Scottie Scheffler collects fifth
win of 2024 at Memorial
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[June 10, 2024]
It doesn't have to be easy for it to be rewarding for Scottie
Scheffler.
He won another tournament and solidified his No. 1 world ranking by
shooting 2-over-par 74 on Sunday to win the Memorial Tournament in
Dublin, Ohio.
"The golf course was playing so tough today, so firm, so fast,"
Scheffler said. "It was a fun test of golf. It was good to battle it
out. I didn't really do a whole lot great today, but I did enough."
Scheffler held on to the lead despite challenges in tough
final-round scoring conditions at Muirfield Village Golf Club. His
8-under 280 tournament total was good for a one-shot advantage on
Collin Morikawa, who posted 71 on Sunday.
It's Scheffler's fifth PGA Tour win this year, all since the
beginning of March. The tournaments he has won are a sampling of the
most prestigious on the PGA Tour: the Masters, the Players
Championship and three signature events.
This one came in a tournament with legendary Jack Nicklaus the host.
"I remember shaking Mr. Nicklaus' hand a few years ago," Scheffler
said. "It's a pretty surreal moment to be able to shake his hand as
a winner here."
The 27-year-old Texan will be one of the favorites at the U.S. Open
this coming week at Pinehurst No. 2 in North Carolina.
Canada's Adam Hadwin shot 74 and ended up in third place at 4 under,
followed by South Africa's Christiaan Bezuidenhout (72) at 3 under.
Scheffler didn't have to do anything spectacular in the final round,
which began with him owning a four-stroke lead. After a bogey on No.
8, he scored pars on the next eight holes before a bogey on No. 17.
Scheffler and Morikawa, playing in the final pairing, went to the
final hole with only one shot separating them. Both hit their second
shots over the green, and Morikawa's attempt to chip in for birdie
from 45 feet away barely skated past, allowing Scheffler to make par
to win.
"It's pretty amazing I feel like I've had some close calls in this
tournament," Scheffler said. "This is a tough place to close out."
Earlier, Scheffler had a chance to stretch a one-shot lead on the
15th, but his putt for birdie clipped the cup and the ball stayed
out.
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Morikawa was within one stroke until his third
bogey of the round came on No. 16, when he was off the green after
his first swing on the par-3 hole.
On the 17th, Scheffler was greenside after two shots on the par-4
hole, but he left his entry to the green considerably short of the
hole and didn't convert the par putt.
It certainly has been an eventful stretch of
several weeks for Scheffler, who was involved in the altercation
with Louisville police upon trying to arrive for his second-round
tee time at the PGA Championship.
Now, he's a tournament champion for the first time since becoming a
father shortly after winning the Masters and RBC Heritage on
back-to-back weeks in April.
Morikawa was pleased to be contending during the tournament's final
day.
"A lot of it has been talking through it, going through the process,
thinking through things," Morikawa said. "Obviously it's been very,
very helpful over these past couple months."
Hadwin closed within one of Scheffler on the front side by birdieing
three of his first seven holes, including a chip-in at No. 1. He
carded five bogeys the rest of the way.
Sunday's only sub-70 rounds were turned in by England's Matt
Fitzpatrick and Argentina's Emiliano Grillo, both with 3-under 69s.
Fitzpatrick, with birdies on three of the last five holes, tied for
fifth at 2 under with Sweden's Ludvig Aberg (74) and Austria's Sepp
Straka (76). Grillo was at 5 over and tied for 27th.
Defending champion Viktor Hovland of Norway had slightly recovered
from Saturday's 77, posting 75 to finish at 2 over and tied for
15th.
--Field Level Media
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