
Scottie Scheffler reveals truth over heated caddie bust-up as golf superstar shows his true colours
World No.1 sticks up for his struggling rival as McIlroy struggles post-Masters glory
Scottie Scheffler has stood up for beleaguered Rory McIlroy and admitted he felt like he'd been hit by a bus after achieving major glory.
The Northern Irish superstar has endured a torrid time since his Masters triumph and the completion of the career Grand Slam
McIlroy has also noted gripes with the media and lost his temper on the course with US Open outbursts during some out-of-character moments.
Scheffler admits he has no idea how his rival must feel having achieved a lifetime goal, but gave a fascinating comparison into his own emotions following victory at last month's PGA Championship which backed up two wins at The Masters.
He explained: 'There's definitely an aspect of having an achievement that you've thought about for a long time and then being able to achieve that goal. Winning a major championship in general just takes a lot out of you. I think physically and mentally it's a pretty taxing thing to do. It's really hard to describe to somebody that hasn't really lived through it.
'I mean, when I woke up after the PGA Championship this year, I literally felt like I got hit by a bus. Like I felt terrible. And it's just part of the adrenaline, part of competing for four days on a really difficult golf course, keeping your head in it for 72 holes, which is a long time, and just mentally it's exhausting. Physically it's a grind too.
'So if that's how I felt after the PGA, I can only imagine how Rory felt after winning the career Grand Slam and it's not easy to show up every week out here and play well. This is a very difficult sport. We play very difficult golf courses like this one.
'We're all out here just trying to do our best, it's a hard game and sometimes it can look easy and sometimes it can feel really difficult, but at the end of the day, we're just showing up trying to do our best and then we go home.'
Scheffler, meanwhile, also addressed his tasty exchange with coach Randy Smith which caught attention at Oakmont.
The World No.1 didn't hide his US Open frustrations after struggling on Friday and headed straight from the course after his media duties to hit a load of balls and work on his game.
Cameras caught an expressive Scheffler looking to have a feisty conversation with his coach Randy Smith as they sought solutions to the issues with caddie Teddy Scott in attendance.
The Ryder Cup star got something out of it as he stayed in title contention through Saturday with an outside chance of catching leader and mate Sam Burns to win the crown and back-up his PGA title triumph with a fourth Major victory.
Scheffler spoke out on the range-session after round three and explained: 'Yeah, I would say in terms of a practice session after the round, that was pretty regular. We're just trying to figure stuff out out there.
'To be honest with you, we left the range, I felt like I didn't figure anything out. Just one of those days where just the swing wasn't there.
'Randy had some thoughts for me that definitely helped today, but I'm going to go hit a few more balls and see if we can figure something out.
'Brooks [Koepka] made some comments this week about his coach kind of getting in his grille. When have you that consistency and you have long-term relationships, there's a lot more trust that gets built up between people and a true friend is somebody that is there for you when you need them, but also they're not going to just be a yes-man, they're there to help you become the best version of yourself and especially when you look at a team.
'Randy's job is to help me become the better golfer. Randy's got a lot of other roles, but at the end of the day, as a golf coach your job is to help me become a better player and sometimes that's getting in my grille and then other times it's putting his arm around me and telling me it's okay.
'I think when you have those long relationships like that, there's a lot of trust that gets built up and you're able to say some things that you wouldn't really say in the first six months of working with somebody.
'In terms of just your development as a player and a person, I think that consistency with the people around you is really important.
'Sam's got a coach that he's had for a long time and you look at something like me getting frustrated on the range with my coach Randy, Sam's definitely been in that position before and it's just one of those deals.
'When you have the trust between people that you're almost like a family; you've worked together for so long. I think that's how his team feels as well. When you have the great relationships with people, they're able to pick you up when you need to be picked up, need to be picked up, and then they're there to kind of keep you in line when things are not going the way they should be and if your attitude's a little bit off.
'I've had a pretty good stretch the last month and I felt well-rested coming into this week. Golf is a funny game, and for me to be sitting where I am this week not having really my best stuff I think is pretty good.'
Scheffler has a long road back, but said: 'Around this place, anything can happen. Do I feel like I'm out of the tournament? No.'

