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Scottie Scheffler resembles peak Tiger Woods as Rory McIlroy and Co nowhere close with eerie stat ominous for his rivals

Scottie Scheffler resembles peak Tiger Woods as Rory McIlroy and Co nowhere close with eerie stat ominous for his rivals

The Irish Suna day ago
THERE is, perhaps, one glimmer of hope for every other professional golfer on the planet.
And that is the possibility that Scottie Scheffler might once more encounter an overzealous traffic policeman and be led away from a Major championship in handcuffs.
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Scottie Scheffler cruised to The Open victory by four shots
Credit: AP
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Tiger Woods won three Opens as world No1 and dominated golf
Credit: Getty
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Scheffler was famously arrested during the PGA Championship at Valhalla last year
Credit: EPA
Little else, it seems, will stop the man who
Scheffler has now won 22 tournaments in three-and-a-half years and has finished inside the top ten at ten of the last 12 Majors, winning three of his last eight big ones.
That extraordinary run includes last year's PGA Championship at Valhalla, when
The world No1 had his wrists shackled in irons, was dressed in orange for a police mugshot and yet still returned to the course and finished the tournament in eighth.
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Louisville's Department of Corrections eventually dropped all charges against Scheffler - a
Save for his ability to spoil people's weekends by turning golf tournaments into processions.
Woods took 1,197 days to win his fourth Major after he'd clinched his first.
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Scheffler did it in exactly the same timescale. Which sounds pretty damned ominous for everybody else.
Next year, the two-time Masters winner and reigning USPGA champion will
Bryson DeChambeau reveals he used to beat Scottie Scheffler for fun as world No1 chases Open glory
Rory McIlroy, who became only the sixth man to win a Grand Slam at Augusta in April, played pretty well at Portrush - especially during his 66 on Saturday - and yet the world No2 could never even lay a glove on the world No1, finishing seven shots back.
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There had been an inevitability about Scheffler since he started sharking his way up the leaderboard as a late starter on Friday, as menacing as a dorsal fin in a paddling pool.
Between the 11th hole on Friday and the eighth on Sunday afternoon, Scheffler played 32 holes without dropping a single shot.
Seven strokes clear of the field after seven holes of his final round, the Texan then took two attempts to escape from a fairway bunker and double-bogeyed.
For a few feverish minutes, it felt as if there might be an outside chance of something genuinely interesting happening - especially as last week's Scottish Open champion Chris Gotterup had just carded a birdie to bring him within four of the lead.
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But ever since he won his first pro tournament in February 2022, Scheffler has proved he is no choker.
He birdied the ninth and the procession continued. They might as well have carried him shoulder-high around these Dunluce links in a sedan chair.
Leading by four heading into the final round, Scheffler drove left into the rough on the opening hole but, using his wedge like some kind of a wand, he landed the ball 16 inches from the hole.
Around the first green there was barely a ripple of applause.
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None of them were close... this fella Scheffler is simply too damned good
Perhaps they were all supreme optimists still believing in the possibility of a McIlroy miracle or perhaps they have seen enough of Scheffler to simply imagine that this kind of thing was somehow normal.
After tapping in for birdie, Scheffler continued on his serene way, save for his scrape in the sandpit at eight.
As soon as he had smoked his tee shot up the fourth fairway, one of Scheffler's fellow Americans yelled out "what's the point, Scoddie?"
It referenced the philosophical pre-tournament press conference during which
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It had felt like the late voice of darts, Sid Waddell, evoking Alexander the Great shedding tears of salt because, by the age of 33, he had no more worlds to conquer. Scheffler is only 29.
This turned out to be a 26th American triumph in the last 34 Majors and an 18th in the last 30 Opens.
These Yanks, they come over here, complain about our weather, try to convince us that our conditions are alien to them, and then they carry off our Claret Jug, time after time after time.
This ended up as an American one-two-three with Harris English four strokes behind Scheffler on 13-under and one ahead of Gotterup.
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Matt Fitzpatrick - the last man to lead this tournament before Scheffler seized the lead on Friday evening - was tied for fourth place with another American, Wyndham Clark, and China's Haotong Li.
But, in truth, none of them were close. This fella Scheffler is simply too damned good.
They'd better call up Officer Dibble.
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The American was led away in handcuffs and put in a cell
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Scheffler celebrated with wife Meredith and son Bennett on the 18th green
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Scheffler's blip was a double bogey in the final round when he needed two shots to get out of a bunker
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Open victor Scottie Scheffler is latest sporting star to explore space beyond wins and losses
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The world's top athletes can seem a confused bunch. Scottie Scheffler described in a press conference before the Open how he keeps asking himself why he wants to win golf tournaments and can't find any answers. The world No 3 men's tennis player Alexander Zverev confessed to feelings of emptiness and a lack of joy in his tennis regardless of whether he wins or loses matches. The Wimbledon women's singles runner-up Amanda Anisimova took a long break from tennis to preserve her mental health, was written off by many and unsure what to expect on return, yet ended up in the SW19 final. What's going on? As the world's top athletes naturally push the boundaries of what's possible physically, so they also have to push the limits mentally, and these questions and experiences are a vital part of that process. We're seeing more and more athletes explore the space beyond winning and losing, a concept many in sport have yet to understand actually exists. 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Organisations including Switch the Play, the True Athlete Project, ACT and the Jacobs Futura Foundation have woken up to the need to help athletes transition out of sport at the end of their careers, alongside various companies that offer athlete transition programmes. What is becoming clear is that those conversations about purpose, identity and social impact need to come much earlier in an athlete's career, long before they retire. An interesting consequence that follows when athletes do have a strong sense of meaning, purpose and connection is less difference between the emotional states of winners and losers. Both winning and losing prove useful in the pursuit of connection with others and the process of self-discovery and character development, reinforcing values and virtues such as resilience, courage, gratitude, and humility. 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