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Ryder Cup triumph being remembered for the wrong reasons, says Rory McIlroy

about 10 hours ago
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Rory McIlroy is eager to shift discussion of last month’s Ryder Cup from the dominant theme of unruly spectators to the “incredible” strength of Europe’s display.Luke Donald and his European team secured back-to-back Ryder Cup wins after reaching what ultimately proved an unassailable position within two of the event’s three days.The reference point for Bethpage Black, though, has been appalling fan conduct; including significantly towards McIlroy.The Masters champion’s wife was hit by a beer thrown from the galleries at one point, with McIlroy himself subjected to abuse throughout.McIlroy’s return to the competitive fold, this week at the India Championship, has led him to try to change the topic of conversation.

“I’ve been following the narrative coming out of the Ryder Cup just like everyone else,” said the Northern Irishman,“Unfortunately, I think it takes away from what we focused on, which was what an incredible performance it was by the European team,“As I’m playing my matches, I’m focused on trying to win my point,You see that the other guys are winning their matches or they are doing well but you don’t realise how well they are playing,“So just over the last two weeks, being able to watch the highlights and just see, especially those first two days, in the foursomes and the fourballs how good the European team were.

The Americans would hit it close, we hit it closer,The Americans hole a putt and we hole a putt on top,It happened every single time,“The unfortunate thing is people aren’t remembering that and they are remembering the week for the wrong reason,I would like to shift the narrative and focus on how good the European team were and how proud I was to be part of that team to win an away Ryder Cup.

”In the immediate aftermath of Europe’s win, McIlroy insisted golf should be proud to seek high standards from competitors and spectators.Some believe this presents the sport with a dilemma as it looks to engage youngsters.“You don’t want your sport to be unwelcoming to newcomers,” McIlroy added.“I absolutely get that.But you also don’t want newcomers coming into the game and ruining centuries of traditions and values of what this game represents or what it upholds.

I think there has to be a balance.“I certainly think that golf can grow but it can grow in a way where the people that are coming into the game still respect and acknowledge that this is a little bit different than maybe other sports.I say it in America all the time, golf doesn’t need to be the NFL.It doesn’t need to be these other sports.Golf is golf, and that’s fine.

Sign up to The RecapThe best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend’s actionafter newsletter promotion“I’d love more people to watch golf.That would be amazing.But I would be more interested in getting more people to play the game, and I think when people play the game, then they learn and they can acknowledge what golf is, what it represents, and the sort of etiquette and the values that you need to adhere to when you play the game.”McIlroy has European teammates Shane Lowry, Tommy Fleetwood and Viktor Hovland for company on his maiden visit to India.Donald is also in the field, with the Englishman yet to decide whether he wants to captain Europe for what would be a third time, at Adare Manor in 2027.

“I think what Luke Donald has done the last two Ryder Cups has revolutionised the captaincy within Europe,” said McIlroy,“The effort and the dedication that Luke Donald has put into the last four years, it’s been absolutely amazing,”
politicsSee all
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Nature groups rebuke Reeves for ‘cynical’ 11th-hour planning bill changes

Last-minute changes to the government’s planning bill have sparked a furious backlash from nature groups who have mounted an attack on the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, over her plans to remove environmental protections.The changes to the legislation come as it enters its final stages before being signed into law.Promoted by Reeves, they are designed to make it easier for developers to side-step environmental laws in order to build major projects such as AI datacentres.They include new powers for the government to overrule local democracy if councils refuse developments based on environmental grounds, or on issues such as water shortages.But in outspoken attacks on the chancellor, charities including household names such as the RSPB and Wildlife Trusts say Reeves is seeking to grab short-term growth headlines to save her budget, rather than well-thought-out reforms to planning

about 13 hours ago
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Pressure on Downing Street to release evidence in collapsed China spy case

Downing Street is under pressure to publish its evidence in the collapsed China spy case after the Crown Prosecution Service denied having blocked its release.Keir Starmer is likely to come under scrutiny at prime minister’s questions on Wednesday after the CPS said it was up to the government to release the evidence.The government has faced mounting pressure over its handling of the collapsed trial of Christopher Cash, a former parliamentary researcher, and Christopher Berry, a teacher. Both men, who deny wrongdoing, had been accused of passing secrets to China, but charges against them were dropped last month.The latest row came after sources within No 10 claimed Chris Wormald, the cabinet secretary, had gone to the CPS to discuss the publication of a witness statement central to the withdrawal of espionage charges against the two British men

about 15 hours ago
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Digital ID: Danes and Estonians find it ‘pretty uncontroversial’

For Danish teenagers, getting enrolled for MitID (my ID) has become somewhat of a rite of passage.From the age of 13, Danes can enrol for the national digital ID system, which can be used for everything from logging into online banking to signing documents electronically and booking a doctor’s appointment.But when they hit 15, all children and their parents receive a letter from the government advising them that from now on, the teenagers will receive their own official communications from authorities which will be sent to them via “digital post”, and they will need digital ID to access it.While there is the option to opt out and instead receive physical mail, few do. Today, 97% of the Danish population aged 15 and over is enrolled in MitID and only 5% of Danes have opted out of digital post

about 19 hours ago
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Keir Starmer back on familiar ground after walk-on part in the Trump show in Egypt | John Crace

Keir Starmer has always known that Monday’s visit to Egypt was going to be the Donald Trump Show. After all, almost every day is the Donald Trump Show and there was no way the US president was going to share the limelight on this of all days. The day when the living Israeli hostages were freed, 1,900 Palestinian detainees were freed and the first aid trucks entered Gaza.This was The Donald’s peace deal. A narcissist is going to narcissise

1 day ago
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Starmer says he expects debate about ‘full horror’ of what happened in Gaza when media allowed in – as it happened

Ed Davey, the Lib Dem leader, asks for more detail of what the UK is doing to help ensure more aid gets into Gaza.He says all the bodies of dead hostages need to be returned.And he asks what the UK is doing to ensure that the expansion of illegal Israeli settlements on the West Bank stops.Starmer thanks Davey for the “content and tone” of his response. (He is making a contrast with Badenoch’s

1 day ago
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Farage, not Marxism, risks ‘poisoning our kids’ | Letters

I am one of those proud teachers that Nigel Farage has in mind (Nigel Farage accuses teachers of ‘poisoning our kids’ on race issues, 9 October). For many years, as part of teaching media, film and journalism, I sought to educate students about basic political terms and concepts. Marxism was, and is, nothing resembling the totalitarian bogeyman that the USSR so conveniently became. Marxism is a doctrine espousing fairness, equal opportunity, redistribution of wealth and emancipation. It aims to be fully democratic

1 day ago
cultureSee all
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Louder than Bombs: Joachim Trier’s thorniest film might be his best

1 day ago
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Creative Australia awards Khaled Sabsabi $100,000 grant months after dumping from Venice Biennale

2 days ago
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‘The vocals were on another level’: how Counting Crows made Mr Jones

2 days ago
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‘A palette unlike anything in the west’: Ben Okri, Yinka Shonibare and more on how Nigerian art revived Britain’s cultural landscape

3 days ago
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Perfume Genius: ‘I really like body hair! I like a bush. I didn’t even notice Jimmy Fallon censored mine’

4 days ago
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My cultural awakening: ‘Kate Bush helped me come out as a trans woman’

5 days ago