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Scottie Scheffler comparisons might be closer to Jack Nicklaus than Tiger Woods
Scottie Scheffler comparisons might be closer to Jack Nicklaus than Tiger Woods

Winnipeg Free Press

time22-07-2025

  • Sport
  • Winnipeg Free Press

Scottie Scheffler comparisons might be closer to Jack Nicklaus than Tiger Woods

PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland (AP) — Even with four majors, three legs of the Grand Slam and 20 victories around the world, it's a little early to be making Scottie Scheffler comparisons. And yes, it's a bit silly. But one moment is worth noting. His four-shot victory at the British Open complete, Scheffler saw 15-month-old son Bennett coming toward him on the 18th green at Royal Portrush. The toddler face-planted going up the slope. Scheffler eventually scooped him into his left arm, his right hand holding the claret jug. This was pure joy. It was reminiscent of Canterbury in the 1973 PGA Championship. Jack Nicklaus, who that week broke the record for most major titles, was coming off the 18th green after the second round when 4-year-old son Gary ran out to meet him. The Golden Bear carried off his cub. 'My favorite photo in golf,' Nicklaus said years later in a Facebook post that he ended by saying, 'Family first, golf second.' Sound familiar? 'He plays a lot like I did,' Nicklaus said in late May at the Memorial, and perhaps that's where any similarities should start. Comparisons with Tiger Woods are natural because they are separated by a generation, and no one has been this dominant for such a long stretch since Woods. Scheffler has stayed at No. 1 for the last two years and two months. But their games, their styles, their paths are not all that similar. Everyone saw Woods coming when he was on 'The Mike Douglas Show' at age 2, when he won the Junior Worlds six times and both the U.S. Junior and the U.S. Amateur three straight times. He made a hole-in-one in his pro debut. He won his first PGA Tour event in his fifth start. Scheffler spent his first year as a pro on the Korn Ferry Tour. 'I played with him a lot in college, and he was not that good,' Bryson DeChambeau said with a laugh. He now refers to Scheffler as being 'in a league of his own.' Woods was all about power and putting. Scheffler is fairways and greens. Woods was overwhelming, winning the Masters by 12 shots, the U.S. Open by 15 and the British Open at St. Andrews by eight for the career Grand Slam at age 24. Scheffler is relentless. He can take the drama out of a major without notice. He's the first player to win each of his first four majors by at least three shots since J.H. Taylor more than a century ago, when the British Open was the only major and had fields smaller than a signature event. Nicklaus picked up on this at the Memorial without ever talking to Scheffler about it. Before the tournament, Nicklaus spoke about his approach to golf — more emphasis on the tee shot (left-to-right shape, like Scheffler) and the approach, less dependence on putting for a good score. And when he got the lead, Nicklaus did what was required. Scheffler won that week by four shots. 'Once I got myself into position to win, then you've got to be smart about how you finish it,' Nicklaus said. 'And that's the way he's playing. He reminds me so much of the way I like to play.' Scheffler was quick to point out he was just over one-fourth of the way to matching Woods' 15 majors (and his 82 tour wins, for that matter). Scheffler most likely can never reach his appeal. Woods was special, a corporate dream. He came back to win at Pebble Beach when trailing by seven with seven holes to play. Fans didn't dare turn away without fear of missing a shot they might never see again. Scheffler won the British Open and mentioned Chipotle. He was trying to explain, as he did when he first reached No. 1 in 2022, that golf doesn't define him. That's what was lost in his remarkable monologue earlier in the week at Royal Portrush. The joy comes from getting to play, getting to work, getting better. The goal is to win. And then he goes home to a wife and son. He is about faith, family and then golf. Fame isn't part of the equation. Scheffler mentioned two Chipotle restaurants at home in Dallas. He can no longer go to one of them because he is recognized. At the other one he's just a guy at the counter trying to decide if he wants extra guacamole. 'I try to live as normal of a life as possible because I feel like a normal guy,' he said. 'I have the same friends I had growing up. I don't think that I'm anything special just because some weeks I'm better at shooting a lower score than other guys are.' There was one other Scheffler comparison. Nicklaus doesn't believe he could have achieved all that he did without his wife, Barbara, whom he honored this year at the Memorial and who is universally regarded as the first lady of golf. Nicklaus played his 164th and final major at St. Andrews in 2005 and said that week: 'I'm not really concerned about what my legacy is in relation to the game of golf, frankly. I'm more concerned with what my legacy is with my family, with my kids and my grandkids. That's by far more important to me.' Scheffler's emotions began to pour out at Royal Portrush only when he saw Meredith, the girl he first met as a high school freshman and finally dated as a senior. He made his PGA Tour debut at the Byron Nelson that year at 17. He recalled being at her house the week before when a promotion about the tournament came on TV. Meredith said to him: 'Wait a minute. Isn't that what you're doing?' Scheffler said she's a fast learner. 'Every time I'm able to win a tournament, the first person I always look for is my wife,' he said Sunday. 'She knows me better than anybody. That's my best friend. It takes a lot of work to be able to become good at this game, and I wouldn't be able to do it without her support.' Thursdays Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter. To the rest of golf world, he's the No. 1 player in the world, now the 'champion golfer of the year.' Fame won't escape him now even if it doesn't define him. ___ On The Fringe analyzes the biggest topics in golf during the season. ___ AP golf:

