Scottie Scheffler, with win at the BMW Championship, does something in golf you’re not supposed to do

Robert MacIntyre waged a four-hour battle against inevitability. Through 17 holes on Sunday, the Scotsman fought despite a wayward driver that repeatedly forced him into scramble mode, watching his four-stroke advantage dissolve into a two-shot deficit. To his credit, MacIntyre kept the outcome uncertain—at least in appearance. But while the competitor in him admirably refused to concede, the thing about fate is it cannot be changed.

The confirmation came at the 17th hole. From just off the green in the rough, Scottie Scheffler’s birdie chip sailed over a ridge, tracked toward the pin, and found nothing but the bottom of the cup. Scheffler responded with a subdued fist pump before exchanging high-fives with temporary caddie Mike Cromie. MacIntyre watched in stunned resignation, learning what the past four years have consistently demonstrated: once Scheffler catches your scent, the outcome mostly stops being a question of “if” to “when.”

2230660823
Scheffler erased a big deficit early, took the reins at the halfway point, held on like hell and delivered an exclamation mark at the end, capturing the BMW Championship for his fifth win of the season.

Sunday was not without drama, though Scheffler initially did his best to eliminate it. He needed just five holes to erase MacIntyre’s four-stroke overnight lead, and by the 11th tee, Scheffler commanded a two-shot advantage—six strokes better than MacIntyre for the day, for those keeping socre at home. But Scheffler, whose putting has transformed from Achilles heel to genuine weapon, missed two makeable putts at the 12th and 14th holes, allowing MacIntyre to creep back into contention. They traded birdies over the next two holes, and with Scheffler facing a difficult lie at the 17th, what we were watching appeared to be in doubt.

Then Scheffler made anyone who harbored doubt realize what we believed to be a contest was … well, sorry for mixing sports analogies, but it was like watching a man trying to beat a brick wall at tennis.

Related articles

Antonio Brown pleads not guilty to attempted murder charge 3 days after getting extradited from Middle East: Report

Antonio Brown pleaded not guilty to second-degree attempted murder charges. His attorney, Mark Eiglarsh, said on Monday that the former Pittsburgh Steelers star was attacked first and acted within…

Johnson Wagner makes claim about Collin Morikawa which can be proven completely false

Collin Morikawa has been in really poor form on the PGA Tour since March. After his T-10 finish at The Players Championship, Morikawa recorded just one more top-10 finish…

WATCH: Taylor Swift swoons over Brittany Mahomes after Patrick Mahomes-Travis Kelce’s insane play during Chiefs-Commanders MNF

Travis Kelce showed his fiancée Taylor Swift his dominant self against the Washington Commanders on Monday, catching six passes for 99 yards and a touchdown. And one…

What many golfers do on the green before putting which Billy Horschel just can’t understand

To the untrained eye, Billy Horschel may not be the first player most golfers look to copy on the greens. Billy Horschel has had a phenomenal career. He…

Absent PGA Tour star to comeback, return date set for December

PGA Tour fans have missed watching 15x Major winner Tiger Woods in action. While Woods competed in the TMRW Golf League earlier this year, the 49-year-old has been away…

“Same doofus who paid Deshaun Watson $250M”: Craig Carton spews venom at Browns owner Jimmy Haslam as Joe Flacco turns Bengals luck around

Sports analyst Craig Carton didn’t mince words when discussing team owner Jimmy Haslam’s bad decisions over the years. The Cleveland Browns have been under fire over their calls regarding…