Rory McIlroy says United States captain Keegan Bradley should have acted more firmly over abusive home support at the 2025 Ryder Cup. McIlroy feels leadership from Bradley was missing when crowd behaviour
in New York moved from loud backing into personal attacks.
Europe still held their nerve in that hostile setting at Bethpage Black. Strong play across the three days delivered a 15-13 victory, making Europe the first visiting team to lift the Ryder Cup away from home since 2012, despite the off-course tension.
McIlroy describes how the atmosphere shifted as Europe pulled ahead. The focus moved from the golf to taunts from sections of the US crowd. Abuse from some fans escalated, and an incident where a drink was thrown towards Erica McIlroy drew major attention.
McIlroy explains that a clear line was crossed when the chanting and comments turned towards close family. "Look, I don't care if people are saying whatever they're saying to me. 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. "
According to McIlroy, the European team had expected a difficult environment long before arriving in New York. "We knew going to New York that we were going to get a lot of stick, a lot of abuse," said McIlroy, while speaking on The Overlap, as he reflected on the week.
McIlroy accepts that home teams often feed off loud backing. "Keegan and I have talked about this. You have to play into the home-field advantage, absolutely. 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. "
What. A. Year. pic.twitter.com/AvXIcYUCTNRyder Cup Europe (@RyderCupEurope) December 31, 2025
McIlroy notes that some United States players and caddies did try to calm things at times, especially as the hosts slipped behind in matches. However, McIlroy believes the main message needed to come from Bradley, who held the central role during such a high profile contest.
The Northern Irish star views the New York week as both a significant European triumph and a warning about how Ryder Cup atmospheres can change. McIlroy’s comments underline questions about crowd conduct and captaincy responsibilities before future editions, with both teams likely to study what happened at Bethpage Black.










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