5 things Scottie Scheffler revealed in Tour Championship beatdown | Monday Finish

Scottie Scheffler with the FedEx Cup trophy

Scottie Scheffler's Tour Championship win revealed two interesting things about him.

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Welcome to the Monday Finish, where college football is back! It’ll be nice for golf fans to finally get a break from ranking controversies, sketchy sources of funding, Georgia at the center of the universe and [checks notes] hmm, never mind. To the golf news…

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GOLF STUFF I LIKE

5 things we learned about Scottie Scheffler.

If you skipped Sunday’s action at the Tour Championship, checked the final score and dismissed it as another Scottie Scheffler beatdown, you’re not wrong, exactly. But you also missed out on a few revealing moments to cap off a surreal season.

Scheffler began the day with a five-shot lead. By the time he reached the fourth hole he had a seven-shot lead. Over the next several holes, though, things changed quickly. Wayward drives left at 5 and 7 led to bogeys, and by the time Scheffler took his stance in a greenside bunker at the drivable par-4 8th his lead had shrunk to four. Then Scheffler hit a cold, hard shank with that bunker shot, a shocking miss that sent his ball skittering off the other side of the green. (Consider that Thing 1: World No. 1 can hit a mean bunker shank.) From there he shorted his chip shot and walked off with another bogey, while playing partner Collin Morikawa made birdie to suddenly draw within two.

Scheffler’s post-round shank explanation was interesting. “That actual specific bunker shot, for some reason I need to figure out why, but I shank it a lot more often than I should when I’m on a side slope like that,” he said. (That’s Thing 2: these shanks apparently happen with some frequency.)

As for his in-round, on-course response? That was downright jaw-dropping. A soaring long-iron at No. 9 from 236 yards to five feet. Birdie. A towering wedge at No. 10 to three feet. Birdie. And a 15-footer for birdie at No. 11 that Scheffler walked in with hardly a reaction, capping off a three-hole stretch that screamed enough screwing around. Then came the door-slamming eagle at No. 14, a reminder that Scheffler isn’t just a talented golfer. He’s the world’s most talented golfer — and he’s an absolute killer, too.

The 2024 version of Scheffler is different, and his 2024 season was different, and the end of the 2024 season served to hammer that point home. That’s Thing 3. Scheffler’s different than Viktor Hovland was a year ago, or Rory McIlroy a year before that, or Patrick Cantlay a year before that. This Scheffler is different than the Scheffler of those years, too — different than last year and the year before, where he also entered East Lake with the lead but left having surrendered it. Instead, when he won this time around it reinforced the idea that his season — the Players, the Masters, half the Signature Events, Olympic Gold, now the Tour Championship — was different than any PGA Tour season since one Tiger Woods played a decade and a half ago.

“Yeah, it’s great,” Scheffler said, asked to sum up his seven-win season. But then he paused. “Still don’t understand why the Olympics doesn’t count. That’s a bit weird to me. I think that’s part of the greed that goes on in your brain, is you say seven, I’m like, ‘I won eight.’ I won the Olympics in the middle of the year, and for some reason it doesn’t count as an official PGA Tour win. It counts the same as — no offense to the Hero — but it counts the same as the Hero World Challenge in the grand scheme of things.”

Who’s counting? Scheffler, clearly. Winner. Still a slight chip on his shoulder. That’s Thing 4.

We learned something else, too, about the way Scheffler thinks and the way he cares. We’ll call this Thing 5, and it came in an interview with Mike Tirico as he accepted the winner’s trophy and was asked about his season.

“It’s hard to put into words what this year has been like for me,” he said. He thanked his wife and his son, but it was telling where his mind went next.

“Really, to the fans as well,” he said. “After the stuff that happened in Louisville I didn’t really know exactly what was going to happen when I showed up to the first tee. But the reception I got on the tee was something I’ll remember for a long time.”

