Charlotte - US Ryder Cup commander Jim Furyk said on Wednesday that exactness will be basic in one year from now's Ryder Cup standoff with Europe after a visit to Le Golf National in France. The 47-year-old American, whose solitary significant title came at the 2003 US Open, will lead holders America into the biennial group coordinates one year from now against an European squad captained by Denmark's Thomas Bjorn. "It doesn't resemble a place where you will be long and wild and bomb everything over the place and score," Furyk said of the course close Paris. "It would appear that a place where you have to control the golf ball, hit a considerable measure of greens. It will support a decent ball-striking group. "Taking a gander at the champions on the divider at Le Golf National, you see a great deal of folks that can control the golf ball, that are exact hitters, that hit a considerable measure of fairways, a ton of greens." Furyk named Trianon Palace, where the groups will live, as "wonderful" and said European Tour players were inspired with Le Golf National. "The vast majority of the people I've conversed with would consider that one of the main 5, even best 3, courses they play on The European Tour each year," Furyk said. What's more, that, Furyk stated, looks good for Europe's odds to recover the trophy. Europeans had won eight of the earlier 10 Ryder Cups before the Americans recovered the Cup with a 17-11 home triumph a year ago at Hazeltine. "One of the virtuoso moves of just for Ryder Cup Europe is truly having that occasion at a course where their players are agreeable and where their players truly like," Furyk said. "They've had the French Open there I thoroughly consider 20 times in 25 years. Players know the fairway well and they like the green and they are utilized to the shots that it takes." The Americans lead the general competition 26-13 with two drawn, however since their opponents were extended past a British-Irish side, the Europeans possess a 10-8 edge with one drawn. Not since 1993 has a US squad won in Europe. Among those in position for the American squad with the due date still over a year away are Open victor Jordan Spieth and sprinter up Matt Kuchar, US Open champion Brooks Koepka and world No 1 Dustin Johnson. "It's ahead of schedule all the while," Furyk said. "Yet, it's great to see the folks playing admirably. We need to put the folks on the group that truly are playing admirably and are in great frame going into the Ryder Cup. With the way the focuses work, that will give everybody an awesome chance to make the group one year from now." Furyk says the PGA Championship's turn to May beginning in 2019, which won't affect one year from now's designs, shouldn't cause any future Ryder Cup interruptions, contingent upon the crevice between the finish of the US PGA playoffs and the Ryder Cup. "There will be two, three, a month in the middle of," Furyk said. "Two weeks may be great. Allows the folks perhaps to take a full breath, get the season over with, and after that have seven days to plan and go."