Dayton Daily News

Scottie Scheffler is reaching a dominance not seen since Tiger Woods

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PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — Scottie Scheffler is next in line for comparison­s with Tiger Woods because golf, like other sports, is always looking for the heir to the throne.

Scheffler is playing great golf, measured as much by his elite ball-striking and alarming consistenc­y as the results. He now has nine victories against the strongest fields — one of them a small field in the Bahamas — in the 25 months since he won his first PGA Tour title.

Equally impressive is his 65% rate of finishing in the top 10.

The next Woods? “I think that’s a funny question,” Scheffler said Sunday evening after his record-tying final round made him the first back-toback winner of The Players Championsh­ip.

He found out the answer a month earlier at Riviera during the Genesis Invitation­al.

“I’m not going to remember the exact numbers, but we’re playing at Riv this year and I hit my tee ball, and this guy yells out, ‘Congrats on being No. 1, Scottie — 11 more years to go!’” he said.

And then Scheffler repeated the number to let it sink in for anyone listen. “Eleven more years to go.” Scheffler reached No. 1 in the world for the fourth time after his runner-up finish in the PGA Championsh­ip last May, and he has been there ever since, challenged a few times by either Jon Rahm or Rory McIlroy.

And now with his second straight win — a five-shot victory at Bay Hill, a five-shot comeback at the TPC Sawgrass — his lead at the top of the ranking is the largest since Dustin Johnson in May 2017. Johnson stayed No. 1 for 64 consecutiv­e weeks, the longest in the post-Woods era. Scheffler is currently at 43 weeks. His total time has been 78 weeks.

Woods holds the record at 281 consecutiv­e weeks, breaking his previous mark of 264 consecutiv­e weeks. His total time at No. 1 was slightly more than 13 years.

Scheffler was off by two years. No need to quibble.

“Anytime you can be compared to Tiger I think is really special,” Scheffler said. “But I mean, the guy stands alone I think in our game. He really does.”

Scheffler has tied Woods with the most Players Championsh­ip titles — two.

“Outside of that, I’ve got 14 more majors and 70-some PGA Tour events to catch up,” he said. “So I think I’m going to stick to my routine and just continue to plod along, try and stay as evenkeeled as I can.”

It’s easy to overlook Johnson, partly because he is with LIV Golf and is seen against a full roster of great players only at the four majors, and partly because it has been seven years since he was at his most dominant. He won three straight tournament­s — Riviera and two World Golf Championsh­ips — and was the overwhelmi­ng favorite at the Masters until slipping down the stairs the day before the first round and having to withdraw.

Before him was McIlroy, who won seven times from May 2014 through May 2015, including consecutiv­e majors. And then he injured his knee playing soccer, missing the British Open at St. Andrews, and lost the No. 1 ranking to Jordan Spieth.

Scheffler offered a small reminder about looking too far into the future. He felt something in his neck on the second hole of his second round, and the pain was such that it hurt to take the club too far back. He needed treatment after the 13th, 14th and 15th holes.

 ?? AP ?? Scottie Scheffler has nine victories against the strongest fields in the 25 months since he won his first PGA Tour title.
AP Scottie Scheffler has nine victories against the strongest fields in the 25 months since he won his first PGA Tour title.

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