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Ryder Cup risks becoming 'nonsense' after LIV Golf defections

Europe and the United States will lock horns at the Ryder Cup next year but the tournament could be a pale shadow of its former self after multiple defections to the rebel LIV series.

The event in Italy starting on September 29, 2023, will be billed as Europe's chance to exact revenge for a humbling defeat last year at Whistling Straits but who will be in the field is anybody's guess.

Henrik Stenson was this week stripped of his role as Europe's team captain while fellow European stars Lee Westwood, Ian Poulter, Sergio Garcia and Graeme McDowell all risk being omitted from future Ryder Cups.

As things stand Americans Phil Mickelson, Dustin Johnson, Bryson DeChambeau, Patrick Reed and Brooks Koepka will not be in the frame for selection for the US team at the event at the Marco Simone Golf and Country Club in Rome.

The US PGA Tour swiftly suspended its defectors last month, effectively ruling them out of competing in the biennial team competition because they will not be able to earn the points to qualify.

The DP World Tour, formerly the European Tour, imposed heavy fines on its members who played in the inaugural LIV event in London and banned them from three events.

But the punishments have not stemmed the tide of players signing up to the Saudi-funded LIV series and it is difficult to predict how things will unfold as golf's civil war deepens.

Wednesday's announcement that Stenson was jumping ship, and would play in the third event of the LIV series in Bedminster, New Jersey, next week was a bitter blow for golf's establishment.

The 46-year-old Swede, appointed captain in March, said he accepted the decision even though he disagreed with it.

"I sincerely hope a resolution between the tours and its members can be

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