

USA: Team USA's Cristie Kerr and Lexi Thompson celebrate securing a half point against European duo Charley Hull and Melissa Reid at the 2017 Solheim Cup in West Des Moines, Iowa.
Europe: Northern Ireland's Rory McIlroy celebrates a crucial shot during a singles match at the 2016 Ryder Cup in Chaska, Minnesota.
USA: David Cannon/Getty Images, Europe: David Cannon/Getty Images

Matilda Castren and Madelene Sagström celebrate Europe clinching the 2021 Solheim Cup at Inverness Club in Toledo, Ohio. Maddie Meyer/Getty Images

Fans fill the grandstands around the first tee of Whistling Straits, Wisconsin, at the 2021 Ryder Cup. Warren Little/Getty Images

Once every two years, Europe and the USA do battle on the golf course.
European and US fans generate a noisy atmosphere during the 2018 Ryder Cup at Le Golf National in France.

Dave Stockton pushes compatriot Corey Pavin into the water while celebrating Team USA's 1991 Ryder Cup victory at Kiawah Island, South Carolina. Simon Bruty/Getty Images
But don’t let the setting fool you – the Ryder and Solheim Cups are a full-blooded fight for supremacy, soundtracked by thunderous cheers and biting jeers.



Manuel Pinero, Seve Ballesteros, José María Cañizares and Jose Rivero pose with the Ryder Cup after Europe's 1985 triumph at The Belfry in Warwickshire, England. David Cannon/Allsport/Getty Images

Team USA's Michelle Wie escapes a bunker at the 2009 Solheim Cup in Sugar Grove, Illinois. Chris Graythen/Getty Images
The tournaments represent the respective flagship events of men’s and women’s golf, making heroes and villains of the game’s greatest players.

American duo Brandie Burton and Dottie Pepper celebrate during the 1994 Solheim Cup at The Greenbrier in West Virginia. David Cannon/Getty Images
European captain Colin Montgomerie celebrates with his players after leading them to victory in the 2010 Ryder Cup at Celtic Manor in Newport, Wales.
Emotions run high – and frequently spill over – on both sides of the ropes. For every famous putt, there has been an equally infamous controversy.


Justin Leonard celebrates after holing a putt against Spaniard José María Olazábal, clinching victory for the United States at Brookline, Massachusetts, in 1999. Jeff Haynes/AFP/Getty Images

Team Europe celebrates behind Suzann Pettersen after she won her match to seal the 2019 Solheim Cup at Gleneagles in Scotland. David Cannon/Getty Images
This is the story of a unique rivalry, told and shown by those who know it best.


USA vs Europe: Golf's raucous rivalry
By Jack Bantock, Woojin Lee and Will Lanzoni, CNN

Chapter 1. Stories from golfing legends Colin Montgomerie and Dottie Pepper Colin Montgomerie Dottie Pepper
Brandon Malone/Action Images/Reuters; Warren Little/Allsport/Getty Images

Colin Montgomerie
Times tables and triumphs

Dottie Pepper
A cause worth dyeing for


Colin Montgomerie
Times tables and triumphs
Colin Montgomerie celebrates with fans after Europe win the 2004 Ryder Cup at Oakland Hills Country Club in Michigan. Brandon Malone/Action Images/Reuters

Dottie Pepper
A cause worth dyeing for
American golfer Dottie Pepper tees off during a practice round before the 2000 Solheim Cup in Loch Lomond, Scotland. Warren Little/Allsport/Getty Images

Dave Stockton pushes compatriot Corey Pavin into the water while celebrating Team USA's 1991 Ryder Cup victory at Kiawah Island, South Carolina. Simon Bruty/Getty Images
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Dubbed “the one that started it” by photographer David Cannon, the 1991 Ryder Cup at Kiawah Island in South Carolina opened a new, prickly chapter in the history of the European-American rivalry.
The tournament took place shortly after the culmination of the first Gulf War (Operation Desert Storm), with some members of the US team – including Corey Pavin and Steve Pate – wearing camouflage-patterned hats emblazoned with the words “Desert Storm.”


American duo Corey Pavin and Steve Pate wear Desert Storm hats during the 1991 Ryder Cup at Kiawah Island in South Carolina. Stephen Munday/Allsport/Getty Images
It set a patriotic tone that was reflected behind the ropes at the Ocean Course, with heckles getting so nasty and loud that captains at the next tournament worked to bring the noise down, six-time Ryder Cup caddie Fanny Sunesson told CNN in 2021.
Hostilities extended onto the fairways, as accusations of gamesmanship soured proceedings. Team USA’s decision to withdraw an allegedly injured Pate rankled Europe early, before Seve Ballesteros became public enemy number one for the Americans after a series of rules spats with Paul Azinger.

Seve Ballesteros tees off on the fourth hole during a match against Paul Azinger and Chip Beck during the 1991 Ryder Cup at Kiawah Island, South Carolina. David Cannon/Getty Images
Azinger blasted the Spaniard as “the king of gamesmanship,” accusing him of purposely coughing when the US players took their shots. Ballesteros responded by accusing Azinger of lying about a rules issue, and would famously later describe the American team as “11 nice guys – and Paul Azinger.”
A missed putt from Germany’s Bernhard Langer handed a narrow 14.5 - 13.5 victory to the Americans, bringing an end to “the War on the Shore.”

