logo
Scottie Scheffler's role in ‘Happy Gilmore 2' is an unexpected gift for golf fans

Scottie Scheffler's role in ‘Happy Gilmore 2' is an unexpected gift for golf fans

This is a story about a movie that saved a sport. OK, that's a stretch, but only a little one.
Scottie Scheffler is the No. 1 golfer in the world. Has been for a couple of years. He has won two Masters titles, one PGA Championship and the recent British Open, as well as an Olympic gold medal. He is so good that somebody ought to check his golf balls for tiny magnets that hook up to the cups on the greens. So far this year, by slapping a little white dimpled ball around in the grass, he has won $19.2 million. He has yet to turn 30, but his overall income, just from golf tournaments, is around $90 million.
This guy is so good that his caddie, Ted Scott, is estimated, at the normal 10% of winnings, to have pocketed about $5 million. For carrying a bag.
So, what's the problem?
Scheffler is so good that he might also be sparking a trend called remote remorse. You really want to watch, but once he gets ahead by a couple of shots, there is nothing left. No drama, no possible twist and turn, no chance of any excitement. Other players in those tense, title-on-the-line final holes, dunk a shot into the water or bury one so deep in the sand that their only choice of club is a shovel.
Not Scheffler. He is a 6-foot-3 human robot whose veins circulate ice water. When the going gets tough, Scheffler yawns.
So, you see this and you know what is coming next — final putt, arms raised in satisfaction, a hug for his multi-millionaire caddie, the mandatory TV interview with the apparently mandatory British-accent female sportscaster, who will always start with, 'How does this feel?'
You, and millions more, click the button on your remote for something more interesting, like HGTV or the Gardening Channel. When Scheffler gets ahead in the final round like that — which is almost always — it is game over. He can squeeze the drama out of a golf tournament like Bill Belichick could out of an NFL postgame interview.
Certainly, you say, Tiger Woods used to win lots of tournaments by lots of big margins and that never seemed boring.
That's because it wasn't. Tiger was animated, angry, annoyed, analytical, fed up with some part of his game, charged up over another part, mad at a reporter, upset with his agent. Tiger could win by eight, occasionally did, and it was still must-see TV. When Tiger was at his best, nobody could beat him and the public loved him and just wanted more. Scheffler is currently at his best and the public certainly is terribly impressed and, sadly, kind of meh. Tiger was a pound-on-the-table-and-shout-at-the-TV kind of player. Scheffler is a nod and a shrug.
But there is hope. Hollywood has intervened, as only Hollywood can.
Twenty-nine years ago, an up-and-coming comic named Adam Sandler made a movie inspired by one of his New England friends, who was a great hockey player and could also hit a golf ball a long distance with a hockey stick. Sandler called the movie 'Happy Gilmore' and found a wide audience that loved it for its irreverence about a game that flaunts hushed reverence.
Among the highlights was an on-course fistfight between Happy Gilmore (Sandler) and aging TV game show host Bob Barker. Barker won by KO.
The movie was hilariously overdone slapstick. It was a gut-laugh-a-minute. It was so stupid and wacky that it was wonderful.
Now, Sandler has made 'Happy Gilmore 2,' and it is again a must-see for all the reasons that the original was. Plus the cameo appearances. Especially one by Scheffler.
In the movie, Scheffler is good, funny, fun. He doesn't have a lot of lines, but he has perfect timing. He punches a guy out on the green and the cops come and haul him away. 'Oh, no. Not again,' he says.
Remember, earlier this year, when Louisville cops hauled him away and put him in an orange jail suit, when he was accused of making a wrong turn while driving into the golf course at the PGA Championship, a tournament that he would eventually win? Well, Sandler and his writers made hay out of that, but more significantly, Scheffler played to it perfectly.
After the movie punch-out, Scheffler is pictured in a jail cell, in an orange jail suit, as a guard asks, since he has been in that cell for three days, if he wants to get out. Scheffler replies, 'Ah, what's for dinner?' When he is told chicken fingers, he says, 'I think I'll stay another night.'
Now, of course, none of that is knee-slapping stuff, but it is Scheffler, and the self-effacing comedy is a perfect image-enhancer, even if it is only in a stupid movie. It is so much better for golf fans to see Scheffler as a roll-with-the-punches fun guy, than an emotionless, ball-striking robot. Neither is totally accurate, but in this media world of image-is-everything, 'Happy Gilmore 2' has done wonderful things for this wonderful golfer. Even moreso, for his sport
He will be all over your TV screens for the three-week FedEx playoffs. It starts Aug. 7 with a tournament in Memphis, followed by the next week in Baltimore and the grand finale Aug. 21 in East Lake, Ga., near Atlanta. For the playoffs, the PGA will distribute $100 million in prize money and the winner will receive $10 million.
Scheffler, a likely winner, would then certainly be invited to appear on TV, especially the late-night shows such as Stephen Colbert and Jimmy Fallon. This would present another great image-building opportunity. He could show up in an orange jump suit.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'Freakier Friday' is double the body swapping, but not double the fun
'Freakier Friday' is double the body swapping, but not double the fun

