Door wide open for Keegan Bradley to be Ryder Cup playing captain after Travelers win
It didn't take long after Keegan Bradley's victory Sunday at the Travelers Championship for the U.S. Ryder Cup captain to consider the irony.
'My whole life, every year I was out here, I wanted to play on the Ryder Cup team, and then this would be the first year where maybe I didn't want to,' said Bradley, a two-time Ryder Cupper, though not since 2014, who was named captain exactly a year ago Sunday.
'I just wanted to be the captain and, of course, you know, this is what happens.'
For months, Bradley has been adamant that he wouldn't pick himself. The only way he'd be a playing captain, he's said consistently, is if he qualified for the 12-man American team based on points.
Even in the moments after he sank a 5-footer for birdie to win the Travelers for the second time in three years, Bradley dodged the obvious question from CBS reporter Amanda Balionis.
Have you convinced yourself that you would be additive to this team now?
'Go U.S.A.!' Bradley answered.
But once he had settled behind the interview podium, Bradley had allowed himself to be realistic. His win projected to move him not only to seventh in the Official World Golf Ranking but also ninth in U.S. Ryder Cup points. The last time a top-10 player in the world was left off a Ryder Cup team was 2016, when Bubba Watson was denied a spot on the U.S. squad despite being ranked seventh in the world. Bradley is also now 10th in total strokes gained this season on Tour and third in strokes gained tee to green.
There's a lot of golf still to be played before the six automatic selections are finalized on Aug. 17 after the BMW Championship and the six captain's pick are chosen following the Tour Championship.
But if things were decided today, Bradley would be hard-pressed to not call his own number. He knows it, too.
'This changes the story a little bit,' Bradley said. 'I never would have thought about playing if I hadn't won. This definitely opens the door to play. I don't know if I'm going to do it or not, but I certainly have to take a pretty hard look at what's best for the team, and we'll see.'
When Bradley got the call a year ago, then PGA CEO Seth Waugh told Bradley that he wanted him to be the first playing captain since Arnold Palmer in 1963. Palmer would go 4-2 that year at East Lake in a dominating U.S. victory.
'My head was spinning, I didn't know what they were talking about, but they knew that that was a possibility and that we would have things in place for that,' Bradley said. 'But you know I'm always trying to be the best that I can be, and I feel like I'm playing the best golf of my career right now.'
Later, while on the Golf Central set with Golf Channel's Rich Lerner and Brandel Chamblee, Bradley said that if he plays at Bethpage Black, he will not relinquish his captaincy. Instead, his assistants – Jim Furyk, Webb Simpson, Kevin Kisner and Brandt Snedeker – would just absorb extra responsibilities.
'I will play if I feel like it will help the team,' Bradley added.
Right now, there's no doubt he would.
The door is wide open for that.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Heartbreak for Fleetwood as Bradley denies him first PGA title
Travelers Championship final round -15 K Bradley (US); -14 T Fleetwood (Eng), R Henley (US); -13 H English (US), J Day (Aus) Selected others: -12 R McIlroy (NI), S Scheffler (US); -6 A Rai (Eng), M Fitzpatrick (Eng), R MacIntyre (Sco); E S Lowry (Ire) Advertisement Full leaderboard England's Tommy Fleetwood was denied his first PGA Tour title in heartbreaking fashion as American Keegan Bradley claimed the Travelers Championship by a single shot. After 41 top-10 finishes, Fleetwood finally looked to be on course to claim his maiden PGA Tour title as he held a two-shot lead with three holes to play and a one-shot advantage going into the final hole. After a decent tee shot on the 18th, a poor putt on his third shot left the 34-year-old needing to hole from six-feet to make par. But Fleetwood narrowly missed, leaving him to bogey and hope that Bradley, who had reached the green in two, would miss his birdie putt. Advertisement The 2011 US PGA Championship winner - who will captain the USA at the Ryder Cup in September - made no mistake, slotting home to deny Fleetwood even a play-off. "I'm gutted right now," said Fleetwood. "I've not been in that situation for a long time. It's probably the worst way to finish. "Leading by two with three to play. Leading by one going into the last and you don't even make it to a play-off. It's the worst way it could go." From the brink of glory to despair Despite his three-shot overnight lead, the scars of past near-misses meant