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Daily Record
15 minutes ago
- Daily Record
Rory McIlroy fires shot over heads of fans at US Open as wowed commentator says 'this is not safe'
'This is not safe' said the TV commentator as the Irish superstar faced tough scenario at Oakmont Bold Rory McIlroy dramatically hit a shot straight over the heads of risk-taking fans during his final round at Oakmont. The Northern Irish superstar began early on Sunday with his US Open title chances long gone due to a disappointing first trio of efforts. Masters champ McIlroy was looking to a strong ending to his tournament, but found himself off line during his fourth hole of the round. With fans in his line to the green and their apparent unwillingness to clear a passageway, the superstar was forced to take on his shot over their heads. The commentary team on the clip put out on Sky Sports' social media talked prior to the strike with one stating: 'He's got a group of spectators in front of him that just don't want to move and he's going to be firing it up over their heads.' At that point, a second member of the coverage added: 'Wow. They obviously haven't seen some of the replays from this week out of this stuff. This is not safe.' Although not having a good tournament, McIlroy displayed all of his skills to execute the shot perfectly and carry the ball safely high and over their heads. The star was hunting positive vibes to take away from a difficult week at Oakmont as he is scheduled to play next at the Travelers Championship in Conneticut where he is scheduled to play next with the tournament starting on Thursday. The career Grand Slam champion's frustrations boiled over at times during the week and he confessed following his Saturday round that he didn't care if he made the cut or not with his opportunity to lift the trophy and win a sixth Major long gone by that stage. The five-times Major winner also reiterated his gripes over the media during his day three chat after coming off the course and insisted he had earned the right to do what he wants when it comes to talking post rounds or not after skipping recent requested briefings. McIlroy spoke with a tone and had an expression that led to his ex- Ryder Cup skipper Paul McGinley insisting that something is eating him and he needs a break. He said: 'He looks fed up to me. He looks like he's had enough of everything. Whether it was the emotional release of everything that's gone on in his career, I don't know. But he's not himself, this is not normal. 'When he does that, because people look up to him. 'A [press] conference like that with his body language and short language doesn't serve him right. I don't like to see it. 'I'm disappointed for Rory that it's come to that. Something is eating at him. He hasn't let us know what it is, but there's something not right.'


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
US Open golf: final round on day four at Oakmont
Update: Date: 2025-06-15T17:00:22.000Z Title: Preamble Content: The good news for Sam Burns: he's in fine form after last week's near miss at the Canadian Open; his 65 on Friday is the best round of the week, proof positive that the five-time PGA Tour winner has the game to get the job done around Oakmont; he's one of only two players (along with Ryan Fox) yet to three-putt on treacherous greens once described by a USGA bigwig as the 'scariest in golf'. The bad news for Sam Burns: only three players out of nine have converted a 54-hole lead at an Oakmont US Open into victory; one of the biggest final-round comebacks in US Open history occurred at Oakmont (Johnny Miller winning in 1973 from six back); someone's won from seven behind going into the final round of a US Open before, Arnold Palmer in 1960, and if anyone in the field can go one better than Arnie, it's surely Scottie Scheffler. So history proves that nothing's certain. And with the leaderboard packed tight, featuring plenty of big names waiting to pounce, pretty much anything could happen if the leading trio stumble. Most of it unlikely, admittedly, but all of it possible. Here's what the top of the tree looked like after 54 holes … -4: Sam Burns -3: Adam Scott, JJ Spaun -1: Viktor Hovland E: Carlos Ortiz +1: Tyrrell Hatton, Thriston Lawrence +2: Rasmus Neergaard-Petersen +3: Robert MacIntyre, Cameron Young +4: Marc Leishman, Chris Gotterup, Scottie Scheffler, Nick Taylor, Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Max Greyserman, Emiliano Grillo, Russell Henley, Victor Perez, Ben Griffin … and here are the tee-times (all BST). It's on! 12.52 Cam Davis (Aus) 13.03 Matthieu Pavon (Fra), Jordan Smith (Eng) 13.14 Hideki Matsuyama (Jpn), Harris English (US) 13.25 Ryan McCormick (US), Taylor Pendrith (Can) 13.36 Johnny Keefer (US), Michael Kim (US) 13.47 James Nicholas (US), Brian Harman (US) 13.58 Philip Barbaree Jr (US), Im Sung-jae (Kor) 14.14 Niklas Norgaard (Den), Denny McCarthy (US) 14.25 