The 2023 Ryder Cup is set to get underway Friday morning at Marco Simone Golf and Country Club in Rome — the first match will go off at 1:35 a.m. ET — and both teams are in full preparation mode.
The Zach Johnson-led Americans are looking to win on foreign soil for the first time in 30 years while the Luke Donald-led Europeans are hoping to put up a bigger fight than they did at Whistling Straits two years ago when the blue and yellow got thumped, 19-9.
For one of the biggest events in golf, the staff at Golfweek has decided to make predictions on who will be hoisting the Cup come Sunday afternoon.
Ryder Cup: How to watch, schedule | Practice round photos | Picks
Gannett may earn revenue from sports betting operators for audience referrals to betting services. Sports betting operators have no influence over nor are any such revenues in any way dependent on or linked to the newsrooms or news coverage. Terms apply, see operator site for Terms and Conditions. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, help is available. Call the National Council on Problem Gambling 24/7 at 1-800-GAMBLER (NJ, OH), 1-800-522-4700 (CO), 1-800-BETS-OFF (IA), 1-800-9-WITH-IT (IN). Must be 21 or older to gamble. Sports betting and gambling are not legal in all locations. Be sure to comply with laws applicable where you reside.
Tim Schmitt, Managing Editor
Score prediction: Team Europe, 15½ – 12½
Odds: Team Europe to win by 1-3 points (+350); Team Europe to win (+100)
A few weeks ago I was sitting with Lanny Wadkins, whose 18 total overall match victories are the most by any living player on the U.S. side, when he said something that stuck with me:
“When we come play Ryder Cups here, we play the best venues. We go to Whistling Straits, we go to Bethpage Black,” Wadkins said. “In 1977, we went to Lytham & St Annes. We’ve never played another great venue over there since, and it’s disappointing that we haven’t. I think they do that because they know we know those great venues from playing Open Championships, but we never get to go play the others.”
Damn Euros. Hiding their courses in plain sight.
But Lanny has a point. Familiarity certainly helps and in a competition as emotional as the Ryder Cup, that home cookin’ will prove the difference between two evenly matched sides.
Adam Schupak, Senior Writer
Score prediction: Team USA, 15 – 13
Odds: Team USA to win by 1-3 points (+340); Team USA to win (+105)
Jordan Spieth was in diapers the last time the U.S. won on European soil but come Sunday he will be sipping champagne and Xander Schauffele will be smoking a victory cigar.
This Cup will be closer than the last bunch but the U.S. team is deep from world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, who sought out a new putting coach to fix his Achilles Heel, to the pairings of Xander-Pat and JT-Jordan, a healthy Brooks Koepka and a rookie like Brian Harman who won’t be afraid of 50,000 fans rooting against him. The Euros have some formidable players, home course and the crowd on their side but even Rory McIlroy has admitted this is a transitional year for Team Europe. This is America’s chance to pounce and behind the leadership of Zach Johnson they are ready to do so. U.S. retains the Cup 15-13.
Todd Kelly, Assistant Managing Editor
Score prediction: Team Europe, 14½ – 13½
Odds: Team Europe to win by 1-3 points (+350); Team Europe to win (+100)
Adam Woodard, Staff Writer
Score prediction: Team Europe, 15½–12½
Odds: Team Europe to win by 1-3 points (+350); Team Europe to win (+100)
Having just seen first hand what homefield advantage can do for a side at the Solheim Cup, I’ve got a hard time picking against the Europeans. While some of the pairings will be the same, this is not the U.S. team that won in 2021 and they’ll face a considerably different test in Italy compared to Wisconsin.
The teams are so evenly matched, with the back-end of Team USA holding a slight advantage compared to Nos. 10-12 on the Team Europe. That said, with the Ryder Cup in Italy for the first time, local fans will show up (just like the Spaniard’s did for the women) and make the difference. The most talent doesn’t always win, and that’ll bear true again this year.
Riley Hamel, Staff Writer
Score prediction: Team USA, 15½ – 12½
Odds: Team USA to win by 1-3 points (+340); Team USA to win (+105)
This isn’t going to be Whistling Straits 2.0. The European team is revamped, shedding the old weight of Sergio Garcia, Ian Poulter and Lee Westwood and replacing them with young studs including Ludvig Aberg. Still, the Americans have six of the top-10 players in the world and seem to have at least two pairings they’ll ride for all four sessions (Schauffele/Cantlay and Spieth/Thomas).
For the first time since 1993, Team USA will hoist the Cup across the pond.
Cameron Jourdan, Staff Writer
Score prediction: Team USA, 15 – 13
Odds: Team Europe to win by 1-3 points (+350); Team Europe to win (+100)
So, here’s the deal. Until the Americans go to Europe and prove they can win on foreign soil, I refuse to pick them. On paper, the U.S. has a better team with more experience on the big stage. Although the European stars have been showing better form in recent months, the Americans are deeper and more experienced. However, none of that matters when it comes to the Ryder Cup, as has been proven time and time and time again. This seems like a time when a Ludvig Aberg or Robert MacIntyre, one of the young guns for the Euros, step up and become a headache for the Americans for a long time, and Marco Simone will be their breaking out party.