First day of Ryder Cup ends with Team Europe up by 3 points after a dream start at Bethpage Black | CNN

First day of Ryder Cup ends with Team Europe up by 3 points after a dream start at Bethpage Black

FARMINGDALE, NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 25: (back row L-R) Patrick Cantlay, Russell Henley, Bryson DeChambeau, Harris English, Scottie Scheffler, Sam Burns, Ben Griffin, Cameron Young (bottom row L-R) Collin Morikawa, Justin Thomas, Captain Keegan Bradley, Xander Schauffele and J.J. Spaun of Team United States pose for a photo prior to the Ryder Cup 2025 at Black Course at Bethpage State Park Golf Course on September 25, 2025 in Farmingdale, New York. (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images)
Ben Griffin speaks to CNN before his Ryder Cup selection about what the tournament would mean to him
03:30 • Source: CNN

What we covered here

Europeans raced into dream start on first day: Team Europe dominated the opening foursomes session to take a 3-1 lead and then staved off an American fourball fight back to hold a 5 1/2 to 2 1/2 after the first day.

• Europe aims to hold the cup: The Europeans are looking to defend their title and do something they haven’t done since 2012: Win on American soil.

Trump attended and provided a bit of a spark: President Donald Trump watched the first day of play in person. The president is an avid golfer and is close with many of the players in the event.

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Europe power into the weekend with three point lead

Tommy Fleetwood played a big part for Team Europe on Friday, winning both of his matches.

And breathe…

A pulsating opening day battle at Bethpage Black comes to a close with Team Europe carrying a 5.5 - 2.5 lead into the weekend of the 45th Ryder Cup.

It went right to the wire in New York, as Rory McIlroy’s agonizing birdie miss in the final fourball contest prevented the visitors from bolstering their advantage even further.

Team USA improved after stumbling out of the blocks, Xander Schauffele and Patrick Cantlay winning the final match of the foursomes sessions to rescue the hosts from suffering a second consecutive Friday morning sweep at the tournament.

Rest up, we’ve still got two more days of drama to come. See you tomorrow!

Results:

Morning foursomes:

Rahm/Hatton (EUR) 4&3 win vs. DeChambeau/Thomas (USA)

Åberg/Højgaard (EUR) 5&3 win vs. Scheffler/Henley (USA)

McIlroy/Fleetwood (EUR) 5&4 win vs. Morikawa/English (USA)

Schauffele/Cantlay (USA) 2 UP win vs Hovland/MacIntyre (USA

Afternoon fourballs

Rahm/Straka (EUR) 3&2 win vs. Scheffler/Spaun (USA)

Fleetwood/Rose (EUR) 1 UP win vs. Griffin/DeChambeau (USA)

Young/Thomas (USA) 6&5 win vs. Åberg/Højgaard (EUR)

Burns/Cantlay (USA) tie vs. McIlroy/Lowry (EUR)

McIlroy misses birdie putt as Friday's final match ends all square

Rory McIlroy reacts after missing his putt on No. 18.

What could have been for Team Europe if Rory McIlroy had made the final stroke of the day - just under a 14-foot birdie putt.

Instead, they and the Team USA pairing of Patrick Cantlay and Sam Burns ended in a tie after 18 holes to end Friday with a European advantage of 5 1/2 to 2 1/2.

It’ll be on the Americans to channel something they could not find on Friday during tomorrow’s session.

Can it be done? Don thinks its up to Bradley to right the ship. We will find out soon enough.

Cantlay/Burns tie McIlroy/Lowry

Tonight, it will be up to Keegan Bradley to turn this around for Team USA

From left, US vice captain Kevin Kisner, captain Keegan Bradley and vice captain Gary Woodland watch play on the 18th hole.

US captain Keegan Bradley has an enormous task on his hands this evening. He’ll go to sleep knowing that the team that has led after day one in each of the last five Ryder Cups has gone on to win.

The Europeans have won the last six Cups in which they were ahead after the opening day. And this time, the gap between the US and Europe isn’t even close – they were destroyed on Friday.

Bradley must somehow project confidence and full belief in his players, without second guessing the things he could have done differently.

Outside of the team hotel, though, it’s a different story.

Should he have started with foursomes, a format in which the Europeans have dominated lately?

Should he have benched three of his in-form rookies for the morning session, including the reigning US Open champion J.J. Spaun?

