Irish Daily Mirror

SCOTTIE HAS NOW PUTT IT ALL TOGETHER

- MIRROR REPORTER

BY

SCOTTIE SCHEFFLER became the No. 1 player in golf with his sublime tee-to-green game.

He got hot with the putter Sunday in the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al and was simply unstoppabl­e.

Shane Lowry (inset), the former British Open champion who started the final round tied with Scheffler, was off his game from the start.

He had three bogeys in seven holes but then played the final 10 holes without a bogey for a 72 to finish alone in third.

Scheffler made every important putt to build a three-shot lead at the turn and then poured it on with a game so complete he closed with a bogey-free, 6-under 66 the lowest score by two shots at Bay Hill in the final round while playing in the last group.

He wound up winning the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al by five shots, the largest margin at Bay Hill since Tiger Woods in 2012. And it came a week before Scheffler defends his title at The Players Championsh­ip, which had been his last official PGA Tour win.

Scheffler switched to a mallet putter this week and he made every putt inside 15 feet on the weekend to win at Bay Hill for the second time in three years.

U.S. Open champion Wyndham Clark did the best at trying to stay close, and he was two shots behind through eight holes. But it all turned so quickly. Clark drove into the rough and made bogey on the ninth hole and then didn’t make another birdie until the par-5 16th. He shot 70.

Scheffler made a pair of birdie putts in the 7-foot range to start the back nine, and then he showed more emotion than usual with a 35-foot birdie on the 15th that turned the final round into a runaway.

Scheffler finished at 15-under.

Clark birdied the 18th for a reasonable consolatio­n prize. He earned $2.2 million as the runner-up.

Russell Henley and Will Zalatoris each had a 72 and tied for fourth. Zalatoris secured a spot in the British Open for having the lowest score among players not already exempt.

Scheffler opened with a 12-foot birdie and no one caught him the rest of the day. “I just stayed in my own little space and tried to keep pushing,” Scheffler said.

His lead atop the world ranking got even larger over Rory Mcilroy, who had a mathematic­al chance to overtake him this week.

Mcilroy started the final round four shots behind and promptly shot 41 on the front nine. He shot 76 and tied for 21st.

“This is a super tough golf course and to be 6 under today going out with the lead and just sort of lapping the field is super impressive,”

Mcilroy said. “But we all knew that he had this in him. His ball-striking is, honestly, on another level compared to everyone else right now.

“We knew if he started to hole putts, then this sort of stuff would happen.”

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 ?? ?? DOMINANT Scottie Scheffler with the trophy yesterday
DOMINANT Scottie Scheffler with the trophy yesterday

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