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Scottie Scheffler wins maiden Open Championship at Portrush

Scottie Scheffler wins maiden Open Championship at Portrush

Agencies Scottie Scheffler
The Open was a shut case as soon as Scottie Scheffler took a four-stroke lead to bed on Saturday. Except he does not. Scheffler has reminded anyone willing to listen this week that sport does not constitute life. His four-shot triumph over Harris English (-13) represented not just victory, but the manifestation of golf's most grounded champion—a man who has mastered the art of separating professional excellence from personal fulfilment, declaring before the championship that if golf ever affected his relationship with wife Meredith or son Bennett, "that's going to be the last day that I play out here for a living".This victory, his fourth major, at the historic links of Northern Ireland stood as testament to Scheffler's unique philosophy — while he pursues greatness with unrelenting intensity between the ropes, his identity remains anchored in the deeper purpose of fatherhood and marriage, proving that true champions can dominate their sport without allowing it to define their essence.Sunday was a mere procession. Scheffler got out of the gates with a hot iron in hand. His laser-guided 9-iron at the first hole left him barely 16 inches for a birdie. By the time he went past the fifth green, he had seven strokes on the field. This was Scheffler's rhapsody with the field reduced to scrambling on the sidelines.The most telling moments of the final round, though, was the stretch between the sixth and ninth holes, where the world No.1 displayed his alpha chops.The tee shot at the 189-yard par-3 sixth caught the steep false front. Scheffler, calm as a cucumber, pitched it to 16 feet. After a brief survey, he found the cup, before punching the air with his fist. It was the most emotion Scheffler let out all day.
After finding the lip of a fairway bunker at eight, Scheffler prodded his way to a double bogey. It was no more than a faux scent of hope, a fraying thread for the chasing group.Rory McIlroy, the local hero, was leading a vain orchestra with English, Haotong Li, Chris Gotterup and Matt Fitzpatrick. Scheffler snapped it at the ninth with a sharp wedge to five feet for another birdie.Scheffler has won each of his four majors by three strokes or more. A feat of dominance comparable only with Tiger Woods (7) and Jack Nicklaus (6).A couple of seasons ago, Scheffler was already phenomenal around the course, but the greens were a constant bother. Phil Kenyon, his putting coach, seems to have plugged that hole. Scheffler gained more than two strokes with the flatstick this week, adding to the 2.54 strokes he gained with his approach. There was no catching such a dominant effort. Scheffler was 59 off 63 this week, putting inside 10 feet.The signs for his competition are ominous. Only Nicklaus, Woods and Gary Player won the Masters, the PGA and the Open before 30. It took exactly 1,197 days from the first to the fourth major for Woods, matched to the day by Scheffler. Also, like Woods, he is the only top ranked player to have won the Open. Since 2022, Scheffler has a scoring average better than all his competitors — eight top five, and a dozen top 10 finishes in the majors. At Shinnecock Hills next year, the US Open Sunday will also be Scheffler's birthday. As good a time as any for the American to join the elite club of grand slam winners in the sport.Scheffler's dominance isn't Tigeresque, at least not yet. But there is little doubt that he is the most dominant golfer to have graced the game since Woods. Starting with the Houston Open in March, Scheffler has played 10 tournaments, winning four and finishing no worse than T8 in the rest. He hasn't missed a cut since the St. Jude Championship in August 2022, a streak of 64 tournaments.It is important also to celebrate the competition within. Wyndham Clark and Bryson DeChambeau epitomised the undying spirit that shapes the attitude of an athlete. Clark shot 76 in the opening round, the wind and rain adding to the distraction from the news of a grounds ban from the Oakmont Country Club, where he knocked down the locker door in frustration after missing the cut at the US Open. DeChambeau struggled to keep his flight in check, struggling to a 78.Remarkably both men fought their way back. Clark shot 66-66-65 climbing to a tie in fourth. DeChambeau worked his way to a top 10 finish with a brilliant 64 on Sunday. Haotong Li played some of his best golf in recent memory, making 80% of the greens in regulation. He had to settle for the best seat in the house to witness Scheffler's brilliance, finishing T4 alongside Clark and Matt Fitzpatrick. Chris Gotterup had a dream European detour, winning the Scottish Open and finishing third in the Open.But the spotlight and all of the acclaim belonged to Scottie Scheffler.
Royal Portrush will remember this championship not for its drama, but for its demonstration of surreal excellence. Scheffler's $3.1 million prize paled beside the greater reward of cementing his status among golf's immortals. The Claret Jug will reside in Texas for the coming year, tangible proof of Scheffler's royal dominion over professional golf's most demanding stage.
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'Was Not In The Spirit Of The Game': Shubman Gill Blasts England For 'Time Wasting Tactics' During Lord's Test
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India.com