Scottie Scheffler comparisons might be closer to Jack Nicklaus than Tiger Woods
Scottie Scheffler comparisons might be closer to Jack Nicklaus than Tiger Woods

Hamilton Spectator

time22-07-2025

  • Sport
  • Hamilton Spectator

Scottie Scheffler comparisons might be closer to Jack Nicklaus than Tiger Woods

PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland (AP) — Even with four majors, three legs of the Grand Slam and 20 victories around the world, it's a little early to be making Scottie Scheffler comparisons. And yes, it's a bit silly. But one moment is worth noting. His four-shot victory at the British Open complete, Scheffler saw 15-month-old son Bennett coming toward him on the 18th green at Royal Portrush. The toddler face-planted going up the slope. Scheffler eventually scooped him into his left arm, his right hand holding the claret jug. This was pure joy. It was reminiscent of Canterbury in the 1973 PGA Championship. Jack Nicklaus, who that week broke the record for most major titles, was coming off the 18th green after the second round when 4-year-old son Gary ran out to meet him. The Golden Bear carried off his cub. 'My favorite photo in golf,' Nicklaus said years later in a Facebook post that he ended by saying, 'Family first, golf second.' Sound familiar? 'He plays a lot like I did,' Nicklaus said in late May at the Memorial, and perhaps that's where any similarities should start. Comparisons with Tiger Woods are natural because they are separated by a generation, and no one has been this dominant for such a long stretch since Woods. Scheffler has stayed at No. 1 for the last two years and two months. But their games, their styles, their paths are not all that similar. Everyone saw Woods coming when he was on 'The Mike Douglas Show' at age 2, when he won the Junior Worlds six times and both the U.S. Junior and the U.S. Amateur three straight times. He made a hole-in-one in his pro debut. He won his first PGA Tour event in his fifth start. Scheffler spent his first year as a pro on the Korn Ferry Tour. 'I played with him a lot in college, and he was not that good,' Bryson DeChambeau said with a laugh. He now refers to Scheffler as being 'in a league of his own.' Woods was all about power and putting. Scheffler is fairways and greens. Woods was overwhelming, winning the Masters by 12 shots, the U.S. Open by 15 and the British Open at St. Andrews by eight for the career Grand Slam at age 24. Scheffler is relentless. He can take the drama out of a major without notice. He's the first player to win each of his first four majors by at least three shots since J.H. Taylor more than a century ago, when the British Open was the only major and had fields smaller than a signature event. Nicklaus picked up on this at the Memorial without ever talking to Scheffler about it. Before the tournament, Nicklaus spoke about his approach to golf — more emphasis on the tee shot (left-to-right shape, like Scheffler) and the approach, less dependence on putting for a good score. And when he got the lead, Nicklaus did what was required. Scheffler won that week by four shots. 'Once I got myself into position to win, then you've got to be smart about how you finish it,' Nicklaus said. 'And that's the way he's playing. He reminds me so much of the way I like to play.' Scheffler was quick to point out he was just over one-fourth of the way to matching Woods' 15 majors (and his 82 tour wins, for that matter). Scheffler most likely can never reach his appeal. Woods was special, a corporate dream. He came back to win at Pebble Beach when trailing by seven with seven holes to play. Fans didn't dare turn away without fear of missing a shot they might never see again. Scheffler won the British Open and mentioned Chipotle. He was trying to explain, as he did when he first reached No. 1 in 2022, that golf doesn't define him. That's what was lost in his remarkable monologue earlier in the week at Royal Portrush. The joy comes from getting to play, getting to work, getting better. The goal is to win. And then he goes home to a wife and son. He is about faith, family and then golf. Fame isn't part of the equation. Scheffler mentioned two Chipotle restaurants at home in Dallas. He can no longer go to one of them because he is recognized. At the other one he's just a guy at the counter trying to decide if he wants extra guacamole. 'I try to live as normal of a life as possible because I feel like a normal guy,' he said. 'I have the same friends I had growing up. I don't think that I'm anything special just because some weeks I'm better at shooting a lower score than other guys are.' There was one other Scheffler comparison. Nicklaus doesn't believe he could have achieved all that he did without his wife, Barbara, whom he honored this year at the Memorial and who is universally regarded as the first lady of golf. Nicklaus played his 164th and final major at St. Andrews in 2005 and said that week: 'I'm not really concerned about what my legacy is in relation to the game of golf, frankly. I'm more concerned with what my legacy is with my family, with my kids and my grandkids. That's by far more important to me.' Scheffler's emotions began to pour out at Royal Portrush only when he saw Meredith, the girl he first met as a high school freshman and finally dated as a senior. He made his PGA Tour debut at the Byron Nelson that year at 17. He recalled being at her house the week before when a promotion about the tournament came on TV. Meredith said to him: 'Wait a minute. Isn't that what you're doing?' Scheffler said she's a fast learner. 'Every time I'm able to win a tournament, the first person I always look for is my wife,' he said Sunday. 'She knows me better than anybody. That's my best friend. It takes a lot of work to be able to become good at this game, and I wouldn't be able to do it without her support.' To the rest of golf world, he's the No. 1 player in the world, now the 'champion golfer of the year.' Fame won't escape him now even if it doesn't define him. ___ On The Fringe analyzes the biggest topics in golf during the season. ___ AP golf:

