Europe WIN the Ryder Cup as Rory McIlroy and Co survive nervy final day against USA after vitriolic abuse from New York fans

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With one missed putt from Collin Morikawa, Luke Donald allowed himself the grin of a man who had made history. He also laughed with the relief of a Ryder Cup winner whose journey to the finishing line was as chaotic as the week itself.

We should go straight to the scale of the achievement because it is astonishing. For the first time since 2012, there has been an away winner in this contest, and you have to go back to the Eighties and Tony Jacklin for the last time a European captain won on both foreign soil and at home. Remarkable.

But no less startling were the tribulations that secured such status on the final day. If Saturday represented the occasion when police dogs were necessary to control the ugly madness of the Bethpage Black crowd, then Sunday heralded the day the golfers of the US finally showed their teeth.

In its excellence, it was deliciously unexpected, to the extent that there were times when it even seemed the US might win. That being the team of Keegan Bradley, whose captaincy had been justifiably ridiculed at multiple stages in the previous 48 hours.

They had entered the final day at 11.5-4.5 behind and went on a brilliant charge, all the way until the scores reached 13.5-10.5 when Shane Lowry lined up a six-foot putt on the 18th to halve his match against Russell Henley. Behind him, the US were up in two, level in two. Somehow, this was in the balance. Somehow, anything could happen.

But when that putt dropped, Lowry went on a four-punch blitz and took seven leaps across the green, because 14 points was enough for Europe to retain the trophy. A great outcome in isolation; an underachievement, dare we say it, if that was all it ended up being.

Europe held off a remarkable USA fightback to win a first Ryder Cup on away soil since 2012

Shane Lowry helped the visitors avoid a huge collapse after securing the half point to retain it

Luke Donald was a relieved man after Lowry's putt spared Europe's blushes at Bethpage Black

USA came closer than anyone expected to pulling off an all-time great Ryder Cup comeback

Because the match needed to be won. From their overnight position, it simply had to be. Anything else would be a stupefying anti-climax.

And that meant tension. That meant a wait. That meant more variables.

But up stepped Tyrrell Hatton, who blanked it all out and seal a half point against Morikawa. He delivered when that putt from the American missed. Relief indeed.

All of which requires some more detail. That commences with Viktor Hovland’s neck injury, which prompted his withdrawal prior to play and therefore a half point apiece from his scheduled match against Harris English, making the score 12-5 at the outset of the session.

To overhaul that, the US needed to break every record in the book. They started by breaking Europe’s spine.

They were immense in taking 5.5 points from the first seven matches and the list of the defeated was a chilling one. Scottie Scheffler had beaten Rory McIlroy, while Cameron Young and Justin Thomas had snatched wins on the 18th green against Justin Rose and Tommy Fleetwood respectively. Jon Rahm? Crushed 4&3 by Xander Schauffele.

There, in a sustained revival, a team that seemed incapable of lacing its own spikes for much of the previous two days was rattling the cage. There, in a doom spiral, Donald’s best men were being floored.

JJ Spaun had also beaten Sepp Straka and, most painfully of all, Matt Fitzpatrick had taken only half a point against Bryson DeChambeau.

Lowry's half point ensured the visitors retained the trophy on an unexpectedly nervy last day

American captain Keegan Bradley was left to rue a nightmare first two days in New York

The likes of Justin Thomas produced an incredible effort on Sunday to give Europe a big scare

Tyrrell Hatton (right) eventually took another half point to ensure Europe won it outright

But it was Lowry who stole the headlines after his vital putt on the 18th officially saw off USA

He was left ecstatic after proving the hero for Europe on a dramatically frantic Sunday

Jon Rahm embraced his teammate after he ensured the Ryder Cup is heading home with them 

The context there is important – Fitzpatrick was five up through seven holes. And then he wasn’t. Had it not been for Ludvig Aberg, who saw off Patrick Cantlay on the 17th, an outright rout would have been played out.

But enter Lowry. He had trailed two down through 14 and nailed a birdie on the last to halve and take the score to 14-12 with two matches still on the course, with an outright win not yet secured at the time of going to press. He was delirious in those moments of celebration, but only time would tell if Europe would have to settle for the draw.

‘I mean, I have been so lucky to experience amazing things in this game but that was the hardest couple of hours in my life,’ he said. ‘I stood over that putt and said, “this is it”. The Ryder Cup is everything for me. To do that on the 18th green, wow. That was so hard. We knew they would come out fighting, but we want the win.’

Thanks to Hatton, somehow the calmest man in New York this week, they had it. Ben Griffin went on to beat Rasmus Hojgaard, but it didn’t matter. Ultimately, nor did Bob MacIntyre’s half against Sam Burns, which took the score to 15-13.

To win away was heralded as one of the toughest tasks in sport and to do it here, in a bearpit, was a challenge highlighted in the gory details of Saturday. That was bedlam and unpleasant.

It also continued into the final day, where, in a surreal turn, the crowds took to taunting McIlroy with squeaky rubber ducks.

Initially, it seemed wildly improbable that such circumstances would leave a red imprint on the leaderboards. Across the first hour, Europe went up in five singles matches and down in only one of the six out on the course. But after three hours, it looked differently. Suddenly, they were down in five and up in only two of the 11. 

McIlroy has won another Ryder Cup despite losing his singles match to Scottie Scheffler

Bradley congratulated Europe counterpart Donald after a thrilling Sunday in New York

Lowry then enjoyed a cider on the course at Bethpage Black after getting Europe over the line

European players were subjected to vile abuse over the course of the weekend, with McIlroy's wife Erica left in tears at one stage after being hit by a drink

It was getting tetchy, because we know by now that this place inspires madness. McIlroy, for one, was getting irate, and no wonder for the appalling abuse he has faced here, which continued across the front nine against Scheffler – the state of McIlroy’s marriage and speculations about how he and his caddie spend their free time were all deemed fair game.

It was particularly febrile on the second tee, where a security guard, stood right next to one heckler, settled on a gentle warning in response to absurd, personal remarks instead of ejection. Some of these marshals made Bradley appear a vision of shrewd, decisive judgement.

By the 10th, McIlroy was simmering, not to mention exhausted, by the whole business. Enter the next evolution in the heckling game – ducks. They had been handed away for free with cocktails here, and the squeaking forced McIlroy to back off a drive. He asked for the fan to be kicked out and then hooked, sliced and duffed his way to a six on the par four.

That allowed Scheffler to go one up in a match that was far short of the classic it might have been. McIlroy rallied with a 30-footer at the next, but when he fell behind on the 13th he never recovered.

For a time, his fate seemed to morph into that of his team. But with one last push, one last American miss, an almighty choke was averted.

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