Xander Schauffele birdied the 18th hole to win the PGA Championship.
MICHAEL REAVES/GETTY IMAGES
Xander Schauffele had a big monkey to get off his back at Valhalla this week.
The World No. 3 had been playing some of the best golf in the world by anyone not named Scottie Scheffler, but had no wins to show for it. Just last Sunday, Schauffele moved to two-for-eight in his career in converting 54-hole leads on the PGA Tour, as Rory McIlroy zoomed by him to win the Wells Fargo Championship. Schauffele hadn’t won since July 2022.
This week at Valhalla, he flipped the script. Schauffele led after each of the first three rounds, having set the early pace in Derby City with a major championship record-tying 62 on Thursday.
Then on Sunday, the day that had plagued him so often on the biggest stages, Schaffele came out of the gates strong and kept up the pace. He finished with a six-under 65 to set a new major championship record of 21 under and win the PGA Championship by a shot over Bryson DeChambeau.
DeChambeau made a dramatic 11-foot birdie putt on the 72nd hole to post 20 under, forcing Schauffele to make a matching birdie to avoid a playoff. Despite leaving his tee shot in an awkward position on the lip of a fairway bunker on the par-5 finisher, Schauffele roped an iron just short and left of the green. From there, he pitched to six feet and made the putt. When the ball rattled in, Schauffele threw his hands in the air in a rare show of emotion.
“I was actually kind of emotional after the putt lipped in,” Schauffele said afterward. “It’s been a while since I’ve won, and I really just— I kept saying it all week, I just need to stay in my lane.
“Man, was it hard to stay in my lane today, but I tried all day to just keep focus on what I’m trying to do and keep every hole ahead of me.”
He then turned to embrace Austin Kaiser, his longtime caddie and former college teammate at San Diego State.
It’s the first career major victory for Schauffele, who had 11 previous top-10 finishes in golf’s four biggest events, including runner-ups at the 2018 Open Championship and 2019 Masters, the former coming after he held a share of the 54-hole lead, as he did this week in Kentucky.
Schauffele’s co-lead with Collin Morikawa Sunday didn’t last long as Schauffele opened by just barely flying the bunker short of the first green and then drilling a 27-footer to take the outright lead.
He added three more birdies on the front nine before a bogey on the par-5 10th, one of Valhalla’s easiest holes, dropped him back into a tie, this time with Viktor Hovland.
Hovland, who revealed he considered skipping the PGA Championship this week after a poor start to the 2024 season, found his game at Valhalla and made six birdies in nine holes between Nos. 5 and 13 to pull out ahead of Schauffele at 19 under. Playing in the same group, DeChambeau nearly matched him shot for shot and was just a shot behind, tied with Schauffele.
Schauffele rebounded by stuffing his next two approaches at the par-3 11th and par-4 12th inside 10 feet and converting both birdie putts to get to 20 under with six holes to play.
DeChambeau, the 2020 U.S. Open winner, finished off his final-round 64 by throwing a dart of a second shot at 16 inside four feet; benefiting from a fortunate bounce from the left trees on his tee shot on 17; and then birdieing 18, the easiest hole at Valhalla this week, from the left fairway bunker.
Hovland had a chance to match DeChambeau at 20 under on 18, but missed from 10 feet and then missed his par effort to finish at 18 under in solo third. He was the runner-up last year at Oak Hill.
After getting up and down from the right side of the 17th green to stay tied with DeChambeau, Schauffele navigated an awkward lie on the lip of the same fairway bunker that DeChambeau had played from to get his second shot by the green. From short left, Schauffele hit a bump and run that checked and stopped six feet below the hole, from where he was able to get the putt to curl in from the left side of the cup.
“I think I’d probably be a little bit less of a patient person if that putt didn’t lip in, but I really didn’t want to go into a playoff against Bryson,” Schauffele joked.
The 2024 PGA Championship was defined by low scoring all week as it became the first major ever to have two players finish at 20 under or better. Not only did Schauffele’s 21 under become a new record in relation to par, but his 263 total also set a new major aggregate record.
Jack Hirsh is an assistant editor at GOLF. A Pennsylvania native, Jack is a 2020 graduate of Penn State University, earning degrees in broadcast journalism and political science. He was captain of his high school golf team and recently returned to the program to serve as head coach. Jack also still *tries* to remain competitive in local amateurs. Before joining GOLF, Jack spent two years working at a TV station in Bend, Oregon, primarily as a Multimedia Journalist/reporter, but also producing, anchoring and even presenting the weather. He can be reached at jack.hirsh@golf.com.
The weird reality of Xander Schauffele’s record-breaking PGA Championship start
Xander Schauffele tied the lowest single-round score in major championship history on PGA Championship Thursday.
GETTY IMAGES/KEYUR KHAMAR
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Xander Schauffele’s PGA Championship first round was, in a word, annoying.
Because for everyone around him, it was another word — the kind that everyone wishes their golf could be described — it was easy.
“When you’re playing with one of the easiest nine-unders you’ve ever seen, it makes you feel like you’re shooting a million,” Schauffele’s playing partner Justin Thomas said ruefully, and perhaps even a little affectionately, after Schauffele’s nine-under 62 on Thursday.
