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CHRISTINEBRENNAN
Ryder Cup

Arnold Palmer's death will shadow, inspire Ryder Cup players

Christine Brennan
USA TODAY Sports

MINNEAPOLIS — A moment of silence and the U.S. flag flying at half-mast were never supposed to be part of the prelude to the 2016 Ryder Cup. But when the great Arnold Palmer died Sunday at the age of 87, one of the world’s most intense international sports competitions abruptly and appropriately took on a mournful and reflective refrain.

Spectators signed a wall Wednesday to pay tribute to the late Arnold Palmer during a practice round for the Ryder Cup at Hazeltine National Golf Club.

“The game of golf is grieving,” American Brandt Snedeker said Wednesday morning at Hazeltine National. “We as fans are grieving. We as people that knew him well are grieving, and how can we grieve together and honor him and show him how much he was appreciated out here, show his family how much he was appreciated?”

Arnold Palmer: 'The King' of golf dies at 87

To most of us across several generations, Palmer was the swashbuckling star of a staid sport whose magnetic personality allowed him to transcend the pastime at the dawn of the television age. He not only won seven major championships in the 1950s and 1960s, he also was a Ryder Cup stalwart before most Americans knew what the Ryder Cup was, playing in six and being on the winning side in all six of them. His 22 match victories remain the U.S. record.

But to the golfers here this week, both American and European, Palmer wasn’t just one of the greatest ever to play their game. They view him as the man who made possible everything they have.

“We all had a tough Sunday night, everybody on the team,” Snedeker said. “We all talked about it on Monday when we got here. Arnie is the godfather of modern golf in my opinion. He's the guy, the flag bearer of what we know as the PGA Tour and what we know of golf in general and what we know of sports in general.

Tony Jacklin's infamous ride on Arnold Palmer's Lear jet

“We all have Arnie stories and part of what he was is ingrained in every one of us. It's been a tough week in that aspect of knowing he's not there anymore. But it's also been a great week in the fact that we have been able to sit there and talk about what Arnie meant to us and bring this whole thing full circle and try to understand our role in this whole process and of this grieving process.”

It turns out that having been brought together at this sad time has become a comfort to these players.

“Being able to play the Ryder Cup this week, it means a lot to the U.S. team,” veteran Phil Mickelson said. “It brings an emotional element and appreciation for what he's done for the game of golf, the Ryder Cup, but the game of golf in general.”

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There will be a moment of silence for Palmer at Thursday's opening ceremony, where a video tribute also will be shown. Players on both teams are expected to wear some sort of pin in memory of Palmer.

“I hope he inspires this Ryder Cup to be all about good teamwork, fair play, good camaraderie amongst both teams, good fun, camaraderie amongst all the fans, because that's what Arnie stood for,” said 2016 Olympic gold medalist Justin Rose of England, one of Europe’s stalwarts.

“He was a people's person from what I could see. He would always stop for kids, autographs he would sign. He would give his time, he would give himself to so many people.”

Tiger Woods 'forever grateful' for friendship with Arnold Palmer

The players here this week have been given an unwanted but unique opportunity to honor him by playing this Ryder Cup in his memory. The Palmer family announced that a public memorial service will be held Tuesday morning in Arnie's hometown of Latrobe, Pa.

“We are all playing with heavy hearts,” said U.S. captain Davis Love III. “I've got to rewrite a speech, still, because I've got to change the tone, and add Arnold in there obviously, and we're planning cars and flights to a funeral that we don't really want to go to.”

But first, appropriately enough, there's some golf to be played.

Follow columnist Christine Brennan on Twitter @cbrennansports.

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