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Scottie Scheffler Doubles Down on Why Being No. 1 Still Doesn’t Satisfy His Hunger

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Imagine being the best in the world at your favorite game. Most people would just stop and take a long nap. But Scottie Scheffler is not like most people at all. He won 6 times in 2025 and has been holding the world number one spot for more than 130 straight weeks now, yet he still feels hungry for more.

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“I think I have the understanding that I’m never going to get there[perfection]. This is a game that can’t be perfected. But I think that’s what always keeps you coming back. Because you can always get a little bit better, you can always get a little bit sharper,” Scheffler shared at the 2026 The American Express presser. “And there’s nothing better than hitting the ball exactly the way you want to. That’s one of the best feelings ever. I think as golfers we’re all kind of chasing that.”

Golf has always eaten perfection for breakfast. With 18 professional major championships, Jack Nicklaus once set a bar that many believed to be the absolute limit of human potential. Before Nicklaus fully ascended, Arnold Palmer defined the pinnacle of the sport. And if anyone searches for statistical perfection, the journey leads to 1945 and Byron Nelson.

In a year, Nelson won 18 tournaments and, more absurdly, he won 11 consecutive starts, a record that stands as one of the rarest feats in golf. Nelson’s scoring average of 68.33 in 1945 seemed like a typographical error in that era. Then came Tiger Woods. If Nelson, Nicklaus, and Palmer laid the groundwork, Woods built the skyscraper.

In 2000, Woods dismantled the concept of competitive balance. He won three majors (U.S. Open, Open Championship, PGA Championship) and nine times overall. And then, when Woods achieved these feats, and it was assumed that the ceiling had been reached, Scottie Scheffler arrived, a quarter-century later, who is looking at Woods’s records not as a ceiling, but as a target.

That’s why last year, after winning the Open Championship at Royal Portrush, when asked about almost the same thing, Scheffler said something similar.

“Is it great to be able to win tournaments and to accomplish the things I have in the game of golf? It brings tears to my eyes just to think about it because I’ve literally worked my entire life to be good at this sport…. But at the end of the day, I’m not out here to inspire the next generation of golfers. I’m not out here to inspire someone to be the best player in the world, because what’s the point?”

In the last few years, Scheffler has won 19 times on the Tour and won four major titles before turning thirty. He landed in the top ten in seventeen out of twenty events last year. Scottie won the PGA Championship, the Open Championship, and was the first player since Woods to defend his title at the Memorial Tournament.

He also didn’t just win the fourth consecutive Player of the Year award, but also won the Byron Nelson Award for scoring average for the third straight time. His scoring average of 68.1 led the whole Tour in scoring average for all four rounds individually, a feat we hadn’t seen since the prime years of Tiger Woods. But despite this, Scheffler thinks his game is imperfect and needs to improve in the upcoming season. He needs to win the U.S. Open to complete his Career Grand Slam and become the seventh golfer to do so.

This never-ending chase for a better game leads him back to the American Express 2026.

The desert return: Why La Quinta matters for Scottie Scheffler

What better place to start chasing than La Quinta? Scottie Scheffler has played in this event six times but never won. His best performance came when he finished third back in 2020.  He missed the 2025 edition due to a kitchen injury, so this 2026 start feels like a small shot at unfinished business. Scheffler also expressed his desire to win the event.

“I wouldn’t say that I’m super goal-oriented. I always do my best to try to stay in the present, and I’ve been preparing to get ready for this event to start the season,” Scheffler said. “And I feel like my game’s in a good spot, and I’m definitely excited to get out there and start another season.”

He did not idle across the offseason. Scheffler returned in December at the inaugural Optum Golf Channel Games with his Ryder Cup Team to play against Rory McIlroy’s European Team and won the event at the defining Captain’s challenge moment.

Still, the AmEx field will not hand him an easy week. Defending champion Sepp Straka, Patrick Cantlay, Robert MacIntyre, and Sam Burns all provide legitimate threats. Several top-25 players entered, and course specialists like Cantlay know how to score on Dye layouts. 

Finally, remember the quote that started this story. Scheffler accepts the chase, and that acceptance frees him from the peer pressure. After this event, Scheffler will head to the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am next week.

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Fitzpatrick’s parents on play-off win against Scheffler

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The roar of the crowd barely compared to the quiet, overwhelming emotion unfolding just beyond the ropes. While fans celebrated the brilliance of Matt Fitzpatrick’s clutch performance, another story was quietly reaching its peak—one written not in scorecards, but in years of unwavering belief.

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Standing side by side, his parents watched the final moments of the playoff with hearts full and eyes glistening. They had seen it all: the early mornings, the setbacks, the near-misses that tested not just talent, but resolve. And now, against the relentless composure of Scottie Scheffler, their son delivered when it mattered most.