And should Scottie Scheffler’s playing partner, Russell Henley, have taken the lead on the odd holes, when Scheffler’s style of play would have perhaps been a better fit?

But most of all, questions will be asked about whether Bradley himself should have played.

He was put in an impossible position with no playing captain since Arnold Palmer in 1963, but he was a player in form, ranked higher than four of the players he picked instead of himself. And more than once this week, he’s admitted that he’s thought about playing.

“I catch myself every now and then looking down the fairway,” he said.

“Seeing the guys walk down the fairway and think how badly I’d like to do that, and how badly I’d want to be in the group with Scottie Scheffler and seeing him play and being his teammate.

“But I feel like I’ve been called for a bigger cause here, to help our guys get ready to play and play at the highest level. But in the back of my mind, I’m always thinking, ‘I could have been out there.’”

Tonight, he has to forget all of that and make his players believe they can turn it around.

He can start by showing them footage of the “Battle of Brookline” in 1999, when the Americans recovered from 6-2 down on Friday. It’s one of the most storied comebacks in all of sport, and Bradley must convince his players that they can do it too.

The vibe behind 18 is a definitely a vibe

Team Europe captain Luke Donald, bottom center, is joined by players and families on the 18th hole on Friday.

One of the coolest sights in golf is taking place right now.

As the final group makes their way to whole number 18, the full complement of Team USA and Team Europe are gathered behind the final green, watching their teammates finish up in a crucial, back-and-forth match.

The groups of players and their families are living and dying with every shot, with Europe jumping to their feet when Rory McIlroy sinks a big putt on 17.

The Americans, coming off an extremely rough day that none of them could’ve seen, were more subdued when Sam Burns held his own putt to keep the final match even.

One last hole to go on his first day of the Ryder Cup.

Team USA and Team Europe keep trading birdie putts heading into final hole

It all comes down to this – the 18th and final hole of Friday’s Ryder Cup session.

After two birdie putts from Rory McIlroy and Sam Burns, both Team USA and Team Europe will duke it out for either a point or a share of a point.

Buckle up because here we go!

Cantlay/Burns tied with McIlroy/Lowry (17)

Tommy and Justin are nails

Tommy Fleetwood, left, and Justin Rose celebrate after winning a point for Europe.

With a rowdy crowd behind the 18th green as the backdrop, and Team Europe hanging out behind the green, Tommy Fleetwood is going off.

His approach shot bounces behind the hole and spins to within just a few feet. It’s a throwing of the gauntlet to the Americans, Bryson DeChambeau and Ben Griffin, who need to win the hole to steal a half point.

It doesn’t seem like Fleetwood or Justin Rose will let them do that as Rose’s shot is as immaculate as his partner’s. They’ll both have tight birdie putts

Griffin does his part to spin his shot up around the pin as well but DeChambeau disappoints by leaving his approach short of the green in a bunker at the foot of a massive hill.

Rose and Fleetwood need to have shocking misses for the Americans to get anything from this match, which they led for so much of the way. An American miracle is required.

It’s not happening. Rose buries his 10-foot birdie putt and the Europeans win this match to go up 5-2.

Fleetwood/Rose defeat DeChambeau/Griffin 1UP

Rahm serves up reminder of his class with virtuoso Friday showing

Jon Rahm reacts after a birdie on the eighth hole on Friday afternoon.

If his absence from the PGA Tour had led you to forget the mercurial talents wielded by Jon Rahm, then let his Friday Ryder Cup masterclass serve as a timely reminder.

The Spaniard dovetailed superbly with LIV Golf co-star Tyrrell Hatton and Austria’s Sepp Straka to make mincemeat of an American quadrant boasting a combined nine majors, as a 4&3 morning foursomes win over Bryson DeChambeau and Justin Thomas was followed up with an afternoon 3&2 win against Scottie Scheffler and J.J. Spaun.

Rahm has made no secret of his adulation for European Ryder Cup icon Seve Ballesteros, dedicating his 2023 Masters to win to his late compatriot, but the 30-year-old is rapidly carving out a storied history of his own thanks to repeated virtuoso performances at the tournament.

Having gone undefeated in Rome two years ago, Rahm’s two wins at Bethpage Black lifts his overall record to 8-3-3 and 9.5 points with two days of golf left to play in New York.

Yet the Barrika-born star, who poured in six birdies to help down reigning major champions Scheffler and Spaun, is in no rush to take the plaudits.

