CHASKA, Minn. — Even with the first opening-session sweep in four decades, the Americans were reminded anew Friday that no lead is safe in the Ryder Cup.

Not after one session. Not after one day.

And based on the last Ryder Cup on American soil, not until it’s over.

Europe rallied from a 4-0 deficit behind its best tandem, Henrik Stenson and Justin Rose, and capped a long and rowdy day when its best player, Rory McIlroy, holed a 20-foot eagle putt, then mocked the crowd by taking a bow.

The Americans’ celebration turned into a consolation.

They had a 5-3 lead, the margin after the first day four years ago in a tournament that ended in another European victory. They lost a chance to really put Europe in a hole.

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“It’s frustrating not to come out a little bit more ahead,” U.S. captain Davis Love III said.

Love couldn’t have scripted a better start – a symbolic one, too.

To honor Arnold Palmer, who died Sunday night, Ryder Cup officials placed on the first tee Palmer’s golf bag from when he was captain of the 1975 Ryder Cup team. Jordan Spieth and Patrick Reed then set the tone with a 3-and-2 foursomes victory over Stenson and Rose, and the Americans delivered the first sweep of the opening session since that 1975 team.

Phil Mickelson, feeling more pressure than usual because of his influence on changes and on this team, also produced big shots. His wedge into 5 feet that Rickie Fowler converted was key in the Americans’ winning three straight holes for a 1-up victory over McIlroy and Andy Sullivan.

“With everything going on – me not having a point and Phil being a big part of getting the players a lot more involved to Arnie passing and him being a huge part of the week, this is big for us,” Fowler said.

It just didn’t last.

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“The guys were disappointed with the way they played this morning and the way they performed,” European captain Darren Clarke said. “But they showed tremendous bravery and heart and desire to go out and play the way they have done this afternoon.”

Beaten for the first time, Rose and Stenson went right back out against Spieth and Reed, and handed the American duo its first Ryder Cup loss. The Europeans made nine birdies in 13 holes for a 5-and-4 victory in an afternoon session in which the board was filled with European blue.

Sergio Garcia, who with Martin Kaymer made only one birdie in a foursomes loss, teamed with a fellow Spaniard, Rafa Cabrera Bello, to dismantle J.B. Holmes and Ryan Moore. McIlroy and Thomas Pieters never trailed against Johnson and Kuchar, handing them a first loss in four Ryder Cup matches.

The lone American point in the afternoon came from Brandt Snedeker and Brooks Koepka, who had no trouble against Kaymer and Danny Willett.

Willett had a little trouble with the crowd, especially when they lampooned him with references to hot dogs and his brother, Pete, who had written a column in a British publication disparaging American galleries.

“It was anticipated,” Willett said. “Coming to America is a tough one, just like when the Americans come to Europe. They gave me a little bit more. I think it was exactly what we thought it was going to be.”

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But it wasn’t just directed at Willett.

The crowd was loud and boisterous from the opening tee shot in misty conditions. There were a few rude comments, not unusual in America for a Ryder Cup. McIlroy had a 20-foot birdie putt to halve the morning foursomes match against Mickelson and Fowler when a fan from 100 yards away shouted, “Get an American to putt it for you.”

Most striking was how quickly the crowd cheered bad shots for Europe. Typically there’s the slightest delay. Not on Friday. Sullivan, one of the six rookies for Europe, hit his tee shot into the water on the 17th that put Europe 1 down and effectively ended the match. The crowd cheered before there was a ripple.

That inspired McIlroy in the final match. He and Pieters were 2 up on the 16th, with Kuchar already in for a birdie, when McIlroy drained a 20-foot putt. Turning to the crowd, he bowed twice and screamed, “C’mon!”

“I wanted to put an exclamation on that session for us,” McIlroy said. “I thought about that celebration before I hit the putt.”

More than a celebration, it was a message from McIlroy to what he felt was a hostile crowd. “I’m not fazed by anything said by the crowd,” McIlroy said. “And I’m not fazed by anything the U.S. throws at us.”


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