
Open champ Scottie Scheffler brands Tiger Woods comparisons 'silly'
The 28-year-old won his second major of the year after May's US PGA, his fourth in total, and he is three-quarters of the way towards a career Grand Slam – which he can complete at next year's US Open in the same four-year time-frame as Jack Nicklaus.
Only 15-time major winner Woods has done it quicker, in three years.
The numbers continue to stack up for the world number one, whose 17-under total gave him a four-stroke victory at Royal Portrush but belied how comfortable his win was.
On Saturday evening Rory McIlroy, a five-time major winner who himself completed the Grand Slam at the Masters in April, said Scheffler was "inevitable" and his play is giving off a Woods-type aura.
He is 111-under-par in majors since the beginning of 2020, 46 shots better than anyone else, and is four from four when it comes to converting 54-hole major leads (Woods won his first 14) and has been world number one for 112 consecutive weeks.
"I still think they're a bit silly," Scheffler said of the Woods comparison.
"Tiger won, what, 15 majors? This is my fourth. I just got one-fourth of the way there.
"I think Tiger stands alone in the game of golf. He was inspirational for me growing up. He was a very, very talented guy, and he was a special person to be able to be as good as he was at the game of golf.
"I don't focus on that kind of stuff. That's not what motivates me. I'm not motivated by winning championships. I don't look at the beginning of the year and just say 'Hey, I want to win X amount of tournaments, I want to win whatever it is'.
"I have dreams and aspirations that I think about, but at the end of the day I feel like what motivates me is just getting out and getting to live out my dream.
"I get to play professional golf, and I feel like I'm called to do it to the best of my ability.
"I don't place much emphasis on things that I can accomplish. It's just mostly about putting in the proper work and coming out here and competing.
"I've always done my best when I'm able to live in the present."
On Tuesday Scheffler gave a surprisingly revealing press conference at which he admitted being successful at golf did not fulfil him and he prioritises being a good husband and father over anything.
After winning the Claret Jug he felt his comments were taken out of context and insisted he was not disrespecting the game or making light of his achievements.
"I think it really underestimates what I was trying to communicate. Maybe I didn't do as effective of a job as I hoped to in communicating that," he added.
"At the end of the day, I have a tremendous amount of gratitude towards moments like these.
"I literally worked my entire life to become good at this game and play this game for a living. It's one of my greatest joys of my life to compete out here.
"To be able to win The Open Championship here at Portrush is a feeling that's really hard to describe.
"This is amazing to win the Open Championship, but at the end of the day, having success in life, whether it be in golf, work, whatever it is, that's not what fulfils the deepest desires of your heart.
"Am I grateful for it? Do I enjoy it? Oh, my gosh, yes, this is a cool feeling.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Daily Mirror
3 hours ago
- Irish Daily Mirror
Tommy Fleetwood's £120k Open prize money sent to the wrong person
Tommy Fleetwood, the English golfer, didn't receive his £120,000 prize money after finishing T12 at The Open Championship in 2018. At 34, he's still hunting for his first major, having secured a T16 at Royal Portrush just last week. Despite not being a serious contender, he managed to score a seven-under par, while Scottie Scheffler dominated from the start and clinched his first Claret Jug by a four-shot lead. Fleetwood has had close calls at the Open before, notably finishing as runner-up in 2019. This means the tournament has significantly boosted his impressive career earnings of £23.1million. Yet, the popular Southport-born golfer was once left scratching his head following the Open at Carnoustie after his winnings were accidentally transferred to an American man with the name Thomas Fleetwood. Thomas Fleetwood, a club professional based at Streamstrong Resort in Florida, was born in 1959 and contested the European Senior Tour's qualifying school four times from 2013. Fleetwood, who is also a caddie, told Reuters he had been trying to get in touch with the Englishman. He said: "It was an honest mistake. I tried to get on their senior tour, so they have my [bank] information." The PGA Tour star himself was left more confused than annoyed by the error, as he said: "It looks pretty genuine. They [the European Tour] are looking into it and I'm sure they'll feel pretty bad about it. (Image: Getty Images) "It's a funny story. It's just something I don't really look at but I'll get on top of that." Greg Thorner, who posted the screenshot of his friend Thomas' bank account, said: "He played a few European events so the European Tour obviously had some information on him and it must have got mixed up. "I didn't believe him at first but then I watched him log into his account and I was like 'Holy crap'. He was not positive it was the same amount that Tommy won at the Open but we checked and it was. "He immediately contacted the bank and told them you've put money into my account that's not mine and unfortunately the money has already been taken out." The European Tour, now the DP World Tour, said at the time: "This was a clerical error which we are resolving and we apologise for the inconvenience caused to both parties." Fleetwood is set to receive £137,535 for his latest efforts at the Open. He will hope to receive his money without any surprises along the way this time around.


Irish Independent
4 hours ago
- Irish Independent
Indo Sport podcast: Bits & Bobs Scottie's Tiger comparisons Lions Tour is as we feared
Today at 14:18 Conor McKeon is fresh back from Portrush as he joins Joe and Will for a Monday Bits & Bobs with Scottie Scheffler's Open win and the Lions tour to the fore. The team debate why Scottie Scheffler fails to stir the emotion, despite the legendary form he is in, as Conor brings us the scenery from his performance on the Antrim coast.


Irish Examiner
5 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Open victor Scottie Scheffler is latest sporting star to explore space beyond wins and losses
The world's top athletes can seem a confused bunch. Scottie Scheffler described in a press conference before the Open how he keeps asking himself why he wants to win golf tournaments and can't find any answers. The world No 3 men's tennis player Alexander Zverev confessed to feelings of emptiness and a lack of joy in his tennis regardless of whether he wins or loses matches. The Wimbledon women's singles runner-up Amanda Anisimova took a long break from tennis to preserve her mental health, was written off by many and unsure what to expect on return, yet ended up in the SW19 final. What's going on? As the world's top athletes naturally push the boundaries of what's possible physically, so they also have to push the limits mentally, and these questions and experiences are a vital part of that process. We're seeing more and more athletes explore the space beyond winning and losing, a concept many in sport have yet to understand actually exists. But as most athletes find out, some sooner than others, to get caught up with winning and losing is to lose the point, both on the court and in life. Finding a purpose behind the pursuit of trophies now forms a key part of an athlete's mental journey to reach and sustain their highest levels of performance. And, typical of elite performance, it's not an easy path. Scheffler explained before and after triumphing at Royal Portrush that winning tournaments brought a positive sense of achievement but that this shouldn't be mistaken for deep, lasting fulfilment. In many ways, it's a healthy questioning attitude. Scheffler is largely in a good place: he still enjoys playing, while keenly aware that winning a golf tournament can never be the be all and end all. But he is aware he doesn't yet have a good enough answer to the question: 'Why do I want to win this championship so badly?' Anisimova was facing burnout two years ago and knew she had to step away. This time off allowed her to reconnect with herself and redefine why she wanted to play tennis again. She said many people told her she would never make it back if she took time out – one wonders whose interests they were looking after or whether they understood the need to nurture an athlete's mental and emotional health as much as the physical and physiological side. Zverev seems to sense he must find a different route and knows the answer isn't about winning or losing. Scheffler, Anisimova and Zverev each prove age‑old findings of biology, psychology and philosophy that humans need meaning in our lives beyond immediate, material gains. Whether you look at the top level of the psychologist Abraham Maslow's hierarchy of needs, return to the Greek Stoic philosophers, or open up the psychiatrist and Auschwitz survivor Viktor Frankl's classic work Man's Search for Meaning, the prime motivating force in humans is to find meaning and purpose in life. Trophies are fun, and we all enjoy them. But as Scheffler reminds us, those celebrations last only a few minutes and won't ever 'fill the deepest wants and desires of my heart'. It's important to note these athletes are not saying winning doesn't matter. It's just not the only thing and, as winning is by its nature temporary and shallow, it's insufficient to sustain the highest levels of performance. Asking 'what's the point of sport?' can feel dangerous, almost heretical, but it's clearly a powerful thought process to sustain any athlete wanting to explore their full potential. Scottie Scheffler celebrates with the Claret Jug after winning The Open at Royal Portrush. Photo: INPHO/Ben Brady Finding reasons why sport matters can look different for different athletes but typically involves the awareness of the person that you are becoming through the pursuit of sporting excellence, the depth of connection that you have with friends, family and wider communities that you belong to, and, over time, the lasting positive impact or legacy you might leave. Giving athletes space and support to explore how they find meaning from their sporting journey is becoming a critical quality for coaches to support and facilitate. But it's a world away from many coaching development routes which have for decades emphasised technical and tactical excellence. Even in the world of sports psychology where there is greatest skill in this area, it's not what is often requested from coaches or performance directors. Organisations including Switch the Play, the True Athlete Project, ACT and the Jacobs Futura Foundation have woken up to the need to help athletes transition out of sport at the end of their careers, alongside various companies that offer athlete transition programmes. What is becoming clear is that those conversations about purpose, identity and social impact need to come much earlier in an athlete's career, long before they retire. An interesting consequence that follows when athletes do have a strong sense of meaning, purpose and connection is less difference between the emotional states of winners and losers. Both winning and losing prove useful in the pursuit of connection with others and the process of self-discovery and character development, reinforcing values and virtues such as resilience, courage, gratitude, and humility. We saw this demonstrated by the Wimbledon men's singles finalists and top two players in the world, Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz, whose speeches were remarkably similar and based largely on gratitude, humility and accepting loss. Alcaraz clarified that losses hurt but were 'not failures' and Sinner emphasised how important it had been to 'accept' his loss a few weeks earlier at the French Open. They had given everything to win Wimbledon but were both immediately grounded that who they are isn't changed by the result and that they are playing a bigger game. Performance sport shows us contenders at the top of their game whose incredible feats of human possibility now go beyond the field of play. As Sinner said just after holding the Wimbledon trophy for the first time: 'We just keep pushing and trying to become a better tennis player, but mostly a better person.' That's the way to find the mental edge, whatever game you're playing. Guardian