“I can’t take the credit, all of it,” he told reporters after the afternoon triumph powered Europe into a 4-2 overall lead.

“Tyrrell has been a fantastic partner … Sepp has done his thing. … It’s a team. I’ve been fortunate to have really good teammates.”

To the 17th hole we go with the final foursome locked in a battle!

Two huge birdie putts from Patrick Cantlay and Rory McIlroy keeps the score knotted up as there are two holes to play in Friday afternoon’s final foursome.

Cantlay/Burns tied vs. McIlroy/Lowry (16)

Bryson is nails

Bryson DeChambeau celebrates after winning the 17th hole.

Some big money shots from the Americans on the par three 17th.

Ben Griffin and Bryson DeChambeau both have their tee shots on the green near the hole as they need to win the 17th and the 18th in order to get a half point for the USA.

Justin Rose missed the green but Tommy Fleetwood, as he has all day, nailed his shot – joining the Americans on the putting surface.

Rose’s chip fell short, but it was Fleetwood’s shot that mattered most.

A birdie would mean a win in the match and he left it about a yard short, much to his dismay.

That gave DeChambeau and Griffin a chance at birdie to win the hole.

Griffin’s effort missed to the left with DeChambeau now having a six-footer to take the hole.

He rattled it around the rim of the hole and it dropped!

They’ll play the 18th as the US has a chance to steal a half point.

Burns/Cantlay vs. McIlroy/Lowry coming down to the wire

Friday afternoon’s final foursomes is proving to be the most competitive as the Team USA duo of Patrick Cantlay and Sam Burns and the Team Europe pairing of Rory McIlroy and Shane Lowry remained tied with three holes to play.

On holes 14 and 15, the 33-year-old Cantlay had two chances at a birdie to give the Americans a one hole advantage but missed both putts, keeping the score level.

Which team will be able to capitalize first?

Cantlay/Burns tied vs. McIlroy/Lowry (15)

As of now, Europe is in control to lead after the first day. Let's see if they can finish strong

Tommy Fleetwood celebrates after making a birdie putt on the 16th hole.

The second match of the afternoon is Team Europe’s to lose with two holes to play.

Justin Rose and Ben Griffin both missed birdie putts by about an inch as the Europeans try to extend their one-hole lead. Tommy Fleetwood, though, didn’t miss at all — nailing a birdie putt to pile the pressure on Bryson DeChambeau.

With a right-to-left putt, DeChambeau watches the ball slide above the hole, and it’s a two-hole lead for Fleetwood and Rose as they head to 17.

Fleetwood is truly playing out of his mind today, a potential MVP of the first day for Team Europe along with Jon Rahm. He won his opening match with Rory McIlroy and is now in a position to get another point with Rose.

Rahm and Straka extend Europe's lead with victory over Scheffler and Spaun

Sepp Straka and Jon Rahm embrace each other after winning their afternoon match on Friday.

Scottie Scheffler’s Friday to forget is over, as Austria’s Sepp Straka follows the American into the cup to tie the 16th hole and secure another point for Team Europe, lifting them into a 4-2 overall lead.

World No. 1 Scheffler never truly settled on the Bethpage Black greens as he and playing partner J.J. Spaun were comfortably beaten 3 & 2 by Straka and Jon Rahm, who dazzled throughout to torment the US duo.

Rahm did not touch down in New York with the same clout he had when he arrived in Rome two years ago as a Masters champion, but the LIV Golf star looked back to his brilliant best as he rolled in six birdies to add another point to his foursomes triumph this morning.

Yet it was another chastening Ryder Cup outing for reigning PGA Championship and Open Championship victor Scheffler, who becomes just the third World No. 1 to lose twice on the opening day of the tournament – joining Ian Woosnam (1991) and Tiger Woods (1999, 2002) – following his 5 & 3 foursomes loss alongside Russell Henley.

Rahm/Straka win 3 & 2 over Scheffler/Spaun

Ruthless Rahm piles more misery on Scheffler

Jon Rahm reacts after making a birdie on No. 15.

Poor Scottie Scheffler. Just when the world No. 1 finally had something to smile about, Spain’s Jon Rahm resurfaced to wipe it firmly off his face.

The American had at last shed the weight of an uncharacteristically frustrating day on the greens as he finally got a big putt to drop, hoisting his putter to the sky in jubilation after steering home brilliantly for birdie from 22 feet on the 15th hole.

