Ryder Cup: Europe captain Padraig Harrington says playing in front of 40,000 US fans better than none at all
- Published
43rd Ryder Cup |
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Dates: 24-26 September Venue: Whistling Straits, Wisconsin |
Coverage: Live text coverage, clips and highlights on the BBC Sport website and app; listen on BBC Radio 5 Live, Sports Extra and BBC Sounds; watch highlights on BBC Two and BBC iPlayer. Click here for full details |
Europe's Ryder Cup players would rather face "40,000 US fans and no Europeans" at Whistling Straits than have "no fans at all", says Padraig Harrington.
Covid travel restrictions mean there will be few Europeans in Wisconsin for the 43rd staging of the Ryder Cup.
Europe captain Harrington insists his players "want the noise, we want the excitement, we want the buzz".
"They will have to embrace it and deal with it. But they wouldn't want the alternative. Having no fans is no fun."
Spectators from both sides are renowned for their partisan support at home matches but fans still travel in their thousands to away matches.
European fans have been unable to travel to the US because of the tough restrictions put in place early last year. On Monday the US announced that travel restrictions would be eased from November - too late for next weekend's match.
"We expect a loud crowd," added Harrington. "We expect excitement, and the players should be well-prepared for it.
"It's not like they haven't seen it before. After all, it is only golf. It's pretty safe inside the ropes. I don't think they need to worry about too much."
Europe have won nine of the past 12 Ryder Cups and are the defending champions after winning 17½-10½ at Le Golf National in Paris in 2018.