Scottie Scheffler comparisons might be closer to Jack Nicklaus than Tiger Woods

time22-07-2025

  • Sport

Scottie Scheffler comparisons might be closer to Jack Nicklaus than Tiger Woods

PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland -- Even with four majors, three legs of the Grand Slam and 20 victories around the world, it's a little early to be making Scottie Scheffler comparisons. And yes, it's a bit silly. But one moment is worth noting. His four-shot victory at the British Open complete, Scheffler saw 15-month-old son Bennett coming toward him on the 18th green at Royal Portrush. The toddler face-planted going up the slope. Scheffler eventually scooped him into his left arm, his right hand holding the claret jug. This was pure joy. It was reminiscent of Canterbury in the 1973 PGA Championship. Jack Nicklaus, who that week broke the record for most major titles, was coming off the 18th green after the second round when 4-year-old son Gary ran out to meet him. The Golden Bear carried off his cub. 'My favorite photo in golf,' Nicklaus said years later in a Facebook post that he ended by saying, 'Family first, golf second.' Sound familiar? 'He plays a lot like I did,' Nicklaus said in late May at the Memorial, and perhaps that's where any similarities should start. Comparisons with Tiger Woods are natural because they are separated by a generation, and no one has been this dominant for such a long stretch since Woods. Scheffler has stayed at No. 1 for the last two years and two months. But their games, their styles, their paths are not all that similar. Everyone saw Woods coming when he was on 'The Mike Douglas Show' at age 2, when he won the Junior Worlds six times and both the U.S. Junior and the U.S. Amateur three straight times. He made a hole-in-one in his pro debut. He won his first PGA Tour event in his fifth start. Scheffler spent his first year as a pro on the Korn Ferry Tour. 'I played with him a lot in college, and he was not that good,' Bryson DeChambeau said with a laugh. He now refers to Scheffler as being 'in a league of his own.' Woods was all about power and putting. Scheffler is fairways and greens. Woods was overwhelming, winning the Masters by 12 shots, the U.S. Open by 15 and the British Open at St. Andrews by eight for the career Grand Slam at age 24. Scheffler is relentless. He can take the drama out of a major without notice. He's the first player to win each of his first four majors by at least three shots since J.H. Taylor more than a century ago, when the British Open was the only major and had fields smaller than a signature event. Nicklaus picked up on this at the Memorial without ever talking to Scheffler about it. Before the tournament, Nicklaus spoke about his approach to golf — more emphasis on the tee shot (left-to-right shape, like Scheffler) and the approach, less dependence on putting for a good score. And when he got the lead, Nicklaus did what was required. Scheffler won that week by four shots. 'Once I got myself into position to win, then you've got to be smart about how you finish it,' Nicklaus said. 'And that's the way he's playing. He reminds me so much of the way I like to play.' Scheffler was quick to point out he was just over one-fourth of the way to matching Woods' 15 majors (and his 82 tour wins, for that matter). Scheffler most likely can never reach his appeal. Woods was special, a corporate dream. He came back to win at Pebble Beach when trailing by seven with seven holes to play. Fans didn't dare turn away without fear of missing a shot they might never see again. Scheffler won the British Open and mentioned Chipotle. He was trying to explain, as he did when he first reached No. 1 in 2022, that golf doesn't define him. That's what was lost in his remarkable monologue earlier in the week at Royal Portrush. The joy comes from getting to play, getting to work, getting better. The goal is to win. And then he goes home to a wife and son. He is about faith, family and then golf. Fame isn't part of the equation. Scheffler mentioned two Chipotle restaurants at home in Dallas. He can no longer go to one of them because he is recognized. At the other one he's just a guy at the counter trying to decide if he wants extra guacamole. 'I try to live as normal of a life as possible because I feel like a normal guy,' he said. 'I have the same friends I had growing up. I don't think that I'm anything special just because some weeks I'm better at shooting a lower score than other guys are.' There was one other Scheffler comparison. Nicklaus doesn't believe he could have achieved all that he did without his wife, Barbara, whom he honored this year at the Memorial and who is universally regarded as the first lady of golf. Nicklaus played his 164th and final major at St. Andrews in 2005 and said that week: 'I'm not really concerned about what my legacy is in relation to the game of golf, frankly. I'm more concerned with what my legacy is with my family, with my kids and my grandkids. That's by far more important to me.' Scheffler's emotions began to pour out at Royal Portrush only when he saw Meredith, the girl he first met as a high school freshman and finally dated as a senior. He made his PGA Tour debut at the Byron Nelson that year at 17. He recalled being at her house the week before when a promotion about the tournament came on TV. Meredith said to him: 'Wait a minute. Isn't that what you're doing?' Scheffler said she's a fast learner. 'Every time I'm able to win a tournament, the first person I always look for is my wife,' he said Sunday. 'She knows me better than anybody. That's my best friend. It takes a lot of work to be able to become good at this game, and I wouldn't be able to do it without her support.' To the rest of golf world, he's the No. 1 player in the world, now the 'champion golfer of the year." Fame won't escape him now even if it doesn't define him. On The Fringe analyzes the biggest topics in golf during the season.

JJ Spaun Notices 'Complete 180' in Players' Attitude After U.S. Open Win
JJ Spaun Notices 'Complete 180' in Players' Attitude After U.S. Open Win

