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Follow Mail Sport’s live blog on the final day of the 2025 Ryder Cup on the Black Course of Bethpage State Park in Farmingdale, New York.
Hovland: ‘It’s heartbreaking to miss out’
Team Europe star Viktor Hovland has spoken.
“There is nothing more I would like to do than be out there representing Team Europe and trying to help them win the Ryder Cup today.
Not being able to do so is pretty heartbreaking. I will be backing my team as hard as I can and rooting them on.”
Breaking:Viktor Hovland is out!
Breaking news from Bethpage: Viktor Hovland has withdrawn with injury.
The Team Europe star had been nursing a neck issue in recent days and it’s proved to be too much for him.
Harris English will not play for Team USA and that match result is a tie – thanks to the rarely-used ‘envelope’ rule
Score is now 12-5 and Europe needs just 2 points to retain the Ryder Cup.
Mickelson shuts down Ryder Cup captaincy talk
Amid Team USA’s abysmal showing this year, eyes are already turning to 2027 – and Phil Mickelson has officially ruled himself out of the picture.
In response to a post from Lee Westwood on X – ‘Hey Phil Mickelson fancy Adare Manor 2027?’ – Mickelson replied bluntly:
“No rumors. My Ryder Cup involvement is over. I’m happy being a spectator and rooting for Team USA.”
With Adare Manor two years away, the search for America’s next leader continues… but it won’t be Lefty.
Europe’s Historic Lead: How We Got Here
Two days. 16 matches. And one record-breaking performance from Team Europe.
After four sessions of foursomes and fourballs, the scoreboard reads Europe 11.5, USA 4.5 – a margin that rewrote the history books.
No team has ever led by seven points heading into the final day of the Ryder Cup.
Europe dominated Friday’s morning foursomes and never looked back. Rory McIlroy and Tommy Fleetwood have led from the front.
Jon Rahm and Tyrrell Hatton have been near-perfect.
And while the Americans found pockets of form, they’ve lacked the firepower and cohesion needed to halt the blue tide.
Sunday Singles Schedule
Here we go. The 12 head-to-head battles that will decide the 2025 Ryder Cup.
Here’s how the final day’s singles matches will unfold, with tee times in Eastern Time:
12:02 p.m. – Cameron Young (USA) vs. Justin Rose (EUR)
12:13 p.m. – Justin Thomas (USA) vs. Tommy Fleetwood (EUR)
12:24 p.m. – Bryson DeChambeau (USA) vs. Matt Fitzpatrick (EUR)
12:35 p.m. – Scottie Scheffler (USA) vs. Rory McIlroy (EUR)
12:46 p.m. – Patrick Cantlay (USA) vs. Ludvig Åberg (EUR)
12:57 p.m. – Xander Schauffele (USA) vs. Jon Rahm (EUR)
1:08 p.m. – JJ Spaun (USA) vs. Sepp Straka (EUR)
1:19 p.m. – Russell Henley (USA) vs. Shane Lowry (EUR)
1:30 p.m. – Ben Griffin (USA) vs. Rasmus Højgaard (EUR)
1:41 p.m. – Collin Morikawa (USA) vs. Tyrrell Hatton (EUR)
1:52 p.m. – Sam Burns (USA) vs. Robert MacIntyre (EUR)
2:03 p.m. – Harris English (USA) vs. Viktor Hovland (EUR)
If it goes this deep, Hovland could have the Cup-winning putt in his hands. Let the games begin.
Final Day at Bethpage
Good morning from Bethpage Black. The final day of the 2025 Ryder Cup is upon us – and Europe stand on the brink of history.
After two days of dominance, Luke Donald’s men lead the USA by a 11.5 to 4.5 – the largest two-day advantage in modern Ryder Cup history.
The chants of ‘Championes, Championes, Ole Ole Ole’ may be echoing in the distance already – as European fans prepare to enter party mode.
However, this is the Ryder Cup – sport’s greatest pressure cooker – and if there’s one thing we know, it’s not over until it’s over.
Can Keegan Bradley’s Americans dig deep on home soil? Or will Europe complete a demolition job in the cauldron of Bethpage Black?
Buckle up. Sunday Singles are about to begin and everything is still up for grabs… just.
Key Updates
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Sunday Singles Schedule
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Final Day at Bethpage