This wasn’t just about a win at the RBC Heritage. It was about validation—for every sacrifice, every mile traveled, every quiet moment of encouragement when the spotlight was nowhere to be found. As Fitzpatrick held his nerve in the playoff, his parents held onto something even deeper: the realization that the journey they had all shared had finally come full circle.

In that moment, victory felt bigger than golf. It was personal. It was emotional. And for those who had been there from the very beginning, it meant everything.

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Fitzpatrick hits ‘out of this world’ shot to defeat Scheffler in RBC Heritage playoff

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England’s Matt Fitzpatrick beat the world No 1, Scottie Scheffler, in a playoff to win the RBC Heritage for the second time.

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Fitzpatrick took a three-shot lead into the final round at Hilton Head and still held that advantage standing on the 15th tee. But playing partner Scheffler produced birdies at 15 and 16 and Fitzpatrick’s duffed chip on 18 cost him a bogey, sending him into a playoff that he looked second favourite to win.

Fitzpatrick, though, hit a superb four-iron approach shot to 12 feet and rolled in a tournament-winning birdie after Scheffler had missed the green with his second and chipped to eight feet with his next.

“It was a lot of grit,” Fitzpatrick, from Yorkshire, told CBS after claiming the fourth PGA Tour title of his career and second in the space of 28 days after winning at the Valspar Championship last month.

“I knew Scottie was going to make some birdies down the stretch and I kind of had to hang in there a little bit. The only chip shot I found into grain all week was in regulation there [the 18th].”

Fitzpatrick – who said the RBC Heritage was close to his heart as he holidayed at Hilton Head with his family when he was young – evoked memories of Rory McIlroy’s stunning victory at the Masters last week after his lead had been whittled away. McIlroy had lost a six-shot halfway advantage in Augusta before winning his second Green Jacket on a dramatic final afternoon.

After failing to win in regulation, Fitzpatrick said of his caddie Dan Parratt: “He actually said: ‘Go and get to the tee. We would have taken this at the start of the week.’

“I know Rory said that the other week so I jokingly said to Dan: ‘OK, here he is, [McIlroy’s caddie] Harry Diamond.’ We had a good laugh about that, but I felt I was in a good spot and to hit the four-iron there was out of this world.

“This was a tournament I wanted to win growing up before any of the majors and before I understood about the game. To win it twice means the world. To go toe-to-toe with Scottie and win it on the 73rd hole is special.”

 

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Jordan Spieth Breaks 20-Year PGA Tour Record at RBC Heritage

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Jordan Spieth achieved a rare statistical milestone during the first two rounds of the RBC Heritage at Harbour Town on April 18, 2026, becoming the first golfer in two decades to remain under par through 36 holes while recording four double bogeys and zero bogeys.

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The three-time major champion finished his first two days at one-under-par, sitting 13 strokes behind leader Matt Fitzpatrick. Despite the chaotic scorecard, Spieth utilized nine birdies and a strong putting performance to offset the four double bogeys occurring on the 6th hole Thursday and the 1st, 8th, and 13th holes Friday.

Statistician Justin Ray first identified the anomaly, noting the historical difficulty of maintaining an under-par score with such a high volume of double bogeys. Ray reported that the specific combination of four doubles and zero bogeys while remaining under par had not occurred on the PGA Tour since 2006.

“I stopped digging at 20 years because I have a family.” said Justin Ray, Statistician.

The veteran statistician further detailed the unique nature of the performance via social media, highlighting that Spieth stands alone in this category over the last two decades of professional play.

“Jordan Spieth through 36 holes this week: 1-under-par 0 bogeys *4 double bogeys He is the only player over the last 20 years on the PGA Tour to be under par, have 4+ doubles and 0 bogeys through 36 holes in any tournament.” wrote Justin Ray, Statistician.

Spieth’s third round on Saturday saw his bogey-free streak end with a three-putt on the 6th hole, followed by another bogey on the 11th. He concluded the 54-hole mark at T42 after carding a 67, supported by a putting performance that ranked second in the field for strokes gained.

The performance followed a T12 finish at the Masters, where Spieth expressed confidence in his ball-striking despite struggles on the greens during that specific tournament.

“I hit it better than the year I won [in Augusta] and I hit it way better than any of the second places or fourths that I hit it.” said Jordan Spieth, Professional Golfer.

The American golfer recently indicated he felt his game was trending in a positive direction, even as his statistics at the RBC Heritage showed negative gains in approach shots and driving accuracy.

“in a great spot” said Jordan Spieth, Professional Golfer.

Spieth entered the third round ranked fourth in the field for Strokes Gained: Putting, trailing only the top three players on the overall leaderboard. His success on the greens included leading the field in round two with a 3.447 putting average according to Yahoo

 

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