Update: European captain Darren Clarke and golfer Danny Willett have both expressed disdain for the comments made by Danny's brother, P.J. Willett.

"[Danny] was unaware of it, and he fully intends to speak to his brother whenever he comes in and ... express his displeasure," Clarke said on Wednesday. "That is not what Team Europe stands for. I was obviously very disappointed in it because that's an outside person expressing their opinion which is not representative of what our thoughts are."

Original story

You might remember Englishman Danny Willett's brother P.J. as the guy who was losing his mind on Twitter as Danny won the Masters earlier this year. It was fun to experience what was happening through somebody so close to the situation.

It became less fun this week when P.J. wrote for National Club Golfer about his brother Danny's first Ryder Cup experience and what P.J. hopes happens.

They need to silence the pudgy, basement-dwelling, irritants, stuffed on cookie dough and pissy beer, pausing between mouthfuls of hotdog so they can scream 'Baba booey' until their jelly faces turn red.

They need to stun the angry, unwashed, Make America Great Again swarm, desperately gripping their concealed-carry compensators and belting out a mini-erection inducing 'mashed potato,' hoping to impress their cousin.

They need to smash the obnoxious dads, with their shiny teeth, Lego man hair, medicated ex-wives, and resentful children. Squeezed into their cargo shorts and boating shoes, they'll bellow 'get in the hole' whilst high-fiving all the other members of the Dentists' Big Game Hunt Society.

Well, OK then. But there's more!

Darren Clarke needs to pick his pairs carefully, they need to support each other intelligently, and the crowd needs to be dealt with swiftly.

If these things happen, Europe will win, and I'll try to support gracefully by embracing the same sense of fair-mindedness that has permeated this unbiased article. If not, the Americans will claim their second victory this century... those fat, stupid, greedy, classless, bastards.

That's a lot of talk for somebody whose brother is playing his first Ryder Cup ... on American soil.

And in case you thought he was misquoted or regrets any of it, he doubled down on Twitter this week.

Game on.