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A glittering 41st Ryder Cup in Minnesota had it all, says Ewen Murray

Phil Mickelson and Jordan Spieth of the United States celebrate with champagne after winning the Ryder Cup

The 41st Ryder Cup had all the drama, the quality and the excitement we have come to expect from one of the world's foremost sporting occasions, and Ewen Murray has been reflecting on the best and worst of the week in Minnesota.

The 41st edition of the Ryder Cup had it all. Just when you think Medinah in 2012 and Gleneagles in 2014 raised the bar, alongside comes Hazeltine National which, over the course of three frenetic days, provided the good, the bad and the ugly.

CHASKA, MN - OCTOBER 02: The crowd cheers on the first tee during singles matches of the 2016 Ryder Cup at Hazeltine National Golf Club on October 2, 2016
Image: The vast majority of the Hazeltine crowd were well behaved, but there were a few who spoiled the party

The ugly was a tiny minority, and I emphasise the word tiny, of 50,000 fans who overstepped the line in golfing etiquette. When you have that amount out of people watching a spectacular sporting event along with a fully charged atmosphere, there is always going to a few who will spoil the party.

American fans, whether it be NFL or baseball, basketball or golf, are noisy. They shout and roar. They have huge passion and they support their respected teams and individuals vigorously. Take that away from sport and you lose a lot of enjoyment, and 95 per cent of the fans in Minnesota were genuinely, good golfing fans.

CHASKA, MN - OCTOBER 01:  Vice-captain Ian Poulter of Europe points to the crowd to have a spectator removed on the eighth tee during afternoon fourball ma
Image: Ian Poulter points out a troublemaker on the second day

In modern society, it's expected and sadly acceptable for fans to cheer when a putt is missed or a tee shot is errant. One must move with the times or be classed a dinosaur. The thing that is not acceptable is when the antics of the small circle of fools interrupt the golf.

That did happen a couple of times throughout the event and it was dealt with by the 95 per cent who were there to watch two teams go head to head. They singled the idiots out and the security officers escorted them off the property.

Danny Willett in a press conference during practice prior to the 2016 Ryder Cup at Hazeltine National Golf Club
Image: Danny Willett's brother hit the headlines for all the wrong reasons

Pete Willett, brother of Danny ... oh dear! Why a magazine would interview Pete would be my first question. Secondly, his brother is the Masters champion and will play a fair amount of golf in the United States. What was there to gain in slating Americans and their lifestyle?

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Now he knows how much there was to lose. Willett's golf was far from what he's capable of and the next few events in America for him will not be a breeze, but he has a strong mind and a good work ethic. He'll bounce back.

CHASKA, MN - OCTOBER 01:  Lee Westwood of Europe plays his shot from the sixth tee during afternoon fourball matches of the 2016 Ryder Cup at Hazeltine Nat
Image: Lee Westwood was short of form heading into the Ryder Cup, and struggled from the off at Hazeltine

The bad? The performance of some of the experienced players in the European side. With six rookies in the team, the onus was on the experienced players to produce and in Westwood, Kaymer and Rose, they failed. I would say at this point, golf is not a tap and you can't turn it off and on. Westwood had struggled in the run up to the event and some will say this was one Ryder Cup too many.

For Matthew Fitzpatrick and Andy Sullivan, it was perhaps one too early. However, they along with Chris Wood, will be older and wiser in the run up to the 2018 edition in France. The experienced gained in Minnesota will be most valuable to them next time round.

Darren Clarke mixed his rookies with established stars on day two of practice
Image: Darren Clarke brought back Westwood for Saturday's fourballs and left out Rafa Cabrera Bello

When a captain loses, he's classed as poor. In victory, he's a genius. Darren Clarke's use of Lee Westwood and his resting of an in-form Rafa Cabrera Bello will no doubt be criticised. So, too, will be the omission of Russell Knox, and the fact that five Europeans played in all five sessions will also scrutinised. These may have been his only mistakes and they are easy to point out in hindsight.

Personally, I think Paul Casey would have made a difference, but Darren couldn't pick him as he is not a European Tour member. Russell Knox would have qualified for the side had he played in and performed well at the Wyndham. If Kaymer and Westwood, two of his three wildcards, had excelled, it would have been a different tale. Sadly, they didn't. A lot of ifs and buts, there always is when there's an inquisition.

CHASKA, MN - OCTOBER 01:  Thomas Pieters of Europe reacts on the 17th green after winning the match during afternoon fourball matches of the 2016 Ryder Cup
Image: Thomas Pieters was a revelation in his first Ryder Cup

The good? The big problem here is, where do we start? For Europe, let's begin with Thomas Pieters. The Belgian star was exceptional alongside McIlroy and looked equally comfortable on his own in the Sunday singles. He already is one of Europe's finest players. He will challenge for majors and he will be a Ryder Cup player for many years to come. Give Captain Clarke some credit there, Thomas was his other wild card.

The quality of golf on show over the three days was, at times, outstanding. A week during which the game of golf had lost Arnold Palmer, it seemed the players wanted to play "Palmer style". Shots they are wary of week in week out, they threw caution to the wind rising to the challenge.

CHASKA, MN - OCTOBER 02:  Rory McIlroy of Europe and Patrick Reed of the United States look on from the fourth tee during singles matches of the 2016 Ryder
Image: Rory McIlroy's clash with Patrick Reed was pure theatre

The first eight holes of the opening singles match was like one of Spielberg's finest scripts. McIlroy and Patrick Reed going hell for leather, trading blow for blow, putt for putt while trying to outdo one another with their celebrations. Reed copied Rory's bow, Mcllroy copied Patrick's quietening tactics made famous at Gleneagles. Their golf and sportsmanship was brilliant.

Yet it wasn't the match of the tournament. The clash of Phil Mickelson and Sergio Garcia will be remembered for years to come. Trading birdies from the off, they were both round in an approximate 63. You got the feeling they could have played another round and still they would be all square.

CHASKA, MN - OCTOBER 02: Sergio Garcia of Europe and Phil Mickelson of the United States walk off the third tee during singles matches of the 2016 Ryder Cu
Image: Sergio Garcia and Phil Mickelson blitzed Hazeltine on Sunday in a match of outstanding quality

With Phil rolling in a 20 footer at the last, Sergio followed him from a third of that distance to record half a point each. The number 63 features a lot in Mickelson's year. The lip out at Royal Troon for a first 62 in a major and Stenson shooting 63 the final round of the Open to stop Phil winning his second Claret Jug. At Hazeltine, Phil and Sergio served up a Ryder Cup treat.

It was victory for Davis Love III, heaven knows how he felt four years ago at the closing ceremony in Chicago. His team had blown a four-point lead in front of America's loyal fans. The son of one of the most respected PGA professionals in the USA is one of the good guys. His players raised their games and played their hearts out for him. The score flattered the US a touch, but best team won by the Twin Cities.

Captain Davis Love III of the United States holds the Ryder Cup
Image: Atonement for Davis Love III after his heartbreak of Medinah

This win for the United States is good for the Ryder Cup as its their first win since '08, and only their third since 1993. When the European bruises and egos heal, the hype will begin all over again. France has a tough act to follow, but Le Golf National is one of the best courses in Europe. It's just over 700 days to the Friday morning foursomes.

I close with Sunday's final words: The US stars earned their stripes. And yes, it was a glittering show in Minnesota.

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