Scottie Scheffler runs away with US PGA title after challengers fade away
Just another Scottie Sunday. Major number three for Scottie Scheffler, the first outside Augusta National and the latest stride towards golfing immortality. A year on from being bundled into a police cell during his last attempt to lift the Wanamaker Trophy, Scheffler took no prisoners. Dancing to the jailhouse rock. Jon Rahm swung and missed at the new US PGA champion before capitulating under sheer frustration. Nobody else seriously featured.
Scheffler earned himself $3.4m (£2.5m) plus further daylight between himself and the rest at the summit of the world rankings. The most remarkable thing about Scheffler is how unremarkable he makes all this seem. This is a golfer who has walked up to the 72nd green of a major holding six-, five- and four-shot leads. He has no experience of anxiety in such scenarios because of his own ability to steady the ship as others waver.
Related: US PGA Championship 2025: Scheffler storms to third major title after Rahm falters – live reaction
A 71 enable him to breeze home by five at 12 under par. Second belonged to Harris English, Bryson DeChambeau and Davis Riley.
The biggest criticism of hosting the year's second major at Quail Hollow has been that a PGA Tour event is played here every year. Many felt this tournament did not feel suitably distinct. Scheffler certainly did not; this is his 15th victory since early 2022. The gap between wins from last September to the start of this month, when Scheffler prevailed at the Byron Nelson, felt like a drought.
This US PGA Sunday was not without flickers of drama. Scheffler began round four with a three-shot lead. The advantage was stretched to five within the same number of holes. This felt like a procession.
Rahm then made things interesting. Birdies at the 8th and 10th placed him within two of Scheffler. Rahm had dual motivation; to prove his switch to LIV had not blunted his major capabilities and to win a first US PGA for Spain. As Scheffler made a bogey at the 9th and Rahm a birdie at the 11th, we had a tie. Rahm had taken just 13 putts in 11 holes. Scheffler found only four greens in regulation during his outward half.
Scheffler now needed to steady himself. Should there have been any doubt he would do precisely that? Birdies at the 10th and 14th – Rahm failed to take advantage of the gettable latter – placed this tournament back into Scheffler's grip. The Green Mile bit Rahm. He dropped a shot at the 16th to leave Scheffler again leading by three. Rahm then found water at the short 17th. Race, run. Scheffler had five shots to spare when finding a fairway bunker from the 16th tee. Rahm cracked his drive into water at the last, smoke flowing out of his ears. As Rahm signed for a 73 and share of eighth, it was so hard to remember what had happened just hours before. Rahm finished seven shots behind Scheffler.
DeChambeau's erratic day at the office involved 70 shots. Too much of the US Open champion's fine work was undermined by sloppy wedge play during this major. 'I'm pretty disappointed,' said DeChambeau. 'But Scottie is an incredible golfer and I've got to look forward to trying to get to his level.' English played the back nine in a wonderful 31, his 65 blasting him up the leaderboard. A US Ryder Cup berth is within English's sights.
Rory McIlroy's low-key week ended with a 72. The Masters champion's aggregate was three over par. There will be an element of reset required after the emotion and heroics of Augusta National. A 69 from Sergio García was not sufficient to allow the Spaniard to talk up his hopes of a Ryder Cup reappearance, at Bethpage in September. 'The way I'm playing, even if Luke [Donald] offered me a pick right now, I would tell him no,' Garcia said. 'So obviously I need to get better. I need to get more where I was just before the Masters, just to show myself and show everyone that my game is solid and it can help the team. It's as simple as that. The good thing is that there's still months until the team is finalised. I have time to gain some confidence and improve a little bit on my game.'
García watched on as his compatriot Rahm sought to make history for their country. He could not. Still, the mere fact Rahm made this interesting for a while is to his huge credit. Scheffler's treble of major titles will only grow, grow and grow.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
43 minutes ago
- Yahoo
After 'stupidest' penalty, Shane Lowry among those exiting U.S. Open early
OAKMONT, Pa. – All Shane Lowry could do was laugh. Battered, bruised and by this point, probably a little loopy, Lowry was well on his way to missing this U.S. Open cut by a mile Friday evening when he picked up his ball on Oakmont's 14th green with his ball marker still tucked away in his pocket. Advertisement 'Probably one of the stupidest things I've ever done,' Lowry said, still laughing. 'I picked the ball up, had the ball in my hand, turned around to Darren (Reynolds, his caddie) and he basically said to me, 'What the f--- are you doing?' … By then maybe my mind was somewhere else.' The blunder resulted in a one-stroke penalty, and Lowry, after replacing his ball and barely missing his 55-footer for bogey, walked toward the next hole at 16 over. He'd end the round a shot worse thanks to a bogey at the par-4 15th, where Lowry's laugh turned into a few expletives as he tapped in his putt, and with scores of 79-78, Lowry missed just his second cut in his past seven U.S. Open starts. 'I don't know to be honest,' Lowry said when asked what happened. 'I drove it in play a lot yesterday, did what I was supposed to do off the tee, and then just didn't have my game that I've had for the last while. And then I really struggled on the greens yesterday, and the round got away from me out here, and that was it. 'They let it sort of do what they said it wouldn't do, but that's all fine, that's the U.S. Open. I just made obviously too many doubles, too many big mistakes, and then when I got a couple chances, I didn't convert them. I didn't really do much right to be honest, other than I drove the ball as good as I've probably driven the ball in a long time. So, yeah, weird couple of days.' Advertisement The 36-hole cut wasn't finalized on rainy Friday thanks the the skies opening up with a few groups still finishing up, but it was assuredly to fall at 7 over. Patrick Reed, Hideki Matsuyama and Matt Fitzpatrick will be among those sneaking into the weekend on the number. Just below them, though, were notable names such as Ludvig Aberg, who was 2 under after two holes Thursday before he shot 72-76; Patrick Cantlay, who went 76-72; Wyndham Clark, who matched 74s both days; and Phil Mickelson, who doubled two of his last four holes to join the unfortunate group at 8 over. LIV's points leader Joaquin Niemann was 10 over, as was Dustin Johnson, who won at Oakmont nine years ago, and Bryson DeChambeau, the actual defending champion this week who backed up his opening 73 with a 77 and wasted no time bolting the property. Justin Thomas, at 12 over, has now missed three straight U.S. Open cuts. And though Lowry's 17-over score was easily the most shocking, he wasn't the only potential European Ryder Cupper who is headed home early. Aberg will certainly be on Luke Donald's team at Bethpage later this year, as will Tommy Fleetwood, who missed at 9 over. Sepp Straka (11 over) and Justin Rose (14 over) also didn't come close to sticking around two more days.

