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Scheffler’s dominance continues in conquest of Augusta National  

Torrid stretch endures for world’s top-ranked player as Masters triumph marks fourth PGA TOUR win in six starts.
Scottie Scheffler holds the record of the fastest golfer to reach World No.1 in OWGR.

The world’s top-ranked golfer woke up Sunday morning in his Augusta, Georgia, rental home crying tears of despair. It was the final day of the Masters and, despite having a three-shot lead and riding the hottest streak that the PGA TOUR has seen in years, Scottie Scheffler suddenly faced a surprising crisis of confidence.

Relying on their shared faith, Meredith talked him off the ledge. A big breakfast then calmed his nervous stomach. 

By the time he reached the training room at Augusta National, he was back in his environment. And when Scheffler stepped onto the first tee with caddie Ted Scott, he felt at peace. The crisis had been replaced by a mission: Complete the journey to become a major champion.

Actually, it’s a very big deal what Scheffler has going on right now. 

His Masters victory is his fourth PGA TOUR win in his last six starts, adding to his previous wins at the WM Phoenix Open, Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard, and the World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play. Not since Jason Day in 2015 has a TOUR pro produced four wins in a six-start stretch.

Two months ago, Scottie Scheffler had yet to win on the PGA Tour.

And not since 1999 has a golfer won four times in a PGA TOUR season by the end of the Masters. David Duval did it back then, winning four of his first eight starts that year.

Scheffler also becomes the first FedExCup leader to win the Masters since the FedExCup was established in 2007. He extended his FedExCup lead to 1,236 points over No. 2 Cameron Smith, this year’s winner of THE PLAYERS Championship and one of his few pursuers during Masters weekend, which Scheffler entered with a five-shot lead after 36 holes.

Scheffler also becomes the sixth player to win in his first PGA TOUR start as World No. 1. And he becomes just the second player to win at least four times, including a major and a World Golf Championships event, in the same season. The only other player? Tiger Woods, who did it eight times.

His historic victory at The Masters 2022 gave him his first major and fourth PGA Tour win.

One other thing worth noting: Scheffler becomes the first player in five years to win on the PGA TOUR and then win a major in his next start since his friend and fellow Dallas resident Jordan Spieth did it in 2017.

All this is to say that this is a pretty incredible stretch of golf we’re seeing right now from the 25-year-old Scheffler, who until two months ago was still seeking his first win on TOUR.

Of course, the question now becomes: How long will that window last?

Will he extend it through the summer to collect more TOUR wins, more majors? Will he still be hot once the FedExCup Playoffs begin with the FedEx St. Jude Championship in August? Since the turn of the century, the most TOUR wins in a single season is nine, achieved by Woods in 2000 and Vijay Singh in 2004. 

Is Scheffler on that kind of path?

Is Scheffler on that kind of path?

For now, though, he’s not looking ahead. He’s never really taken that kind of long-range perspective. He’s the kind of player who rarely looks at leaderboards. He just wants to keep his head down, focus on the next shot and grind away.

Right now, there’s plenty of moments for Scheffler to enjoy – and plenty of his fellow PGA TOUR pros who are trying to figure out just how to slow down his dominance.

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