the pressure was still firmly on Fleetwood. Advertisement Three bogeys and a birdie in his opening four holes raised fears that he could once again be set for a near miss. Fleetwood steadied from there, keeping par until a pair of birdies on the 11th and 13th holes restored a two-shot lead. Bradley had looked out of contention when he fell a shot back by bogeying the par-four 14th. But a sensational 35-foot birdie on the 15th put the 39-year-old firmly back in the running. It was Bradley's approach on the 18th that turned the tide, with the American laying up five feet from the hole to pile the pressure on Fleetwood. Fleetwood's missed par putt gave Bradley a perfect read of what he needed to do to seal the win. Advertisement He stayed composed, closing with a two-under 68 to finish up on 15 under for the week, with Fleetwood a shot back - tied for second with Russell Henley, who chipped in on the last. 'Another near miss for Fleetwood' - Analysis This is a heartbreaking defeat for Fleetwood, who must have thought he was about to land his first PGA Tour title while preparing his approach to the final green. But his earlier bogey at the 16th meant that the closing stretch was laden with pressure after those birdies at 11 and 13 had strengthened his position at the top of the leaderboard. Fleetwood has been top four in two of his past five tournaments and dominated for much of the Travelers event. Advertisement But the passionate, partisan atmosphere inspired local star Bradley to come up with a brilliant birdie while the Englishman slumped to a tame bogey that flipped the tournament on its head. Fleetwood has finished second twice in majors and last year was an Olympic silver medallist. This runner-up finish will hurt just as much as those near misses. Bradley's win, meanwhile, calls into question whether he would be better playing for America in this September's Ryder Cup rather than captaining the US side.


Axios
an hour ago
- Axios
Another shocking Red Sox trade
Red Sox fans are furious after the team traded away star player Rafael Devers last night — the second time in the past five years the franchise has traded a star player for what seems like an insufficient return. "I'm shocked. This is a terrible trade. Rafael is their star player and it's going to ruin the Sox," one fan told Boston's CBS affiliate, WBZ. "I honestly think they're just doing it for the money." Devers is a three-time All-Star.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
4th PGA Tour Pro Golfer Withdraws from Travelers Championship Before Final Round
4th PGA Tour Pro Golfer Withdraws from Travelers Championship Before Final Round originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The final round of the Travelers Championship is underway with a stacked leaderboard, including Tommy Fleetwood in contention seeking his first PGA Tour win. One notable player who fired a blistering 6-under-par round on Saturday, catapulting up the leaderboard near the top 10 going into Sunday, has sadly withdrawn shortly after the start of the final round. Advertisement Viktor Hovland withdrew from the Travelers Championship after finishing two holes during Sunday's round, citing a neck injury. Hovland started the day in 14th place, 10 strokes behind leader Tommy Fleetwood, and was paired with world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler. Viktor Hovland tees off during the first round of the Travelers Streicher-Imagn Images The 27 year-old Norwegian became the fourth player to withdraw from the Travelers Championship, joining Jordan Spieth, Si Woo Kim and Eric Cole. Spieth withdrew citing neck pain during the opening round, making it the first time in his career he withdrew from competition. Si Woo Kim withdrew on Friday with a back injury, and Eric Cole withdrew before the start of Sunday's play, citing illness. Following his stellar 2022-2023 season, during which he racked up three PGA tour wins, including the Memorial Tournament, BMW Championship and TOUR Championship, Hovland struggled with some swing changes in 2024 before bouncing back in 2025. Advertisement Hovland just came off his best finish at a U.S. Open, finishing solo third at Oakmont Country Club last week, when he dazzled with his short game around Oakmont's tricky greens. He has seven career PGA Tour wins including two top 10s and one win in 2025 at the Valspar Championship. Hovland sits 20th on the FedExCup points list. Hovland will have another shot at a major championship next month, when he is slated to tee it up at The Open Championship taking place at Royal Portrush in Northern Ireland from July 17-20. This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 22, 2025, where it first appeared.