Justin Leonard is mobbed by his American teammates after holing the winning put of the 1999 Ryder Cup. Popperfoto/Getty Images
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It says a lot about the events of the 1999 Ryder Cup that it is remembered as much for what happened off the course as it is for the remarkable US comeback that took place on it.
Europe had taken a 10-6 lead into Sunday at The Country Club in Brookline, Massachusetts, but the US – roared on by a raucous home crowd – rallied in unprecedented fashion, winning the first six matches in a row.
Positioned in the firing line, photographer David Cannon described the atmosphere towards the Europeans as “vitriolic.” The climate proved too toxic for Colin Montgomerie’s father, who stopped watching his son’s matches due to the intensity of heckling, while Montgomerie’s European teammate Mark James claimed a fan spat at his wife.

USA fans celebrate during the 33rd Ryder Cup at Brookline Country Club, Massachusetts, in 1999. Stephen Munday/Allsport/Getty Images
Pandemonium ensued when Justin Leonard holed out for a birdie from 40 feet in a crucial match against José María Olazábal, as American players, wives, and caddies flooded onto the green in celebration – even though Olazábal still had a chance to putt and keep Europe in the game.
The Spaniard missed, confirming US triumph and reigniting celebrations all over again. The day’s events sparked widespread outrage in European media, with legendary British-American writer Alistair Cooke – in a BBC radio broadcast titled “The Arrival of the Golf Hooligan” – describing the tournament’s final day as “a date that will live in infamy.”

Sergio Garcia is consoled by vice captain Sam Torrance after Europe are defeated by the US at the 1999 Ryder Cup. Craig Jones/Allsport/Getty Images
European vice-captain Sam Torrance would later label it as “the most disgusting day in the history of professional golf.”
"The spectators behaved like animals and some of the American players, most notably Tom Lehman, acted like madmen,” Torrance wrote in his 2004 autobiography, “Sam.”
It led to a conscious effort to rein in passions at the next event. The 2002 tournament at The Belfry in Warwickshire – delayed by a year after the 9/11 terrorist attacks – was a far calmer affair, with Europe taking victory.

Europe's Annika Sörenstam begins to cry after a ruling that she played her shot out of turn during a fourball match at the 2000 Solheim Cup in Loch Lomond, Scotland. Warren Little/Allsport/Getty Images
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Annika Sörenstam was left in tears after controversy struck during the 2000 Solheim Cup at Loch Lomond, Scotland.
Europe had been cruising as the Swede chipped in for a birdie during a four-ball matchup against Pat Hurst and Kelly Robbins, a sublime shot from off the 13th green that drew Sörenstam and playing partner Janice Moodie level – momentarily.
The American team challenged that Sörenstam had played out of turn, claiming that it was Robbins’ shot. After much discussion with US captain Pat Bradley, Sörenstam was forced to retake her shot.
Unable to repeat the feat, a visibly upset Sörenstam watched as Hurst putted to take the hole and, later, the match.
"It is just really sad when you have tournaments like this," Sörenstam told reporters at the time.

Team USA's Pat Hurst explains to her captain Pat Bradley and European captain Dale Reid why she had accused Annika Sörenstam of playing her shot out of turn during a fourball match at the 2000 Solheim Cup. Warren Little/Allsport/Getty Images
"It is sad to see that the ugly part of them (Team USA) came out because both Pat and Kelly are the nicest they have. And it is just sad to see that - that they don't even have sportsmanship."
The Europeans would have the last laugh, taking a 14.5 to 11.5 victory, but the experience stuck with Sörenstam for years after.
"When people ask me what I wanted to be known for, I always said sportsmanship," Sörenstam told ESPN in 2013. "When that happened, that was no sportsmanship at all, and that made me upset.
"It wasn't about losing the hole or the match. It was more the principle that somebody could do something like that."

Europe’s Suzann Pettersen explains to captain Carin Koch the length of the putt that she did not concede to American Alison Lee during their match at the 2015 Solheim Cup in St. Leon-Rot, Germany. Stuart Franklin/Getty Images
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Another rules controversy took center stage at the 2015 Solheim Cup in Germany, but this time it was the Europeans who took on the role of villains.
Team USA had been struggling at Golf Club St. Leon-Rot on Sunday morning, but Alison Lee looked set to provide a boost when she putted to within 18 inches of the penultimate hole in a four-ball match against Suzann Pettersen and Charley Hull.
Believing her opponents had conceded the putt, Lee picked up her ball to make her way to the final hole, only for Norway’s Pettersen to claim that the shot had not been conceded. Referees upheld the challenge, Lee was hit with a one shot penalty and Europe went on to take the hole and a commanding 10-6 lead into the final round of singles matches.

American Alison Lee (center) is comforted by US assistant captains Nancy Lopez (left) and Wendy Ward after Lee picked her ball up before it had been conceded, which led to the United States losing a crucial point at the 2015 Solheim Cup. Thomas Niedermueller/Getty Images
A 20-year-old Lee and 19-year-old Hull were left in tears, with US captain Juli Inkster criticizing Team Europe for being “disrespectful.”
"I couldn't believe it. I saw Suzann walk away. You don't do that to your peers,” Inkster told reporters.
"I expected Carin (Koch, European captain) to do something afterwards but she didn't."
The incident – later dubbed “gimmegate” – ultimately lit a fire under the US Team, as they roared back in the afternoon to clinch a stunning 14.5 to 13.5 victory.