Schauffele, after the Open win, chases Olympic Gold. Again.
He holds the claret jug. Now Xander Schauffele reaches for Olympic gold. Again. From Troon to Paris. From dreams to reality. From near misses to wild success.
From the beaches of San Diego to the top of the world—and that’s not a reference to the rankings, where Scottie Scheffler remains No. 1.
But if Schauffele continues his ascent or even duplicates his bravura performances the last two months, in time he could move ahead of Scheffler, former British Ryder Cup captain, Peter McGinley said on the Golf Channel.
For the present, we consider how the 30-year-old Schauffele, who previously hadn’t finished first in a major, took the PGA Championship at Valhalla in May and then Sunday took the 152nd Open at Royal Troon in Scotland.
Schauffele entered the final round of the Open tied for second with five others one stroke behind leader Billy Horschel. And then quickly enough served notice with a birdie on Troon’s infamous Railway Hole, the 11th, the most difficult on the course.
Striding elegantly down the 18th fairway in front of boisterous crowds—they so love their golf in Scotland—Schauffele came in with a 6-under par 65 and a four-day total of 275 (9 under).
That was two strokes ahead of third-round leader Billy Horschel (68) and Justin Rose (67), who tied for second at 277. It wasn’t as if Schauffele was a disappointment. He won a Scottish Open and the Men’s golf division of the Tokyo Olympics in 2016.
What’s important in golf, however, is winning one of the four majors. He had none. Now he has two.
“I think winning the first one helped me a lot (Sunday), on the back nine,” said Schauffele. “I had some feeling of calmness come through. It was very helpful on one of the hardest back nines I have ever played in a tournament.”
Which it is supposed to be. The Open is the oldest tournament in golf and depending on the weather and the width of the fairways is often the most difficult.
After half a day of driving rain Saturday, the weather was clear Sunday, albeit hardly warm. The temperature was in the low 60s, not taking into account the wind chill.
Schauffele was always accurate. Within the last year, he has picked up distance to go with the accuracy, which as pointed out made him a factor in the majors.
“He has a lot of horsepower,” Rose said about Schauffele. “He’s good with a wedge, he’s great with a putter. He hits the ball a long way. Obviously his iron play is strong, so he’s got a lot of weapons out there. I think one of his most unappreciated ones is his mentality. He’s such a calm guy out there.”
One of the reasons for his stability is his confidence developed through practice and persistence. He said that playing in the Scottish Open enabled him to understand the vagaries of lynx golf, which is far different than that played on a course in the United States.
“It’s a dream come true to win two majors in one year,” Schauffele said. “It took me forever just to win one, and to have two now is something else.”