Daniel Berger (US), Tony Finau (US) 14.36 Rory McIlroy (NI), Andrew Novak (US) 14.47 Adam Schenk (US), Mackenzie Hughes (Can) 14.58 Justin Hastings -a- (Aus), Matt Fitzpatrick (Eng) 15.09 Collin Morikawa (US), Rasmus Hojgaard (Den) 15.20 Ryan Fox (NZ), Corey Conners (Can) 15.36 Patrick Reed (US), Laurie Canter (Eng) 15.47Jon Rahm (Spa), Tom Kim (Kor) 15.58 Maverick McNealy (US), Xander Schauffele (US) 16.09 Kim Si-woo (Kor), Jhonattan Vegas (Col) 16.20 Aaron Rai (Eng), Trevor Cone (US) 16.31 Jordan Spieth (US), JT Poston (US) 16.42 Brooks Koepka (US), Thomas Detry (US) 16.58 Jason Day (US), Chris Kirk (US) 17.09 Keegan Bradley (US), Sam Stevens (US) 17.20 Matt Wallace (Eng), Ryan Gerard (US) 17.31 Ben Griffin (US), Victor Perez (Fra) 17.42 Russell Henley (US), Emiliano Grillo (Arg) 17.53 Max Greyserman (US), Christiaan Bezuidenhout (SA) 18.04 Nick Taylor (Can), Scottie Scheffler (US) 18.20 Chris Gotterup (US), Marc Leishman (Aus) 18.31 Cameron Young (US), Robert MacIntyre (Sco) 18.42 Rasmus Neergaard-Petersen (Den), Thriston Lawrence (SA) 18.53 Tyrrell Hatton (Eng), Carlos Ortiz (Mex) 19.04 Viktor Hovland (Nor), JJ Spaun (US) 19.15 Adam Scott (Aus), Sam Burns (US)


Times
an hour ago
- Times
US Open live: leaderboard, scores and analysis from round 4
That's better from McIlroy, who plays a couple of beautiful approaches into the par-three 13th and par-four 14th to get to three under for the day and seven over for the tournament. There are birdies to be had out there, which will encourage the chasing pack behind Burns. Among them now is Thomas Detry and Jason Day after their early birdies. Scottie Scheffler tees off in less than ten minutes. Please enable cookies and other technologies to view this content. You can update your cookies preferences any time using privacy manager. These are the previous five occasions at the US Open in which a player has held a one-shot lead through 54 holes and their eventual finishing position:1999 Payne Stewart (won)2008 Tiger Woods (won in playoff)2009 Ricky Barnes (T-2)2013 Phil Mickelson (T-2)2017 Brian Harman (T-2) A birdie at the 11th follows consecutive bogeys for McIlroy, whose frustration is plain to see. On Friday, he smashed a tee marker with a wood on the 17th hole having earlier tossed another club in frustration. He boils over again in this final round, but this time with arguably the smoothest club throw ever at a major championship… Please enable cookies and other technologies to view this content. You can update your cookies preferences any time using privacy manager. Shots are difficult to pick up and even easier to lose at Oakmont but Ryan Fox's start to his final round should encourage players further back in that Burns's lead on four under is not unassailable. A successful 11ft putt at the 7th gives the New Zealander his third birdie of the day and he is now into a tie for 21st. Jon Rahm and Xander Schauffele have also made decent starts, giving an indication that these could be favourable scoring conditions. Please enable cookies and other technologies to view this content. You can update your cookies preferences any time using privacy manager. The statistics of the four players under par so far in this tournament make for fascinating reading as each one is excelling in different fields. Sam Burns, the leader, has been the second best in the field with his approach play and around the greens, but ranks 53rd out of 66 off the tee. Adam Scott has meanwhile been the best player off the tee but has struggled around the greens. JJ Spaun has been the best putter in the field, while Viktor Hovland's approach play has been the best — although he has been poor off the tee and putting. Rick Broadbent, Oakmont Golf, and golfers, do not help themselves sometimes. Tron Carter, of No Laying Up podcast, was the first to report that Wyndham Clark, the 2023 US Open champion, had trashed his locker after missing the cut here. A photo is now doing the rounds on social media. The Times has sought confirmation from his management, while the USGA refused to confirm or deny the report. If he is guilty then why keep it in-house? Alas, this has always been golf's way. Last month Clark broke his driver as he flung it into advertising hoardings at the US PGA. He issued a fulsome apology after that one. 'My actions were uncalled for and completely inappropriate, making it clear that I have things I need to work on. 