Newsweek

time10-07-2025

  • Sport
  • Newsweek

JJ Spaun Notices 'Complete 180' in Players' Attitude After U.S. Open Win

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Do you remember when JJ Spaun drained that 65-foot birdie putt at rain-soaked Oakmonton to win the U.S. Open? One would still get chills if they see Spaun, soaked and stunned, raise his arms and throw the club in the air as the ball disappears into the cup. ABSOLUTE CINEMA J.J.'S PUTT TO WIN THE U.S. OPEN FROM EVERY ANGLE — U.S. Open (@usopengolf) June 16, 2025 That Father's Day was like a turning point for the 34-year-old dad. He broke down in tears right after, and the golf world broke open with praise. Adam Scott, Spaun's longtime idol, was among the first to congratulate him. And an old tweet Spaun posted years ago, admiring Scott, went viral overnight. But the American pro's biggest revelation came this week at the Genesis Scottish Open, where he admitted that life on Tour has flipped since he lifted the trophy at Oakmont. "It's been a complete 180," he admitted on Wednesday. NORTH BERWICK, SCOTLAND - JULY 09: J. J. Spaun of the United States looks on during the pro-am prior to the Genesis Scottish Open 2025 at The Renaissance Club on July 09, 2025 in North... NORTH BERWICK, SCOTLAND - JULY 09: J. J. Spaun of the United States looks on during the pro-am prior to the Genesis Scottish Open 2025 at The Renaissance Club on July 09, 2025 in North Berwick, Scotland. (Photo by) More Getty Images "I've been out here for eight, nine years now... but you kind of notice a little bit of change in tone or I guess more of like respect. "Especially from the top guys," Spaun highlighted. "They engage a little bit more with you. You kind of feel you're at a different level now, winning a major." One of those top guys was Jack Nicklaus. Spaun recalled a moment at the Memorial Tournament, just a week before Oakmont, when the Golden Bear stopped him. "He just said I was playing really well. I said, 'Yeah, it would've been nice to win.' He's like, 'You keep knocking on that door, you're going to knock one down.'" The 34-year-old did exactly that, and Nicklaus followed up with a personal letter. "It was really cool," Spaun said. Now he stands at No. 8 in the Official World Golf Rankings (OWGR), but still feels stunned by the attention. "It feels good to kind of earn that respect from my peers... making me feel like I belong, which is huge for confidence and huge for self-belief." He added, "I still kind of can't fathom every time someone congratulates me for winning the U.S. Open. It's still a pinch-me moment... I'm completely honored." Now, back at the Genesis Scottish Open, JJ Spuan shot an even par 70 during his opening round. He is six shots off the lead. More Golf: PGA Tour posts persimmon gift for Rory McIlroy amid Grand Slam

R-E-S-P-E-C-T: JJ Spaun gets letter from Jack Nicklaus, congrats from pros as major champ
R-E-S-P-E-C-T: JJ Spaun gets letter from Jack Nicklaus, congrats from pros as major champ

USA Today

time09-07-2025

  • Sport
  • USA Today

R-E-S-P-E-C-T: JJ Spaun gets letter from Jack Nicklaus, congrats from pros as major champ

