Golf Mar 08, 2026

Rory McIlroy: Ryder Cup crowd at Bethpage Black worst I've experienced- 'Keegan Bradley could have done more'

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Rory McIlroy: Ryder Cup crowd at Bethpage Black worst I've experienced- 'Keegan Bradley could have done more'

Rory McIlroy said the Ryder Cup crowd at Bethpage Black was "by far the worst" he has experienced, saying USA captain Keegan Bradley "could have done more".

Speaking to Your Site pundits Roy Keane, Gary Neville and Jamie Carragher as the latest guest on The Overlap podcast, world No 2 McIlroy shared some light on the abuse Europe's players received in New York.

"Oh, by far [the worst crowd I've ever experienced]," McIlroy said.

"In 2016 we played the Ryder Cup in Minnesota, and I thought that was bad. But I compare this year to 2016, and 2016 was nothing compared to some of the stuff we heard.

"We knew going to New York that we were going to get a lot of stick, a lot of abuse. For six months right before the competition, everyone was saying it's going to be hostile.

"I didn't [think it would be as hostile as it ended up]. Look, I don't care if people are saying whatever they're saying to me, even the first tee announcers shouting: 'F*** you, Rory,' which is nothing compared to the other stuff we heard.

"Erica, my wife, would say she's a grown woman, she's strong, she can handle that, but then when it starts to get into your family, I heard stuff about my daughter that I couldn't even repeat here. It's horrific.

"But I think it's sort of society and culture at the minute as well. It's that mob mentality where people see other people doing something and then they think it's okay. And then it sort of builds up.

"There's 50,000 people there, and all it takes is 500 of those to be bad eggs and then it skews the atmosphere."

Discussing events at Bethpage Black further, McIlroy added he felt USA captain Bradley could have done more to halt the abuse directed at the European players.

"Keegan Bradley and I have talked about this. You have to play into the home field advantage, absolutely," he said.

"But during the competition on Friday night and Saturday night, after the stuff that we heard on the course, there was an opportunity for either Keegan or some of the team-mates to be like: 'Let's just calm down here. Let's try to play this match in the right spirit.'

"Some of them did that, but obviously Keegan had the biggest platform of the week in being the captain. I feel like he could have said something on that Friday or Saturday night, and he didn't.

"But in fairness, Sunday was a little bit better. It seemed like the rhetoric was sort of calmed down a bit.

"In the Ryder Cup for the first two days, there's 50,000 people on four holes. It's so tight and so packed in and so condensed. Then on Sunday there's 12 matches, so the crowd is a little more dispersed around the golf course. It doesn't really get into that mob mentality as much.

"It's a great event for golf to have, because it's the only time you have that real partisan feel. What we feel or what I feel as a football fan or what you felt when you were playing.

"That's a rivalry and people really get into that. It's the reason it's probably the biggest tournament in golf.

"I would say winning as a team has a very different feeling to winning as an individual. You can celebrate it more.

"I've always said individual wins in my career are always going to be the proudest things that I've achieved or what I'm proudest of, but I've never had as much fun in my career as I've had at the Ryder Cup.

"That was my eighth Ryder Cup and it was definitely the best one by far."

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