'I hold myself to a high standard, trying to always play for something bigger than myself, and yesterday I fell short of those standards. For that I am truly sorry. I promise to improve the way I handle my frustrations on the course going forward, and hope you all can forgive me in due time.' McIlroy said yesterday that he wanted his final round to be done 'in under 4½ hours' so he could 'get out of here' but he is stringing some of his best golf of the week together. He holes a 21ft putt for birdie at the par-four 7th then almost makes a 54ft putt at the 301-yard par-three 8th. He is yet to make a bogey and is now eight over for the tournament. Fox is also off to a flyer and birdies at the 2nd and 4th have got him to six over. Rick Broadbent, Oakmont So here we go. Fair to say it had been a slow-burner at Oakmont, but today could be a cracker. Adam Scott is there to prove there is life after 40. Justin Rose was a shot away at the Masters but could Scott, pushing 45, get over the line? Three rounds at par or better — nobody else has managed that — and the lack of a star name in front of him will make many think he can, but plenty have a chance here. In the past 20 years the winner has always been within four of the lead going into Sunday. Tyrrell Hatton is just beyond that but his approach play was stellar on Saturday, and Bob MacIntyre can make a lot birdies and will be relishing the chance of chasing. You can easily make a double bogey here and scores can go south very quickly, but overcast and softer conditions should provide opportunities for the adventurous. Buckle up. How hard is Oakmont playing so far? Well, of the 26 players already out on the course, only two of them — McIlroy and Ryan Fox, who won the Canadian Open last week — are under par. McIlroy has had three good looks for birdie at the 3rd, 4th and 5th after that strong start but putts from between eight and 28ft have stayed high. He remains at nine over. Spain's Jon Rahm has meanwhile just started his final round by finding the right side of the 1st fairway. Sitting just three shots off the lead is Viktor Hovland, who — like Burns and Spaun — is also bidding to win his first major. The Norwegian reached a career-high third in 2022, won the FedEx Cup in 2023, but gave an honest assessment of his frailties in March after a run of four missed cuts in five tournaments. 'It sucks — I just don't have control over what I'm doing,' he said. Two days late, Hovland had his hands on the trophy at the Valspar Championship. 'Stupid, stupid game,' he wrote on social media afterwards and he has now posted rounds of 71, 68 and 70 this week. Statistically, he has been the best player from tee to green at Oakmont, his wedge play is remarkably improved after extensive work with chipping guru Joe Mayo, and he could become the man to beat if his putter gets hot today. Rick Broadbent, Oakmont McIlroy may have become a puzzling enigma since completing the career grand slam at Augusta in April, but a bevy of less-fancied players are relishing the prospect of contending for a major on one of the world's toughest courses. Sam Burns reached 54 holes at four under par, a shot clear of an age-defying Adam Scott and JJ Spaun. 'I'm pretty happy to be one behind and not sleeping on the lead,' Scott said after a superb round of 67. 'This would be huge for me.' Rolling in the putts and rolling back the years, the popular Aussie has the chance to become the second-oldest US Open champion at 44 and set a record for the longest gap between majors; his first came at Augusta in 2013. Viktor Hovland dropped a shot on the last but played some lustrous irons and is only three off the lead. They are the only men under par. • Rick Broadbent: Sam Burns and Adam Scott lead charge as Rory McIlroy heads for exit So how do we think Oakmont is going to play today? Well, there are only four players in the entire field under par — Burns, Scott, Spaun and Hovland — and a number of players including McIlroy have lost their temper as they grapple with the brutal conditions. Through three rounds, Oakmont's lightning greens have produced nearly twice as many three putts (462) as Augusta did for the entire 2025 Masters (238). To make matters even more challenging today, the tee box at the par-three 8th sets the hole at its full 301 yards. There is every possibility that the winning score will be over par later today. After slumping to ten over par following three frustrating days, Rory McIlroy could no longer let his golf do the talking yesterday. So having refused to speak to the media after six consecutive rounds at the majors, he said that he had not really cared if he had made the cut or not. His amended ambition for Sunday? 'A round in under 4½ hours and get out of here.' McIlroy is clearly struggling for motivation after his Masters victory in April but has made an early birdie at the 2nd at the start of his final round. Good afternoon, golf fans, and what a day this promises to be. There is no major quite like the US Open when it comes to punishing, gruelling golf and, even against that benchmark, the course at Oakmont can be particularly vindictive. Sam Burns comes into the day on four under and with a one-shot lead over Adam Scott and JJ Spaun, while Viktor Hovland and Tyrrell Hatton are also in the chasing pack. On a course where shots are so tough to gain and even easier to lose, that could change very quickly. Stay with us for updates and Rick Broadbent's expert analysis from Oakmont.