Boston Globe

timea few seconds ago

  • Boston Globe

'Freakier Friday' is double the body swapping, but not double the fun

Since it's the sequel to the 2003 remake of the 1976 adaptation of Mary Rodgers's book, 'Freakier Friday' ups the ante. By violating the genre's numeric rule, director Nisha Ganatra and writer Jordan Weiss prove that double the bodies does not equal double the fun. Everyone is so bland and one-dimensional, it's easy to forget who's who. Two of the people involved in the mysterious swap are therapist Tess Coleman ( Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Fast-forward 22 years, and Anna is now a single mother with her own rebellious teenage daughter, Harper (Julia Butters). After giving up her musical career to raise Harper, Anna is now the producer for Ella ( Advertisement (L-R) Maitreyi Ramakrishnan as Ella and Lindsay Lohan as Anna Coleman in "Freakier Friday." Glen Wilson/Disney Advertisement Meanwhile, Tess has become a bestselling author of self-help books, and is still married to the easygoing Ryan (Mark Harmon, reprising his role). The elder couple are enjoying their golden years as silver-haired, spry grandparents. Harper's daily high school Hell includes run-ins with Mr. Bates (Stephen Tobolowsky), the same teacher who tormented her mother, and battles with her British chemistry lab partner, Lily (Sophia Hammons). Harper thinks Lily is an overconfident snob with an accent; Lily thinks Harper is an American idiot. After their latest argument destroys the chemistry lab, Anna and Lily's widowed dad, Eric (Manny Jacinto) are called to the principal's office. Anna takes one look at this hunky bad boy turned chef and her face turns into the heart-eyes emoji. The feeling is mutual. One movie montage later, Anna and Eric are planning a wedding. Everyone is happy except the feuding soon-to-be-stepsisters. With just three days until the wedding, will these two ever find any common ground? Cue the body swapping. Disney must have gotten the memo about the 2003 film's bad optics involving magical fortune cookies and Asian characters who spoke broken English. This film's magic comes from Vanessa Bayer's hilarious Madame Jen. She's a fortune teller who has about 17 other side hustles, including business card making and Starbucks barista. The quality of her other gigs aside, Madame Jen is very good at disrupting family drama by spiriting the squabble makers into other people's skin. First, she interacts with Tess and Anna, who are just innocent bystanders. Then, when Lily actively seeks her fortune, Madame Jen scares her and Harper with an otherworldly chant: 'Change the hearts you know are wrong to reach the place where you belong.' Advertisement The next day—a Friday, of course—Harper and Lily switch bodies. Not with each other, but with Anna and Tess. Anna is now Harper and vice versa, which makes sense. Lily and Tess are reversed, which does not make sense. Shouldn't Lily be Eric? No matter. Now that they can impersonate grown-ups, Lily and Harper hatch a plan to break up their parents' impending marriage and reunite Anna with her first love, motorcycle-riding himbo, Jake (once again played by Chad Michael Murray). Lindsay Lohan and Chad Michael Murray reprise their roles in the sequel "Freakier Friday." Glen Wilson/Disney 'They're ripping off 'The Parent Trap,'' I wrote in my notes. 'The Parent Trap' was a 1961 Disney movie whose 1998 remake starred, of all people, Lindsay Lohan. The plot is quite similar, which made me wonder if this film was playing some kind of meta-based 4-D chess. Perhaps it is. 'Freakier Friday' feels like it swapped with the 2003 movie. So many scenes, actors, and subplots are lifted from the earlier film that this one feels redundant. Curtis is also playing the same beats she did last time, except now it's a grandmother acting like a teen. I liked the 'Freaky Friday' remake. It had some real emotional heft to it, much of it due to the excellent performances by Curtis and Lohan. This time, all the characters are one-note, especially the teenagers. Despite the material, the performances aren't bad. Butters and Hammons overshadow their adult counterparts once they assume their new roles. Curtis is intermittently funny, and Lohan gets a few big laughs playing a kid in a grown-up's body. There are also several musical numbers that are well done yet stretch the movie to just under 2 hours. Advertisement The "Freakier Friday" cast includes Julia Butters as Harper Coleman, Lindsay Lohan as Anna Coleman, Jamie Lee Curtis as Tess Coleman and Sophia Hammons as Lily Davies. Glen Wilson/Disney Like 'Hocus Pocus 2' and any number of recent Disney rehashes, 'Freakier Friday' exists so that the adults who grew up on their predecessors can take their kids to the sequels. Disney has folks convinced that this is the only way to share your love. Nostalgia chooses a different path nowadays, I guess. Because when my mother wanted to share her childhood love of Mary Poppins with me, she showed me 'Mary Poppins.' If I were a kid today, she would have dragged me to 'Mary Poppins Returns' instead. How times have changed. ★★ FREAKIER FRIDAY Directed by Nisha Ganatra. Written by Jordan Weiss. Starring Jamie Lee Curtis, Lindsay Lohan, Julia Butters, Sophia Hammons, Manny Jacinto, Mark Harmon, Maitreyi Ramakrishnan, Vanessa Bayer, Chad Michael Murray, Stephen Tobolowsky. At AMC Boston Common, Landmark Kendall Square, Alamo Drafthouse Seaport, AMC Causeway, suburbs. 111 min. PG (nothing freaky or objectionable) Odie Henderson is the Boston Globe's film critic.