The stuff that happened in Louisville could be a good album title but in this case refers to Scheffler’s bizarre arrest at the PGA Championship due to an unfortunate miscommunication with an overzealous member of the Louisville P.D. In real time Scheffler seemed to take the episode in stride and and in the weeks that followed he sidestepped questions on the subject, citing ongoing legal proceedings. But this recall at season’s end was a window into Scheffler’s mind, with one clear conclusion: that was a really big deal.

In real time it was as easy as it was for the internet to fire off jokes about Scheffler’s orange-jumpsuited mugshot, all in good fun. But transport yourself to Scheffler’s shoes and the entire episode was jarring. It was a reminder that things can go wrong, even for the most talented among us, and that even if you spend your life trying to treat people the right way, a stranger on a dark, rainy morning won’t know that. I’m sure Scheffler had never really imagined himself as the sort of person who’d end up in a jail cell. Once he’d become that person, perhaps his worldview shifted just a bit.

The recall to Tirico seemed like an admission of exactly that. That when Scheffler had made it back to Valhalla to play golf that day, he worried what people might think. For a guy who’d never been accused of being anything but a little boring, that was new. But the public took his side. They’re still on his side. He’s clearly grateful.

In all we learned that Scheffler post-shank is still the best player in the world. We learned that Scheffler’s Louisville episode left a real impression. Combined, we learned that Scheffler is human. Just really, really good with a long-iron.

Learning new things about Scottie Scheffler, eight wins later: that’s golf stuff I like.

WINNERS

Who won the week?

Scottie Scheffler won the Tour Championship and its $25 million first prize. Good week.

Haeran Ryu rebounded from a Saturday 78 with a Sunday 64 to chase down Jin Young Ko — and then beat her on the first extra hole to win the inaugural FM Championship at TPC Boston.

Niklas Norgaard fulfilled a lifelong dream by capturing his maiden win on the DP World Tour at age 32. The Danish pro overcame a viral chipping meltdown at No. 15 to win the Betfred British Masters by two.

Another Dane, Fredrik Kjettrup, won for the third time on the PGA Tour Americas, earning him guaranteed promotion to the Korn Ferry Tour for 2025.

And Team Great Britain and Ireland won their first Curtis Cup since 2016 by a single point in a dramatic finish at Sunningdale Golf Club.

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NOT-WINNERS

A good year for most, but…

Rory McIlroy played well but never contended at the Tour Championship, a result that was in some ways fitting for a season that was solid but, by his lofty standards, still disappointing. He described feeling like a “distant third” in the world behind Scheffler and Xander Schauffele and, even though he still has five starts left this fall to make 27 for the year, plans to cut back his schedule for 2025.

“I’m usually sort of like a 22 [start] sort of person. But again, that was when I was sort of in my 20s and didn’t have the responsibilities that I do now,” he said. “I’m going to try to cut it back to like 18 or 20 a year going forward, I think.”

Whether that’s just end-of-season fatigue talking remains to be seen; in the meantime we’ll look forward to McIlroy at the Horizon Irish Open at the legendary Royal County Down in just two weeks’ time.

SHORT HITTERS

Five pros (other than Scottie) who left the Tour Championship happy.

Collin Morikawa shot the lowest 72-hole score in the field, earning a win on the “fake leaderboard.” He finished second on the adjusted leaderboard, earning $12 million. He moved back up to No. 4 in the world and capped off a terrific season. “I needed a lot lower and I knew that. But I fought hard, and all week, honestly, that’s kind of the golf I missed playing,” he said. “Hopefully we can use this as a stepping stone into next year.”

Sahith Theegala shot the second-lowest 72-hole score in the field. He also called a penalty on himself mid-round Saturday, earning the respect of the golfing public — and then rebounded with seven birdies on the back nine and eight more in Sunday’s round to finish solo third.

Russell Henley finished better than anyone, making birdie at No. 17 and then pitching in for eagle from 35 yards out at No. 18 to finish off a round of 9-under 62 that got him into T4 and the biggest payday — $4.83 mil — of his career. He also all but guaranteed a spot on the Presidents Cup team in the process. “Obviously a dream of mine, why I work so hard is to make one of these teams. Hopefully it works out,” he said.

