{"id":1246966,"date":"2023-09-05T16:31:37","date_gmt":"2023-09-05T16:31:37","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/golftoday.co.uk\/?p=1246966"},"modified":"2023-09-05T16:39:04","modified_gmt":"2023-09-05T16:39:04","slug":"ryder-cup-aberg-brings-a-game-to-the-alps-and-heads-for-rome","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/golftoday.co.uk\/ryder-cup-aberg-brings-a-game-to-the-alps-and-heads-for-rome\/","title":{"rendered":"Aberg brings A-game to the Alps and heads for Rome"},"content":{"rendered":"

Luke Donald, the European captain for the Ryder Cup match in Rome later this month, yesterday named his six wild-card picks to complete the 12-man team. It seemed, somewhat bizarrely, both surprising and inevitable that one of those selected would be Ludvig Aberg, the 23-year old Swede who on Sunday won the Omega European Masters at Crans-sur-Sierre in Switzerland. It was his first win in professional golf. He\u2019s only been a pro since June. He has only had three top-10 finishes in 12 starts this year. He has never played in a major championship. (Just consider that sentence again.)\u00a0<\/span>\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n

He is by far the most inexperienced golfer to be picked to play in the Ryder Cup. The former world No.1 ranked amateur golfer had already established a reputation for being a wonderful driver of the ball. Donald asked the organisers of the Rocket Mortgage Classic on the PGA Tour to put him in the same group as Aberg at their tournament in June and he had said earlier this summer that he had been \u201ctracking Ludvig for about a year\u201d. At Crans last week, Donald arranged for him to play the first two rounds with Nicolas Colsaerts and Edoardo Molinari, two of his vice-captains for the match, thereby blatantly inviting Aberg to show what he could do. What he could do was birdie five of the first six holes and on Sunday he completed the job. He is, if you like, the opposite of Justin Thomas, picked for the US team by Zach Johnson because of what he has done in past Ryder Cups (albeit he has only played in two of them) as opposed to what he\u2019s done lately (like shooting in the 80s at both the US Open and at the Open Championship).<\/span>\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n

Aberg\u2019s win in Switzerland elevated him from 200<\/span>th<\/span> to 90<\/span>th<\/span> on the Official World Golf Ranking, which is impressive in itself but it must still leave someone such as Adrian Meronk – ranked 51<\/span>st<\/span> and a winner of the Italian Open at Marco Simone, the Ryder Cup venue, earlier this year \u2013 wondering if Donald has made the correct call here. As with Thomas, only time and events will tell us.<\/span>\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n