NBC Sports
an hour ago
- NBC Sports
After 'stupidest' penalty, Shane Lowry among those exiting U.S. Open early
OAKMONT, Pa. – All Shane Lowry could do was laugh. Battered, bruised and by this point, probably a little loopy, Lowry was well on his way to missing this U.S. Open cut by a mile Friday evening when he picked up his ball on Oakmont's 14th green with his ball marker still tucked away in his pocket. 'Probably one of the stupidest things I've ever done,' Lowry said, still laughing. 'I picked the ball up, had the ball in my hand, turned around to Darren (Reynolds, his caddie) and he basically said to me, 'What the f--- are you doing?' … By then maybe my mind was somewhere else.' The blunder resulted in a one-stroke penalty, and Lowry, after replacing his ball and barely missing his 55-footer for bogey, walked toward the next hole at 16 over. He'd end the round a shot worse thanks to a bogey at the par-4 15th, where Lowry's laugh turned into a few expletives as he tapped in his putt, and with scores of 79-78, Lowry missed just his second cut in his past seven U.S. Open starts. 'I don't know to be honest,' Lowry said when asked what happened. 'I drove it in play a lot yesterday, did what I was supposed to do off the tee, and then just didn't have my game that I've had for the last while. And then I really struggled on the greens yesterday, and the round got away from me out here, and that was it. 'They let it sort of do what they said it wouldn't do, but that's all fine, that's the U.S. Open. I just made obviously too many doubles, too many big mistakes, and then when I got a couple chances, I didn't convert them. I didn't really do much right to be honest, other than I drove the ball as good as I've probably driven the ball in a long time. So, yeah, weird couple of days.' The 36-hole cut wasn't finalized on rainy Friday thanks the the skies opening up with a few groups still finishing up, but it was assuredly to fall at 7 over. Patrick Reed, Hideki Matsuyama and Matt Fitzpatrick will be among those sneaking into the weekend on the number. Just below them, though, were notable names such as Ludvig Aberg, who was 2 under after two holes Thursday before he shot 72-76; Patrick Cantlay, who went 76-72; Wyndham Clark, who matched 74s both days; and Phil Mickelson, who doubled two of his last four holes to join the unfortunate group at 8 over. LIV's points leader Joaquin Niemann was 10 over, as was Dustin Johnson, who won at Oakmont nine years ago, and Bryson DeChambeau, the actual defending champion this week who backed up his opening 73 with a 77 and wasted no time bolting the property. Justin Thomas, at 12 over, has now missed three straight U.S. Open cuts. And though Lowry's 17-over score was easily the most shocking, he wasn't the only potential European Ryder Cupper who is headed home early. Aberg will certainly be on Luke Donald's team at Bethpage later this year, as will Tommy Fleetwood, who missed at 9 over. Sepp Straka (11 over) and Justin Rose (14 over) also didn't come close to sticking around two more days.


NBC Sports
an hour ago
- NBC Sports
Rory McIlroy, not 17th tee marker, into weekend at U.S. Open
OAKMONT, Pa. – Rory McIlroy will be sticking around for the weekend at Oakmont. The left tee marker on the 17th hole, however, won't be. McIlroy surely will receive a bill from the USGA for the damage, which occurred after McIlroy sent his drive sailing toward the front-right greenside bunker at drivable par-4 and then took his frustrations out with one swift blow using his driver. The characteristic time of the clubhead on the marker was likely below the legal limit, but it didn't matter, as the marker was split like Bruce Lee karate-chopping a 2x4. Rory juist SMASHED the tee marker on 17. That wasn't the only outburst from the 36-year-old McIlroy. Earlier on the back nine, he tomahawked a long iron down the fairway after hooking his second shot at the par-5 12th into the rough. Ironically, McIlroy saved par on both holes, then stuffed a wedge to 5 feet at the par-4 finishing hole to card a second straight 73 and make the cut by a shot at 6 over. Also somewhat ironically, McIlroy nearly ranks in the top 10 in strokes gained off the tee through 36 holes after struggling with a new driver at the PGA Championship a few weeks ago. Sure, he's losing around three-fourths of a shot on approach and is nine shots behind heading into Saturday (he'd be just three if not for three double bogeys in a five-hole span between the end of his first round and start of his second), but things could be much worse. For starters, McIlroy could've endured the last two days of his playing competitors, Shane Lowry and Justin Rose, who combined to shoot 31 over. And it's not like, you know, McIlroy didn't complete the career grand slam just two months ago at Augusta National. But while Lowry stopped to talk to the media, McIlroy, hat turned backwards, declined all interview requests for the sixth straight major round – he did conduct a press conference on Tuesday – and headed directly to the parking lot. Everyone will try again tomorrow.