Scottie Scheffler ‘hungry’ to win the Charles Schwab Challenge, a tournament he grew up attending with his family

“Playing in front of a home crowd as the week goes on is always really fun.”

Scottie Scheffler is back in his home state as the best golfer in the world.

Thanks to his runner-up finish to Brooks Koepka at the PGA Championship, the Texan reclaimed the No. 1 spot in the Official World Golf Ranking, pushing Jon Rahm to No. 2 (the Spaniard tied for 50th at Oak Hill).

The vibes should be high in Fort Worth, Texas, at the 2023 Charles Schwab Challenge for Scheffler, who lost in a playoff to his best bud Sam Burns at Colonial Country Club last season and comes into the week in great form.

But is the hunger there a few days after a major championship?

“I’m typically pretty hungry to win whatever event it is,” he said Wednesday after his nine-hole pro-am. “I show up expecting to come here and play well and do my best. Yeah, I’m hoping for a good finish this week, but I try not to look too far ahead.”

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Scheffler has loved playing in front of the Lone Star State crowd all year, finishing T-9 at the Houston Open in the fall, grabbing fourth at the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play in March and tying for fifth at the AT&T Byron Nelson a few weeks ago.

In fact, going back to last season, Scheffler’s worst finish in Texas during his 2021-22 campaign was a tie for 15th at the Nelson.

Just another reason why the vibes should be high for world No. 1.

“It’s nice being back here at home and being able to play an event. … to be able to sleep in my own bed this week and able to just be at home the last two days was definitely important in terms of rest. Then playing in front of a home crowd as the week goes on is always really fun,” Scheffler said.

His relationship with this event started way before he turned professional. Scheffler’s been coming here since he was a kid.

“I grew up coming to this tournament. Being able to come here and play the golf course and compete is definitely very special for me,” he said. “I’ve grown up dreaming of being out here, and now being on the other side where I’m inside the ropes and trying to do my best and compete is definitely very special.

“I remember showing up here with my dad and just coming out and watching. My dad loved to watch golf. When I grew up, any time I could get a chance to go to the PGA Tour, it was pretty cool. So come out here on practice round days and watch guys.

“I typically liked the practice round days more just because you could get closer to guys and I liked just watching. It wasn’t as much about the atmosphere. It was more just me watching and learning from those guys.”

As a young player growing up in Texas, there’s one name that stands out among the rest that Scheffler looked towards as inspiration.

Jordan Spieth.

“Jordan, he was another guy I looked up to growing up,” he said. “He was always a few years ahead of me and crushing it from a young age. So he was always a guy I looked up to and was able to bounce things off of when I was thinking about turning pro, when I turned pro. He’s always been a guy that’s given me great advice, and he’s such a talented player.”

Time will tell if Scheffler can turn in a performance good enough to earn the title come Sunday, just like Spieth did at Colonial in 2016.

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Michael Block has better odds to finish inside top 40 at Charles Schwab Challenge than several PGA Tour winners, including Kevin Kisner, European Ryder Cup captain Luke Donald

Will you be betting on Block this week at Colonial?

The People’s Champion, Michael Block, had the best week of his life in Rochester, New York, at the PGA Championship. The 46-year-old shot rounds of 70-70-70-71 to finish in a tie for 15th, good enough for an automatic invitation to the 2024 PGA at Valhalla.

However, that won’t be the next time we see Block.

The PGA pro was invited to this week’s Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas, moments after finishing his final round at Oak Hill. Block was also given a spot in the RBC Canadian Open at Oakdale Golf and Country Club slated for June 8-11.

More Charles Schwab betting: Expert picks, odds

As for this week at Colonial, Block has better odds to finish inside the top 40 than Tour winner Kevin Kisner and European Ryder Cup captain Luke Donald. Block sits at +275 to top 40, while Kisner and Donald are +280.

To win, however, Block is +50000. Meaning if you were to place a $100 wager on Block to claim the trophy come Sunday, you’d win $50,100 ($50,000 plus your original $100).

Not a bad payday.

Colonial should fit Block’s game well. It’s not about distance at the John Bredemus/Perry Maxwell design, it’s about plotting your way around.

And if he can putt as well as he did at Oak Hill — sixth in SG: Putting (+1.545) — he should have a chance come Friday afternoon to make the weekend.

Plus, a top-40 bet on Block feels like the right thing to do after what he gave the golf world last week.

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