J.J. Spaun is still adjusting to his admission into a new world after winning the U.S. Open at Oakmont last month. Spaun, 34, described himself as going from 'a mid-tier player fighting for his card' to a 'major winner,' and the way his fellow pros and fans have been treating him has made an impression. 'It's been a complete 180. I've been out here for eight, nine years now, and you see the same guys, but you kind of notice a little bit of change in tone, or I guess more of like respect,' Spaun said on Wednesday during a press conference ahead of the Genesis Scottish Open. 'Especially from the top guys. They engage a little bit more with you. Not that they are different with other players, but you kind of feel you're at a different level now, winning a major.' Among those players who have congratulated Spaun on his career-defining moment? None other than Jack Nicklaus, who wrote him a letter. Funny enough, Spaun had chatted with the Golden Bear at the Memorial, the last tournament Spaun had played before being the only player in the 156-man field to break par at the U.S. Open. Nicklaus, who is the tournament host at Muirfield Village, stopped Spaun and let him know that his good play hadn't gone unnoticed. 'I never really engaged with him before that,' Spaun said, 'and he just said I was playing really well. I said, 'Yeah, it would have been nice to win.' He's like, 'You keep knocking on that door, you're going to knock one down,' and, literally, the next week that happened. He remembered that and sent me a nice note, which was really cool.' Spaun played the following week at the Travelers Championship after his two-shot victory over Robert MacIntyre. After a sluggish start, Spaun closed with 63 to finish T-14. Not that he's complaining but hardly a moment goes by without another person congratulating Spaun, who had only one previous victory since joining the Tour in 2014, on becoming a major winner. 'Everyone wants to come up to you, which is cool, but man, I mean, how does Scottie do it?' he said, referencing world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, who has reeled in three majors and 16 titles since February 2023. 'I guess people just get sick and tired of telling him congrats, they just don't tell him after a while.' Spaun continued: 'It feels good to kind of earn that respect from my peers, and obviously the greatest players that are out here kind of acknowledging me and making me feel like I belong, which is huge for confidence and huge for self-belief. 'It's still a pinch-me moment that it's something that I did do. It's very cool, and I'm completely honored to kind of, yeah, earn the respect from the other players and the fans … It's awesome. I'll never get sick of it.' Spaun also has been elevated to one of the featured groupings for the first two rounds and will play alongside Tommy Fleetwood and Scotland's own Connor Syme, at the Genesis Scottish Open. It will be held at the Renaissance Club in North Berwick for the seventh consecutive year. It's a co-sanctioned PGA Tour and DP World Tour event for the fourth year in a row.

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