Even In Ryder Cup Defeat, St. John's Own Keegan Bradley Shines In Rookie Debut

October 01, 2012

St. John's alumnus Keegan Bradley came to the 39th Ryder Cup as a rookie with a world of talent but questions remained, "could he deliver when the pressure was on?" And, as crushing a defeat as it was for the U.S. (squandering a 10-6 lead only to lose to the Europeans 14 1/2 to 13 1/2), that question was answered as millions of people saw the real Keegan Bradley come of age as a "bonafide star in the annals of American golf" this week at Medinah (IL) Country Club just outside of Chicago.

His 3-1-0 record was the most points (3) by an individual American, along with Jason Dufner, Dustin and Zach Johnson, and Phil Mickelson. He gave world number #1 Rory McIlroy all he could handle before losing 2 and 1 on Sunday. Bradley became the first U.S. rookie to win in his first three team matches since Loren Roberts in 1995.

Plus, his pairing with idol Phil Mickelson proved masterful by captain Davis Love III, as the dynamic duo played 44 holes and only trailed for three holes the entire weekend.

He hit long putts for birdies to electrify the crowd, bombed drives off the tee that disappeared out of site and measured a staggering 320+ yards on average. Rookies at the Ryder Cup normally don't turn in these types of performances.

Even off the course his enthusiasm made him a fan favorite. Prior to the final round, Bradley inexplicably ran up the player walkway to the first tee and got the crowd in a frenzy before Sunday's 12-match format got underway. He felt it was his duty to take the initiative, and that more than anything personifies a new dawning in American golf and Keegan Bradley has made a claim for being the "emotional leader of a new crop of U.S. talent."

Ryder Cup week will highlight Bradley's exploits at the 39th competition of this Super Bowl of Golf, but on this day the Europeans would not be denied defending the Cup title of two years ago. Even a late wake up call for McIlroy, who almost missed his tee time, couldn't derail the Europeans from winning.

The Americans were gracious in defeat as Bradley tweeted, "real tough (to take) but great playing to the Europeans." Davis Love III may have said it best when he noted to close the post U.S. press conference, "America can be proud of this team."

Bradley is an ambassador for St. John's University and you can add American Golf to that moniker, but he's even a better person, a gentleman and a fierce competitor at the age of 26, who respects the game of golf and its traditions - as well as being gracious in defeat.

For more information contact Dominic Scianna, Assistant Vice President for Media Relations by calling 718.990-6185 or e-mail inquiries to sciannad@stjohns.edu. For more news and information regarding St. John's follow us on our University website at www.stjohns.edu/news.

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