FARMINGDALE, New York :Sweden's Ludvig Aberg is feeling a greater sense of belonging ahead of his second Ryder Cup appearance this week, two years after a debut so spectacular it left world number one Scottie Scheffler in tears and rewrote the record books.

Aberg made history in 2023 as the first player to compete in a Ryder Cup before appearing in a major championship, but it was his performance alongside Viktor Hovland that truly announced his arrival on golf's biggest stage.

The European duo's 9&7 foursomes victory over Americans Scheffler and Brooks Koepka in Rome marked the largest margin of victory for an 18-hole match in Ryder Cup history, a result so emphatic it reduced the world's best player to tears.

"It's not something I think about," world number 16 Aberg told reporters on

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