‘He’s being consulted’: How Tiger Woods figures into Keegan Bradley’s Ryder Cup captaincy

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Tiger Woods gets a fist bump from Keegan Bradley (Photo by Keyur Khamar/PGA TOUR via Getty Images)

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Keegan Bradley wasn’t the PGA of America’s first choice to captain the 2025 U.S. Ryder Cup team that will try to wrest the trophy from the Europeans at Bethpage Black next month. For years, Phil Mickelson, who first endeared himself to New Yawkers with his spirited runner-up finish at the 2002 U.S. Open at Bethpage, was all but a lock to assume the role. But then along came LIV and Mickelson’s defection from the golf establishment and, with it, the need for a new skipper.

Tiger Woods? The job was his if he wanted it. But after agonizing for months over the decision, Woods determined in May of last year that he was too busy with his PGA Tour policy board role, TGL duties and parenting responsibilities to give a Ryder Cup captaincy the time and attention it required.

But that didn’t mean Woods would retreat from the process entirely, beginning with him voicing his views on who should be captain. When a PGA of America executive proposed to Woods the outside-the-box idea of appointing Bradley to the post, Woods thought Bradley was “a brilliant choice,” a person close to the captain-selection process told me earlier this week.

That respect works two ways and has materialized in Woods playing a key advisory role to Bradley over the last year. “He’s being consulted,” the team source said of Woods. “And I know he feels like he’s a part of Keegan’s decisions and how he’s thinking about it, and Keegan has been hugely respectful of that. Without giving [Woods] an outsized role, I think it’s been balanced and kind of appropriate. He’s been sort of an informal advisor or Dutch uncle.”

One such opportunity to pick Woods’ brain came earlier this year when Bradley and Woods were paired in the Seminole Pro-Member in South Florida, an exclusive one-day event that annually brings together many of the world’s best players with shimmery names from the business world and beyond. But Woods wasn’t the only font of wisdom in the group. Playing alongside them was Shane Battier, the former NBA star who spent his college years at Duke University under the tutelage of legendary coach Mike Krzyzewski. Bradley listened intently as Battier spoke of Coach K’s team-building tactics and methods he used to inspire his players and earn their loyalty and trust.

Woods hasn’t yet captained a Ryder Cup team, but he has helmed a Presidents Cup squad, in 2019, when he expended one of his four captain’s picks on himself. That self-selection made Woods particularly well suited to counsel Bradley on the decision that, before Wednesday, had sat for months on Bradley’s shoulders like a lead weight: Should he name himself to his own team? Doing so would be defensible given Bradley’s excellent form this season. But the potential downside of wearing two hats was also not hard to see. Woods could relate to Bradley’s conundrum, which led Bradley to consult with Woods “a ton” about the matter, Bradley said at the Open Championship in July. Bradley added, “During this process, he’s been one of the most helpful people that I’ve had.

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