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'Was Not In The Spirit Of The Game': Shubman Gill Blasts England For 'Time Wasting Tactics' During Lord's Test

India skipper Shubman Gill has slammed England for their time wasting tactics during the third Test at Lord's, while saying that it was not in the spirit of the game. With the series tied at 1-1 ahead of the Lord's Test last week, the closely fought third Test between England and India witnessed plenty of drama on the field. This included an animated flare-up between India skipper Shubman and England openers towards the end of the third day of the Test. After managing to equal England's first innings total of 387, India wanted to squeeze in two overs in the remaining six minutes of play. However, that wasn't possible as the English openers took their time to get ready, and the India captain got involved in a heated discussion with Zak Crawley and then Ben Duckett. Addressing the pre-match press conference, India skipper cleared the air on the incident between him and England openers. "Let me clear the air. We had seven minutes of play left, the English batters were 90 seconds late to bat. Not 10,20 but 90. Yes, we would have also liked to bat less in the same situation but there is a manner to do it. I feel what happened was not in the spirit of the game," said Gill. "It's not something that I am proud of, we had no intention of doing that but there was a build-up to it," he added. The 25-year-old Gill also confirmed that Rishabh Pant will be keeping the wickets in the 4th Test, after an injury saw Dhruv Jurel replace the left-handed batter in the field at Lords. With India now trailing 1-2, many are wondering whether Karun Nair's fairytale has come to an end. In what has been his first series since 2017, the right-hand batter has only amassed 131 runs across six innings with a high score of 40. With both Sai Sudharsan and Abhimanyu Easwaran itching to go, Gill confirmed he is hopeful that Nair will turn around his form and help the team. "We have had conversations, we think Karun is batting well. He did not play at his number in the first game, It is difficult to make a comeback in a series like this. It is about getting that click, you score a 50 and then can go on to make a big score. We are hopeful he will turn it around," said Gill.

Ind vs Eng 4th Test: Can India script an injury-time comeback?
Ind vs Eng 4th Test: Can India script an injury-time comeback?

Economic Times

time3 hours ago

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Ind vs Eng 4th Test: Can India script an injury-time comeback?

