The Ryder Cup will return to Minnesota's Hazeltine National in 2028, organizers announced in a half-minute video Monday, making the golf course the first U.S. venue to host the biennial event twice since it began in 1927.

We’ve got some news... pic.twitter.com/y6gaYajPCZ
— Ryder Cup USA (@RyderCupUSA) March 26, 2018

Monday's video announcement was made with a heavy Minnesota accent, involving members of the Olympic gold-medal winning U.S. men's curling team that is based in the state.

The U.S. defeated the Europeans in 2016 at Hazeltine, snapping a three-match losing streak.

According to the Minneapolis Star Tribune, however, it wasn't necessarily that victory in a week of perfect fall weather that lured the PGA of America to return to the Minneapolis-St. Paul area:

The event’s growing demands have limited the number of clubs that have the room and infrastructure to hold future ones. Hazeltine proved to be a winning Ryder Cup venue because its sprawling Chaska grounds are spacious enough to hold the ever-growing corporate villages, television compound and operational infrastructure that took nearly four months to erect in 2016.

The event at Hazeltine also provided a financial windfall for the PGA of America, as huge crowds filled the spacious grounds for the week capped by three days of tight, international competition.

Future Ryder Cups have been awarded to Paris this fall, Whistling Straits in Wisconsin in 2020, Rome in 2020, Bethpage Black on Long Island in 2024 and Olympic Golf Club in San Francisco in 2032. European sites for 2026 and 2030 haven’t been announced.
The Ryder Cup typically is played in late September