Happy Gilmore, Scottie Scheffler and Premiere
Digest more
Scottie Scheffler had a joke for Haotong Li during the final round of the Open Championship at Royal Portrush. Its punchline was two words.
Rory McIlroy and Scottie Scheffler have been the dominant forces in golf in recent years but the golf icons share a healthy mutual respect and admiration off the course
Scottie Scheffler used a Chipotle anecdote to reflect on fame, fulfillment, and his priorities beyond golf after his fourth major win.
This article was originally published on www.si.com as Scottie Scheffler’s Son Bennett Becomes Perfect Meme After British Open Win.
Scottie Scheffler is the World No. 1 golfer, a fact that has only been backed up this week at the British Open. But according to one of his best friends on the PGA Tour, Scheffler also might be the best a trash talking on the golf course.
Scottie Scheffler's dominance echoes Tiger Woods' peak, but with quiet excellence instead of intensity. Four majors, Olympic gold, and ruthless consistency.
5don MSN
Scottie Scheffler hit one of the shots of the day at The Open Championship Wednesday, and almost simultaneously, a spectator unleashed the fart of the year.
Scottie Scheffler is on the cusp of wrapping up the fourth major championship of his career at The Open Championship. Scheffler, who won the PGA Championship in May and has victories at the 2022 and 2024 Masters,
That moment arrived Thursday while Scottie Scheffler played his second shot on the 17th hole at the 2025 British Open at Royal Portrush. Scheffler, sitting to the right of the fairway and 111 yards out, hit a beautiful iron shot that landed three feet from the pin.
6d
Golf Digest on MSNBritish Open 2025: Scottie Scheffler gave the best (and deepest) press conference answer we've ever heardThe somewhat contradictory answer was that golf does fulfill Scheffler, along with his family, but that if the game ever affected his role as a husband and father he'd quit on the spot. Family matters the most to him, so he ends up asking himself the same question at tournament after tournament:
Harvard's Arthur Brooks has spent years thinking, writing and talking about the keys to a life of happiness and fulfillment.