Live Events (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel England don't just hold the 2-1 lead in this series going into the fourth Test at Manchester, they seem to have the rub of the green as least when it comes to injuries. England announced early that they were making only one change to the team that won the third Test, bringing in Liam Dawson , the veteran left-arm spinner, into the eleven in place of Shoaib Bashir, who injured a finger on his left hand while fielding. Dawson will be playing only his fourth Test, at the age of 35, after eight years in the cricketing wilderness. Dawson has had decent returns at the domestic level over the last few seasons and was thought to be the best person to play a role in Bashir's absence. His first three Tests yielded seven wickets at an average of nearly meanwhile, have plenty to think about when it comes to team composition. Shubman Gill, the captain, confirmed that both Arshdeep Singh and Akash Deep were unavailable. Nitish Reddy has already been ruled out of the rest of the meant that Jasprit Bumrah would certainly play — and logic dictated that anyway with the series being on the line — and that Anshul Kamboj, the 24-year-old from Haryana, was likely to make his Test debut. Kamboj has played only 24 first-class matches, but he has 79 wickets at an impressive cost of 22 per scalp and is also handy with the other option was to play Prasidh Krishna, but he has not lived up to the billing thus far and offers little with the bat. India also confirmed that Rishab Pant was fit to keep wickets and Gill backed Karun Nair to come good, suggesting that all he needed was one decent score to turn things England wore a settled look, India were swirling a touch, but it was in similar circumstances that they pulled off victory in the second Test. So, they will not feel hugely disadvantaged. What was a bit unusual, however, was Gill's invoking of the spirit of cricket. Gill is only three Tests old as captain, one of which included his now well publicised exhorting of Zak Crawley for time-wasting tactics.'A lot of people have been talking about this, so let me clear the air for once and for all. The English batters on that day had seven minutes of play left. They were 90 seconds late to come to the crease,' said Gill. 'Not 10, not 20, 90 seconds late. Yes, most of the teams use this tactic. Even if we were in a position, we would have also liked to play fewer overs. But there's a manner to do it. But to be able to come 90 seconds late on the crease is not something that I would think comes in the spirit of the game.'This is a supremely slippery slope to be on. After all, the rules exist for a reason, and umpires are at hand to enforce them, even if perhaps they are not always as proactive or strict as they can be. When Gill says there's a 'manner' to do it, which would be acceptable, this is problematic. Different teams will see different things as acceptable, based on accepted practices growing up playing the game and cultural Gill was only stating his position to get under the skin of the opposition, that's a perfectly legitimate approach. After all, England made it clear that they had engineered a mindset shift of their own in this context. 'It was good fun, ' Harry Brook said of the fracas with Gill. 'We watched the Indians go hard at Creeps (Crawley) and Ducky (Duckett). We had a conversation, we thought it was the perfect opportunity to not be the nice guys that we have been in the past three years, to go out there and put them under more pressure than what they have probably had before.'Brook pointed to how this had come from within the set up. 'He (McCullum) actually said a few days before that we are too nice sometimes, and I brought it up the night before the last day: 'Baz said the other day we're too nice, I think tomorrow is a perfect opportunity to really get stuck into them'.England used this sense of outrage to funnel their aggression in the pointed end of the third Test and it worked for them. But, only because they did so from a place of calm, and as a strategy. If Gill is doing the same, there's no reason India can't be similarly galvanised. But, if he genuinely believes that it is the world against him and his team, it may well become a self-fulfilling prophecy

Ricky Ponting's Big Verdict On 'Out Of Character' Shubman Gill's Captaincy: "Like Virat Kohli..."
Ricky Ponting's Big Verdict On 'Out Of Character' Shubman Gill's Captaincy: "Like Virat Kohli..."

NDTV

time4 hours ago

  • NDTV

Ricky Ponting's Big Verdict On 'Out Of Character' Shubman Gill's Captaincy: "Like Virat Kohli..."

Batting legend Ricky Ponting said India skipper Shubman Gill's aggressive posturing during the Lord's Test against England was "a little out of character" but at the same time viewed it as a "captain standing up for his team". The closely-fought game saw plenty of drama on the field, including an animated flare-up between Gill and the England openers towards the end of the third day of the Test. India had managed to equal England's first innings total of 387, and wanted to squeeze in two overs in the remaining six minutes of play. However, that wasn't possible as the English openers took their time to get ready, and Gill exchanged words with Zak Crawley and then Ben Duckett. Former Australia captain Ponting understood why Gill's aggressive action at Lord's was met with surprise. "That was a little out of character from what I've known from Shubman in the past. I am sure everyone that was there watching it and I know you would know him quite well, that's not what he's generally like," Ponting told 'The ICC Review'. But Ponting also sympathised with Gill, saying it was a case of a young captain taking a stand for his team under the circumstances. "That's the captain standing up for his team, that's a captain really wanting to show that it's his team now and this is the way that we're going to play the game, and also, I guess, wanting to give a little bit back." India lost the Test by 22 runs to trail the series 1-2. The fifth and final Test begins here on Wednesday. Ponting felt that Gill acted in a manner similar to former captain Virat Kohli. "I think that's him starting to put his stamp on his team. And a lot like Virat (Kohli) did, similar ways like that. Rohit (Sharma) probably was never as outwardly aggressive, I guess, especially to opposition players. "I know he (Rohit) would quite often get aggressive with his teammates and try to bring the best out of them that way. But I love watching Shubman stand up for what he thought was right in the game last week." Ponting has played Tests in England across four separate tours, and twice as captain (2005 and 2009). He said that the pressures of such a high-profile tour could get to a skipper. "The UK can be a hard place to play. The crowds, as much as they love their game, can be as hostile a place to play as anywhere in the world. "The media there, when you're in a big series, when it's an Ashes series or when it's England and India, the media always feel like they're right on top of your back as well." (Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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