Monday, May 20, 2024

Xander Schauffele wins PGA +

 BREAKING: Schauffele wins PGA at Valhalla

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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.

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.”


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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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