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Scottie Scheffler turns his Dallas HQ into a little piece of Scotland ahead of huge month

Scottie Scheffler turns his Dallas HQ into a little piece of Scotland ahead of huge month

Daily Record6 days ago

World No.1 will hone skills at home for The Renaissance and Portrush
Student Scottie Scheffler will briefly turn his Dallas base into a little piece of Scotland as he does his homework ahead of a double date across the Atlantic.
The world No.1 failed to add to his trophy haul at the Travelers Championship as he finished tied sixth alongside Rory McIlroy.

However, Scheffler has immediately turned his attentions to the next tests which come at The Renaissance Club and in Northern Ireland. The American ace tees-up next at the Genesis Scottish Open before the hunt for a fourth Major crown of his career starts in The Open at Royal Portrush.

Having just come through a stretch of high-profile events in his homeland, Scheffler will spend quality time at home with family before his next assignments. But, such is his dedication to the job, he will also have a steely focus on plans before jetting to Scotland tinkering and trying to perfect the differing types of shots he is going to need for when he hits the UK links tracks.
Scheffler outlined his imminent plans in the aftermath of last round at the Travelers, which saw him card a 65 to finish three behind eventual winner and his Ryder Cup captain Keegan Bradley.
He said : 'I'll go home and try to sleep for a few days, see if my little man [son Bennett] is going to allow that. Get some rest, some recovery. I think I played five out of the last six weeks, been in contention a lot, so get home, get some rest and start preparing for the Scottish Open. I'll start practicing toward the end of the week and I'll continue to hit the shots that we need when we go over there and that's pretty much it, yeah. Pretty simple.'
Scheffler was unable to get his hands on the silverware in Connecticut, but the fact he finished high on the leaderboard again despite not having his best game offers another chilling warning to the rest that is ready to pounce once more.
He said: 'I did some good things this week. I think obviously I was looking for a little bit more, but overall not a bad week. If I have a different day yesterday [Saturday] I think it's a different story, but you can't be perfect every day, I'm just trying to do my best and I fought back nicely today [Sunday] and posted a decent score.
'I felt like I hit it a lot better, kept a clean card. Today was the first day where I've been bogey-free and I think this is a golf course where limiting your mistakes is really important. You're going to get opportunities, but you got to limit your mistakes and this week I just wasn't able to do that.'

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