Twelve hours before Scottie Scheffler stood over a 4-footer to extend a Monday playoff at the Travelers Championship, he had faced a putt twice that length just to force one.
On Sunday, Scheffler had been in the driver’s seat all round long at TPC River Highlands, but suddenly a furious charge from Viktor Hovland had threatened to make that all come undone. Scheffler had stuffed approaches on 16 and 17 to collect tidy pars to fend off Hovland, but now, on 18, he’d made a rare blunder. His birdie putt, a 25-footer, had ripped past the hole, an uncharacteristically ugly putt that opened the door for Hovland’s own playoff-clinching tap-in par.
Now, with Hovland in the house at 21 under, Scheffler needed a 8-footer to finish on the same number. With the tournament on the line in the dying moments of Sunday evening, Scheffler drained the putt, following it into the hole with a fist pump and appearing for the moment to seize the momentum heading into a Monday playoff with Hovland.
But then, 12 hours later, there Scheffler was again on the same hole, staring down another putt with the same stakes on the line. It didn’t seem like much — an 8-footer for birdie with a touch of left-to-right break — and yet the enormity of the moment was lost on nobody: a make and the tournament would continue; a miss and Scheffler would head home the loser.
Scheffler seemed at worst very likely to make his putt, but in reality it was more of a coin flip: The Tour make-rate from the same distance is 50% to 54%, depending upon the year (53.55% this year) — and that’s leaving out the stress of putting with a Signature title on the line.
Scheffler stepped to his putt, settled and gave it a good stroke, watching as the ball headed toward the hole. But he’d hit it too hard. The ball caught the left edge of the cup, looping around and out. A lip-out for the loss.
The World No. 1 could do nothing but watch as his ball laid just a tap-in away from its home. He put his head in his hands as the crowd looked on shocked. Afterward, there was little he could say.
“Maybe I hit it a little firmer than I intended to,” Scheffler said. “It looked like it got pretty far by the hole and I was playing it outside the hole, so I hit it down my line, just maybe the speed was a touch off.”
For Hovland, the win was just his second PGA Tour title since his breakout 2023 season and the first of a 2026 campaign that has featured no shortage of turbulent play.
“You always want to try to beat the best,” Hovland said. “What he’s been doing the last few years is just super impressive, and I have so much respect for him and his game. To go up against him and have a chance to beat him, I think it’s just super exciting. That’s what you wake up every day to get better, that’s for those moments right there.”
In the end, it was a reminder that golf is a game of great effort … and incredibly small margins.
“It’s been two really, really long weeks,” Scheffler said. “Being in contention both weeks. Any time after a major championship, especially a U.S. Open, I think you’re going to be pretty worn out. But like I said, I felt like I did some really nice things this week, which I’ll use that momentum going into the rest of the season.”
Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: golf.com