It left Rahm needing to convert from roughly the same distance to preserve a three-shot lead, and the Spaniard relished ruining Scheffler’s fleeting happiness, drilling home to guarantee a half point in the matchup.

Rahm/Straka 3 UP vs. Scheffler/Spaun

McIlroy misses putt to shift momentum back to Team USA

Rory McIlroy reacts after missing a putt on the 13th hole.

Uh oh! Flashback to the Masters earlier this year with Rory McIlroy missing putts.

After Patrick Cantlay birdied the 13th hole, it was up to the 36-year-old to either make the just under six-foot putt or give the opposition pairing their second straight single-hole win.

The putt lipped out and now it is all tied up with five holes to play.

The good news is we all know how the Masters ended for McIlroy!

Cantlay/Burns tied vs. McIlroy/Lowry (13)

What played out on hole No. 14 captures the day so far

The 14th green during the Bryson DeChambeau-Ben Griffin vs. Tommy Fleetwood-Justin Rose is a microcosm of the day for the Americans.

The Europeans make easy work of their tee shots, putting the ball near the pin — including a perfect shot from Fleetwood that landed about eight feet away.

The Americans, meanwhile, are all over the place. Griffin goes into the bunker off the green and DeChambeau is on the green but about 40 feet away. Griffin gets up and down for par while DeChambeau rolls a great putt … that misses by about two inches.

Fleetwood buries his birdie putt and puts his team up a hole in a critical match on this Friday afternoon, with four holes to play in this one.

Thomas and Young cruise to Team USA's second point

Justin Thomas applauds his teammate Cameron Young after their win on Friday afternoon.

Team USA cuts the overall deficit to 3-2 thanks to a commanding 6 & 5 (six shots up with five holes to play) victory from Justin Thomas and Cameron Young.

Thomas was an exasperated figure during his morning foursomes defeat but looked reinvigorated as he and Young made short work of young European duo Ludvig Åberg and Rasmus Højgaard.

Thomas/Young 6&5 vs. Åberg/Højgaard

Cantlay refuses to buckle

Patrick Cantlay reacts after making a putt on the 12th hole.

Patrick Cantlay and Sam Burns are refusing to go down without a fight.

World No. 22 Cantlay makes short work of the 12th to once again cut Rory McIlroy and Shane Lowry’s advantage to one.

Lowry/McIlroy 1UP vs. Burns/Cantlay (12)

Straka pulls a rabbit out of the hat at 14

Simply sensational from Sepp Straka.

Over 30 feet from the 14th hole, the Austrian conjures some putting sorcery to waft home a perfectly judged birdie. It’s a huge moment and he knows it, as he bellows his delight with a fist pump.

J.J. Spaun follows him in to keep the margin at three strokes, but the Americans are running out of time.

Rahm/Straka 3 UP vs. Scheffler/Spaun (14)

POTUS now back at White House

President Donald Trump steps off Marine One as he returns to the White House on Friday.

President Donald Trump has arrived back in the capital after leaving Bethpage Black. He spent a few hours at the first tee grandstand, taking in some Ryder Cup action, and is now at the White House.

Trump arrived around noon with his granddaughter Kai and departed from New York around 3:30 p.m. ET.

After spending time behind his protective layers of glass, which was flanked by Secret Service agents, he made his way onto the first hole tee box to mingle with golfers Bryson DeChambeau, Ben Griffin and Team USA captain Keegan Bradley.

President Donald Trump gets the crowd fired up at Bethpage Black on Friday.

Cantlay and Thomas try to light US fire

Cameron Young, left, celebrates with Justin Thomas after they won the 11th hole.

What was that about a momentum shift?

Patrick Cantlay and Justin Thomas answer the American call for a spark, dropping in birdies to cut the deficit to one and extend the lead to four in their respective matchups.

With Thomas and Cameron Young on track to make a procession of their bout, and Scottie Scheffler and J.J Spaun seemingly powerless in theirs, it puts huge onus on Cantlay and Sam Burns to reel in Rory McIlroy and Shane Lowry.

Yet the Irish duo respond emphatically, 2019 Open champion Lowry making no mistake after a gorgeous approach to restore Europe’s two shot cushion in the match.

Thomas/Young 4UP vs. Aberg/Hojgaard (11)

McIlroy/Lowry 2UP vs. Burns/Cantlay (11)