Vikings WR depth chart: How Jordan Addison suspension impacts Minnesota
Vikings WR depth chart: How Jordan Addison suspension impacts Minnesota

USA Today

timea few seconds ago

  • USA Today

Vikings WR depth chart: How Jordan Addison suspension impacts Minnesota

The Minnesota Vikings are set to begin the 2025 NFL season without one of their top two wide receivers. The NFL announced Tuesday it had suspended Jordan Addison for the first three games of the season for violating the league's Substances of Abuse Policy. The suspension stems from a 2024 incident during which Addison was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence. Addison's absence will create a temporary void in Minnesota's receiving corps opposite Justin Jefferson. Here's a look at the most likely candidates from the Vikings' wide receiver depth chart that could fill that hole. Who is Jordan Addison's backup? Jalen Nailor may not be Addison's true backup, but the Vikings' No. 3 receiver figures to see the largest increase in opportunities with Addison out of the lineup. Addison missed two games during the 2024 NFL season in Weeks 2 and 3 while dealing with an ankle injury. In those contests, Nailor played 104 of a possible 117 snaps while logging a combined six catches for 85 yards and two touchdowns. Logging similar production would give Nailor flex appeal across fantasy football formats. That said, it's worth wondering whether his ceiling will be capped if the Vikings try to ease first-year starter J.J. McCarthy into action as part of a run-heavy offense. EXCLUSIVE: Patrick Mahomes talks painful Super Bowl loss (and new haircut) Vikings WR depth chart The Vikings haven't released an unofficial depth chart ahead of their Week 1 preseason matchup with the Houston Texans. That said, their top three receivers are holdovers from the previous season, so the battle for roles and reps is likely to occur behind them. Below is a look at the top-five projected receivers on Minnesota's depth chart. * Denotes starter. Among the backups, Moore would figure to have the best chance to step into a larger role in Addison's absence. The 25-year-old missed the entire 2024 NFL season due to a knee injury but logged a career-best 530 scrimmage yards during the 2023 season. Felton – a 6-2, third-round rookie out of Maryland – could also see more playing time if the Vikings want a wide-out with more size than the 5-7 Moore. The Vikings carried six receivers into Week 1 last season, so Addison's suspension could allow another two of the team's depth receivers to make the roster. In addition to the six listed above, Minnesota has practice squad holdovers Lucky Jackson, Jeshaun Jones and Thayer Thomas on its 90-man roster along with newcomers Silas Bolden, Dontae Fleming, Tim Jones, Robert Lewis and Myles Price.

Trump says 2028 Olympic athletes will be tested to prevent transgender competitors
Trump says 2028 Olympic athletes will be tested to prevent transgender competitors

USA Today

timea few seconds ago

  • USA Today

Trump says 2028 Olympic athletes will be tested to prevent transgender competitors

Asked if he would consider genetic testing to stop transgender Olympic competitors, Trump said "there will be a very, very strong form of testing." President Donald Trump said athletes hoping to compete in the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games in Los Angeles will be tested to prevent transgender athletes from participating. Asked during an Aug. 5 press conference focused on the Olympics if he would consider genetic testing to stop transgender competitors, Trump said "there will be a very, very strong form of testing, and if the test doesn't come out appropriately they won't be in the Olympics." Trump signed an executive order in February aimed at barring transgender student athletes from participating in women's sports. The U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee later changed its rules to prevent participation by transgender women, citing Trump's executive order. USOPC president Gene Sykes and CEO Sarah Hirshland sent a letter to the Olympic community saying the change came after "a series of respectful and constructive conversations with federal officials" following the executive order. On Aug. 4, the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services issued policy guidance preventing trans women from receiving 'extraordinary ability' visas to compete in women's sports. Trump's comments about testing athletes came after he signed an executive order to create a White House Olympics task force to handle security and other issues related to the 2028 games. The games are expected to draw 11,000 Olympic and 4,500 Paralympic athletes. Contributing: Nancy Armour, Reuters

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store