
Hull sink Millwall to reach Championship play-off final
Hull City secures Championship play-off final spot with 2-0 win over Millwall
Keegan Bradley is beginning to feel better about the U.S. Ryder Cup loss at Bethpage, which still haunts him months later. He reflects on his experiences and acknowledges the challenges he faced as captain during that tumultuous weekend.
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NEWTOWN SQUARE, Pa. â This may or may not make heartbroken American golf fans feel any better, but Keegan Bradley is still wrestling with the United Statesâ catastrophic Ryder Cup loss at Bethpage nearly eight months later. Heâll be driving down the road, and all of a sudden heâll remember an element of that chaotic, wrenching weekend â a pairing, maybe, or a course setup tip, or the one thing he did (or didnât) say to his players â and everything will come roaring back. Thatâs about as diabolical a punishment as anyone could possibly conceive for a losing Ryder Cup captain.
Still, though, the demons are starting to recede. âIâm starting to feel better,â he said Monday at Aronimink before the PGA Championship. âThe last couple months, Iâve started to feel more like myself.â He conceded that âsometimes Iâm a little too honest (in public) with how Iâm feeling, and it gets me in some weird spots.â
The way that the favored, home-team United States lost â getting blown out on Friday and Saturday before rallying Sunday for a semi-respectable 15-13 loss â combined with the terrible behavior of a loud Bethpage contingent all landed on Bradleyâs head. He spent months afterward trying to atone for every mistake that led to the loss, some of which were his, most of which werenât.
Keegan Bradley of Team United States stands on the 18th green after Team Europe won the Ryder Cup during the Sunday singles matches of the 2025 Ryder Cup at Black Course at Bethpage State Park Golf Course on September 28, 2025 in Farmingdale, New York. (Photo by Carl Recine/Getty Images)
Keegan Bradley mentioned he is starting to feel better about the Ryder Cup loss, although memories of the event still haunt him.
The U.S. team lost the Ryder Cup at Bethpage with a score of 15-13, after being heavily defeated on Friday and Saturday.
As captain, Bradley dealt with the pressure of the team's poor performance and the behavior of the crowd, which he felt contributed to the loss.
Bradley has started to feel more like himself in recent months, indicating a gradual recovery from the emotional toll of the Ryder Cup loss.

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(Carl Recine via Getty Images)
At this point, the Ryder Cup is something of a Greek tragedy for Bradley, with pain and buried trauma at every turn. From his losses as a player in the 2012 Medinah collapse and the 2014 Gleneagles blowout, to being left off the 2023 team in Netflix-televised agony, to Bethpage ⊠itâs safe to say that Bradley and the Ryder Cup may never reconcile.
For that reason, he said Monday, he doesnât even entertain thoughts of playing his way onto the 2027 team. âRyder Cup's just so brutal to me over the years in every way,â he said. âIn every single way it's been brutal, and I have a tough time focusing in on something like that because of how tough it's been.â
Still, he canât help holding out just a little bit of hope, canât help sharing, or maybe oversharing, what his true feelings are.
âI told myself after Rome I was never going to get that emotionally invested,â he said. âI was going to play my game and try to get on the team. But I'd really like to make that team in Ireland. I'd really love to play for Jim Furyk, who is an idol of mine, but also become a great friend and mentor. ⊠The guys on the team last year changed my life. Changed who I am as a person, and I would love to play on a Ryder Cup with them.â
Yeah. That doesnât sound like a guy whoâs shying away from yet another chance to get his heart stomped. âI'll be 41 when that happens,â he conceded. âBut what a cool story it would be. How fun would that be?â