Rory McIlroy said not having the “big personalities” of LIV golfers Sergio Garcia, Lee Westwood and Ian Poulter at the Ryder Cup allowed others to step into leadership roles and gave younger players room to grow at the tournament.
Garcia, Westwood and Poulter were absent from Europe’s victory over the U.S. at the Marco Simone Golf & Country Club after their decisions to join the Saudi-backed LIV circuit and subsequent resignations of their DP World Tour memberships.
The trio had played key roles at the Ryder Cup over the years.
Garcia is Europe’s record points scorer with 28.5 from 10 appearances, while Westwood earned 24 points in 11 appearances at the biennial event and finished on the winning side seven times.
Poulter played at seven Ryder Cups and helped Europe win five of them, with his huge performances earning him the nickname ‘The Postman’ as he always delivered at the event.
“They’ve had unbelievable Ryder Cup careers and they’ve made their choices, and they’ve done what they’ve done and no one can take away the impact they’ve had for the European team over the years,” the 34-year-old McIlroy said.
“But I feel like this week, not having those big personalities in the team room let other guys have that chance to flourish and to shine: Viktor (Hovland), Jon (Rahm), myself.
“There wasn’t a ton of space taken up in that room by some of the other big personalities, and I think that just let the rest of the team just sort of flourish. It’s a young team. We can all grow together.
“I could potentially be the oldest person on the team next time. It’s a new era. And it’s a pretty good one.”