USA TODAY US Edition

Fitness push boosted Scheffler

- Adam Schupak

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. – As the twotime defending champion of the WM Phoenix Open, Scottie Scheffler has a chance to do something only one golfer has done before in the long and illustriou­s history of this tournament: threepeat.

Arnold Palmer did it from 1961-63 when the event was played at Phoenix Country Club. Since the tournament moved to TPC Scottsdale in 1987, only Hideki Matsuyama (2016-17) had won back-to-back Phoenix Opens before Scheffler’s current run.

But it was Scheffler’s failure to earn his first PGA Tour title at the 2021 WM Phoenix Open, a year before his winning ways began, that may have been the turning point in his career. That’s when Scheffler realized he needed to take his fitness to the next level.

Scheffler played in the final group in 2021 and closed in 1-under 70 but got passed by Brooks Koepka’s 65 and settled for a T-7 finish.

“We found out he didn’t have the cardiovasc­ular endurance,” said Troy Van Biezen, a chiropract­or whose stable of players won 12 majors and more than 100 tournament­s while under his care. “He had some fatigue on the back nine. I worked with Tiger when he won the 2019 Masters and he told me I want to be as physically, emotionall­y and mentally strong when I tee off on Thursday as when I’m going down the back nine on Sunday. That always stuck in my head.”

So, after falling short at TPC Scottsdale, Van Biezen sat down with Scheffler and constructe­d a new exercise regime built around stability, mobility and flexibilit­y but that also included everything from nutrition to hydration and recovery, taxing the body with sled pushes and finishing sessions with burners or hits.

“I told him, ‘I’m going to beat the crap out of you,’ ” Van Biezen recalled. “We’re going to do a lot of high-intensity aerobic work, build up your aerobic capacity and your endurance.’ Let’s make sure we control the controllab­les.”

Scheffler made endurance training a point of emphasis that offseason so he’d never feel gassed again. Not only did he return to the Valley of the Sun and notched his first PGA Tour title in a playoff over then-reigning FedExCup champion Patrick Cantlay in 2022, but he went on to have a remarkable year, winning the Masters among four victories and being named PGA Tour Player of the Year.

He reached No. 1 in the world and followed up his breakthrou­gh season by holding off Jon Rahm and Nick Taylor to successful­ly defend his WM title, adding The Players Championsh­ip a month later and producing one of the most consistent seasons in memory. In 23 starts Scheffler recorded 13 top-fives and 17 top-10s, both high marks for any player in a single season on tour since 2005 – to repeat as 2022-23 PGA Tour Player of the Year.

Golf at the highest level has become a power game played by a collection of the most physically fit athletes to play the game. Van Biezen spent 21 years on the PGA Tour, providing consistent chiropract­ic care while witnessing the evolution in how pro golfers care for their bodies. (He recently took a full-time post with the NHL’s Dallas Stars as director of sports performanc­e and science.)

“Back in the day, after a round, the guys were having a smoke and a beer. Now it’s a protein shake, recovery bike ride or a flush on the table, cryotherap­y, Normatec (leg compressio­n) boots,” Van Biezen said. “They’re athletes now, so you’ve got to treat them that way.”

Van Biezen, who considers Scheffler to be the equivalent of a Formula 1 race car and he’s the pit crew chief, works in synergy with Randy Smith, Scheffler’s longtime swing instructor, and Scheffler said that relationsh­ip has been a key ingredient to his success.

“They love working together and it’s been pretty easy for me just to kind of follow their ideas,” Scheffler said. “Randy’s always been the swing guy and a lot of the imbalances I had in my body were causing my swing to become a certain way, so when Randy wanted to change my swing a little bit and make little changes, it’s pretty easy for us just to go to Troy and say hey, ‘My right hips been a little bit tight, it’s hard for me to get in my right side,’ and that’s something that we can work on in the gym very easily.”

Regular golfers can benefit from Scheffler’s workout programs via Golf Forever, an app-based exercise and pain relief program with a proprietar­y trainer, which he began using the week before winning at TPC Scottsdale for the first time in 2022. The trainer is sold at more than 400 retail stores, allowing any golfer to follow virtually the same workout routine as the two-time defending WM Phoenix Open champion. To hear Van Biezen tell it, the 27-yearold Scheffler hasn’t tapped his potential yet.

“He plays the game because he loves it. He wants to get better and he’s a huge competitor,” Van Biezen said. “I don’t think we’ve seen the best of Scottie yet, for sure.”

 ?? KYLE TERADA/ USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Scottie Scheffler, shown at the Pebble Beach Pro-Am, has won the WM Phoenix Open the past two years.
KYLE TERADA/ USA TODAY SPORTS Scottie Scheffler, shown at the Pebble Beach Pro-Am, has won the WM Phoenix Open the past two years.

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