Adam Scott finished strong, too; just last week he had to play his way into the Tour Championship and took full advantage once he got here, shooting 66-67-68-67 to finish T4 alongside Henley. “All of a sudden I feel like I’m a good player again,” he said post-round.

And Justin Thomas, who arrived at No. 30, the last man in the field, put together a solid case for the U.S. Presidents Cup team’s final captain’s pick when he made eight birdies in a Sunday 65 to turn in the seventh-best score of the week. “Really hope I get a chance at Presidents Cup because I feel like — it was fun. These last couple days and this week I played really, really well. It was nice to have a good round to finish off the season today.”

ONE DUMB GRAPHIC

Scottie Scheffler, the franchise.

ONE SWING THOUGHT

Where Scottie beats Xander.

World No. 2 Xander Schauffele was asked what he’d like to borrow from No. 1 Scottie Scheffler.

“When I’m driving it well, I feel like I can get him, but overall I’d say he’s probably got me in driving,” Schauffele said. “Just his accuracy is really good when he needs to pick it up or drop the speed a little bit just to hit more fairways.”

He’s right. Scheffler led the Tour Championship in strokes gained off the tee and he’s No. 3 on the season in that category. Schauffele’s no slouch off the tee at No. 10 for the season but was 22nd at East Lake, which contributed to him falling out of contention. Overall there’s a reason these guys are 1-2 in the world — they’re 1-2 in strokes gained from tee to green. Scheffler just happens to be No. 1 by quite a bit.

ONE BIG QUESTION

Should we be in the American Southeast in August?

I spent a few days at East Lake this week and left feeling … sweaty. I enjoyed the changes to the golf course, I like the clubhouse, the lake is cool, 18 is a memorable finisher and there have been plenty of big-time moments on these historic fairways, but especially during the practice rounds I found 95 and humid to be so oppressive that it sort of sucked the energy out of the place. Judging by player feedback, Memphis was even worse — a golf course players like but contested in triple-digit heat indexes.

On the other hand, the BMW Championship at Castle Pines earned rave reviews. I was wondering if players would be complaining about a playoff event at elevation but they seemed to find the course setup, fan turnout and general tournament operation to be top-notch. The weather didn’t hurt, either.

There are significant sponsor interests keeping the Tour’s playoff events in Atlanta and Memphis. And although those are both gorgeous places to play golf in the spring, August seems to have residents yearning for air conditioning. Meanwhile, in other big-time sports markets — think New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago, or West Coast options like Seattle (Chambers Bay?), the Bay Area (even Pebble Beach?) there seems to be an appetite for more but no golf coming. This is a spot for questions, not complete solutions, so I’ll leave it here: Why not make the FedEx St. Jude a big-time spring event, work East Lake into the Masters lead-up and get creative in some big-time markets come playoff time?

ONE THING TO WATCH

Norgaard’s chip-choppy finish.

I mentioned above that Danish 32-year-old Niklas Norgaard suffered some chipping woes en route to victory. But what did that look like? Reinforcing Scheffler’s message from earlier, it’s worth a watch just to remember that even though the pros definitely aren’t just like us, they’re not perfect either.

“I was nervous, but not that nervous. That was purely just chipping badly,” said Norgaard after making double bogey.

NEWS FROM SEATTLE

Monday Finish HQ.

It’s back-to-school week here, which means it’s golf tryout season, too. Some of you have already been through that process this summer — or perhaps your kids have. Good luck, gang. Go low. Have fun. Soak up the warm weather and long afternoons while we’ve still got ’em. And remember, if you hit a shank, you might just be on your way to World No. 1.

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Dylan Dethier welcomes your comments at dylan_dethier@golf.com.

Dylan Dethier

Dylan Dethier

Dylan Dethier is a senior writer for GOLF Magazine/GOLF.com. The Williamstown, Mass. native joined GOLF in 2017 after two years scuffling on the mini-tours. Dethier is a graduate of Williams College, where he majored in English, and he’s the author of 18 in America, which details the year he spent as an 18-year-old living from his car and playing a round of golf in every state.