And he had every right to swoon over the way Schauffele struck the ball on PGA Thursday. In the first round of the second major championship of the year, Schauffele played utterly perfect — lapping the field in the morning session with a nine-birdie, zero-bogey affair that put him atop by three heading into the afternoon. Schauffele’s performance resulted in an opening-round 62, tying the lowest single-round score at a major championship ever. Sure, it came in slow and soft and windless conditions that rendered Valhalla mostly toothless, but in a field of players lighting up the leaderboard, Schauffele was the best of the bunch by a solid two club-lengths, and not even he could ignore it.
“Probably, yeah [I’m playing the best golf of my career],” Schauffele said Thursday. “I feel there’s spurts, moments in time where you feel like you can control the ball really well; you’re seeing the greens really well; you’re chipping really well. I’d say this is very close to [the best], if not it.”
It was a course-record shot on Thursday at the PGA Championship, and it was, nobody could argue, easy.
“He’s playing really, really great golf right now,” Thomas agreed. “You feel like he’s one of those guys every time he tees it up right now, he’s going to be in contention.”
But in some ways that was the funny part of Thursday’s performance. For everyone else in the field, Xander’s Thursday at the PGA was a stupefying display of ball-striking that moved the goalposts of staying in contention — the kind of round that introduces the idle thought into the back of everyone’s mind that it might finally be his week. And for Xander, it was everything but that.
“Yeah, it’s a great start to a big tournament — one I’m obviously always going to take,” he said, summarizing the point rather nicely. “But it’s just Thursday. That’s about it.”
In some ways, that was the strange thing about Xander’s Thursday at the PGA Championship. While everyone else in the sport seemed to be whispering about his round, he seemed unwilling to entertain the thought that it was anything more than the first chapter of a four-chapter book he’d already worn out the spine reading. An easy first chapter, sure, but nobody reads for the first chapter.
The week was a “big tournament” — not a major — and the performance was, as he reiterated a few times, “just Thursday.”
“[I’m] going to bed knowing I’m playing some pretty good golf, so I might just wipe the slate clean,” he said flatly.
One-off rounds happen often in major championship golf, and though a runaway Thursday leader can sometimes portend good things for the rest of the week (like Brian Harman at Hoylake last summer), they can just as often prove an early distraction for the real winner. Schauffele knows this as well as anybody. Over the last seven years, he’s held the Thursday lead as much as anybody at the majors, and yet as of Thursday afternoon, he’s got zero wins to show for it.
It’s early to call Schauffele tortured by the majors, but with 12 top-10s in golf’s four biggest events (the second-most of any active player without a major victory), it certainly isn’t too early to call him spurned by them. Through the first seven years of a fabulously successful career, Xander has become known as one of the best never to do it. That’s golf’s ultimate backhanded compliment — and Xander’s disinterest in gloating after Thursday indicated his cheek is getting a little sore from hearing it.
Perhaps that’s because this year’s PGA Tour season has seen Xander fall into those habits beneath the major level, too. He is winless in 12 starts in ’24, but those 12 starts have featured two runner-up finishes and eight top-10s. Once again a great player, and once again struggling to close.
“I think not winning makes you want to win more, as weird as that is,” he said. “For me, at least, I want it more and more and more. The top feels far away, and I feel like I have a lot of work to do. But I’m just slowly chipping away at it.”
We know now better than ever that professional golfers have no trouble being greedy. In some ways, the essential skill of the sport’s highest level is greed. The art of doing impossible things with a club in your hands involves convincing yourself that you can do them.
“Dude, look, golfers are disappointed no matter what they shoot,” Thomas said with a grin Thursday when asked about Schauffele. “That is one thing that will never change. We could shoot 56 and we should have shot 55.”
Some of Schauffele’s strength is his demeanor, Thomas said Thursday — never too high and never too low. But it’s easy to conflate composure with contentedness, and anyone who’s been within 30 miles of Xander on a major championship Sunday knows happy to be here isn’t among the many colorful words in his vocabulary. But angry with a 62 isn’t, either.
“I don’t really operate that way,” he said when asked if he’d seen himself going any lower. “When you shoot something low, you kind of get lost in the process of what you’re doing versus thinking about how low you’re trying to shoot.”
Schauffele’s composure belies the real truth of his PGA Championship performance on Thursday: it was easy, but he knows that getting to where he’s aiming won’t be. It will require mettle and temerity and consistency beyond anything Xander has done in his playing life, and it’ll require those things in every waking moment between now and Sunday evening.
In other words, Thursday was a good start. Maybe even a great one. But it was Thursday.
Just Thursday.
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James Colgan
GOLF.COM EDITOR
James Colgan is a news and features editor at GOLF, writing stories for the website and magazine. He manages the Hot Mic, GOLF’s media vertical, and utilizes his on-camera experience across the brand’s platforms. Prior to joining GOLF, James graduated from Syracuse University, during which time he was a caddie scholarship recipient (and astute looper) on Long Island, where he is from. He can be reached at james.colgan@golf.com.
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