Jon Rahm motivated by No. 1 battle with Rory McIlroy, Scottie Scheffler
Send a link to a friend
[March 01, 2023]
Rory McIlroy issued a one-word response when asked earlier this
month if he felt like the best player in the world.
"Yes."
That was before the Waste Management Phoenix Open, when the Northern
Irishman indeed occupied the top spot in the Official World Golf
Ranking.
McIlroy, who regained the No. 1 ranking in October, would remain on
that perch for only a few more days before Scottie Scheffler
snatched it by successfully defending at TPC Scottsdale. Scheffler's
reign lasted exactly one week, with Jon Rahm reclaiming the No. 1
ranking with his victory at The Genesis Invitational.
The Spaniard holds the spot entering this week's Arnold Palmer
Invitational. Asked on Tuesday if there's anyone who could beat him
when "firing on all cylinders," Rahm issued his own one-word
response.
"No."
He was quick to add that he hopes a lot of players would feel the
same way.
It's hard to argue with the confidence Rahm has in the state of his
game. He arrived at Bay Hill coming off his fifth win in his past
nine worldwide starts, and Rahm is the first player since Johnny
Miller in 1975 to win three events in a year before the calendar
reached March.
"There's a lot of satisfaction that comes to it when you get to be
No. 1 when the other players have been playing great golf as well,"
Rahm said. "Scottie had a great year last year, Rory had a great
year last year, and then towards the end of the year I kind of
picked up.
"And even with Scottie winning at Phoenix, I was able to get to No.
1 right after."
How long Rahm stays there remains to be seen -- McIlroy or Scheffler
could leapfrog him again depending upon how things go at Bay Hill.
Rahm, who has been an outspoken critic of the OWGR, acknowledged the
power struggle over No. 1 between three players competing at such an
elite level is exciting for the game.
[to top of second column] |
"I mean, it's been great," he said. "What is it,
the most amount of No. 1 changes in this short period of time? I saw
some of those stats because it's just really interesting, which
speaks to the greatness of the game of golf right now, how good
everybody's been playing."
The revamped schedule and increased purses the PGA Tour implemented
in response to the threat from LIV Golf has led the top players
competing in the same event far more often.
This week, 43 of the top 50 players in the OWGR are at Bay Hill --
the most at an event since the 2022 Open Championship. The majority
of them will head two hours north for next week's Players
Championship.
That's all with an eye toward the Masters the first week of April.
Rahm said he recently received some advice from Tiger Woods on how
to maintain to keep his game at its peak level for as long as
possible.
"I asked him, ‘Out of the 82 wins on the PGA Tour,' -- I didn't get
into the other ones -- ‘how many times do you think you played your
best all four days?' And he said, ‘Three at most.' Right? A lot of
those Sundays he played his best, but the whole week, very few.
"The thing is, you don't need to be firing on all cylinders to win."
Perhaps the ongoing threat from the likes of McIlroy and Scheffler
at the top of the world rankings will continue to push Rahm to
maintain his current level.
"There's a lot of satisfaction that comes to it," he said of being
No. 1 in the world. "When we've been playing the way we've been
playing, it's a lot of fun.
"You should sit down and reflect and enjoy what you're doing,
obviously. But as competitors you don't want it to end, obviously."
--Field Level Media
[© 2023 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |