen to be the captain of this team. My ultimate goal to start this thing was to be the best captain that I could be.”
THERE IS SOMETHING NOBLE about Bradley stepping aside. And there were cool subplots and signs of selflessness that came from his vacancy.
In 2023, the biggest snub besides Bradley was Cameron Young, who finished the year No. 9 in Ryder Cup standings but was passed over. This year? Bradley picked Young over himself.
In 2023, the last man onto the team may well have been Sam Burns, who was selected over Bradley. But instead of exacting some sort of revenge, this week Bradley selected Burns over himself again, with a particularly compassionate phone call.
“I love you,” Bradley told Burns. “And I’m so proud of the way you played the last month of the season with this on your shoulders.”
Leadership can come with sacrifice. Bradley made it clear that he doesn’t want his own story to be the center of attention. He made it clear that he considered himself for the team but never committed to the idea and yielded when several other contenders played their way on. He also made it clear just how badly it hurt to make that final call, to break his own heart, to deny himself the dream of playing on another Ryder Cup team, when ironically any captain not named Keegan Bradley would have chosen Keegan Bradley.
“Yeah, Monday was tough for me. I was just alongside the guys that didn’t make the team. I was moping around. I was bummed out,” Bradley said. He never said so, but it’s only human nature that he must have wondered at some point in that process whether he’d have preferred to just be a player and not a captain at all.
Who’s to blame? I don’t think there’s much use in pointing fingers, as I’m not even sure where I’d point them. I thought Bradley’s choice for captain was an inspired one; after Phil Mickelson left for LIV and Tiger Woods turned down the role, there wasn’t a particularly obvious choice for U.S. captain, and Bradley will be excellent. There’s just a dark irony to the fact that Bradley’s captaincy robbed Bradley of his Ryder Cup playing dreams. And so the moment required an embrace of a new goal, a new standard of success.
“But quickly you realize what a dream it is to be a Ryder Cup captain and what a dream it is to be a Ryder Cup captain for these 12 guys that I know so well,” Bradley said. “And a Ryder Cup captain at Bethpage Black, where I showed up to St. John’s as an 18-year-old kid with a dream of playing on the PGA Tour and never dreaming of being a Ryder Cup captain and I get to return to that same course as the captain of these guys representing our country, and that’s most important.”
It sounded like he’d even convinced himself.
Still, it’ll be that much sweeter if he plays the next one.
Dylan Dethier welcomes your feedback at dylan_dethier@golf.com.
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