Free enterprise (and #freescottie) alive and well as Scottie Scheffler T-shirts take off at PGA Championship

It’s a trending hashtag, it’s a chant and it’s even a T-shirt for sale in the parking lot.

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LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Free Scottie.

It’s a trending hashtag, it’s a chant and it’s even a T-shirt for sale for $10 in the parking lot at Valhalla Golf Club at the 106th PGA Championship.

Taylor Farrell and Cole Turner, friends who drove in early Friday morning from Indiana to attend the second round, were stopping to pick up a friend at a hotel when news broke that Scottie Scheffler had been detained by police ahead of his morning tee time. The hotel happened to be next to a print shop so they downloaded images off the Internet and e-mailed them to a 64-year-old lady who made the shirts.

“It took 30 minutes,” Farrell said.

PGA: Tournament hub | Friday tee times | Photos

They weren’t the only ones. Some industrious entrepreneur arrived in the Valhalla Golf Club parking lot with a carload of shirts and was selling them for $10. One fan wearing a #FreeScottie shirt said he had another and offered to sell it for $20.

Good to see that American free enterprise is alive and well.

Others simply used a black Sharpie to a white shirt while one fan wore an orange jumpsuit amid his buddies and said of Scheffler, “We’re doing this in support of him. He’s one of the most humble people on the PGA Tour.”

On several holes of Scheffler’s opening nine, fans started a chant of Free Scottie and the message spread like wild fire much like the taunts at Patrick Cantlay and his refusal to wear a hat during the Ryder Cup in Rome. Only this time it was a Scottie lovefest. Indeed, the crowd had the feel of a home Ryder Cup and Scottie received a level of fandemonium the likes of which the world No. 1 and two-time Masters champion has never experienced.

2024 PGA Championship
Fans who did not want to be identified wore “Free Scottie” T-shirts to support Scottie Scheffler at the 2024 PGA Championship’s second round. (Photo: Matt Stone/Louisville Courier Journal)

There were several creative fans who did their best to get chuckles. Some of the best:

“Scottie, I need your lawyer”

“You play pretty good with an ankle bracelet on”

“Is this your work-release program?”

And to a group of cops assigned to monitor Scheffler’s threesome: “You guys going to let him get away with that?”

When one of the officers in Scheffler’s detail was asked if he was getting heckled, he shook his head in the affirmative and said, “But I’d heckle me.”

For all the chants and cracks and fans hoping for a reaction to their shirts from Scheffler as he walked by, the world No. 1 just kept his head down and stayed in his bubble.

Scottie is free and the fans at Valhalla loved him like never before.

Fans are already wearing Scottie Scheffler mugshot T-shirts at 2024 PGA Championship

That was quick.

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Friday morning was one of the weirdest in the history of golf. Just after 6 a.m. ET, world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler was arrested and charged with several crimes, including second-degree assault on a police officer. However, he was released before 9 a.m. ET and is currently playing in the second round of the 2024 PGA Championship at Valhalla Golf Club in Louisville, Kentucky.

When he was on the range, Scheffler released a statement regarding the confusing situation.

As you’d expect, fans are cheering hard for Scheffler as he goes around Valhalla, and a few fans are already wearing T-shirts featuring Scheffler’s mugshot.

Oh, and an ode to Prison Mike from The Office.

PGA: Tournament hub | Friday tee times | Photos

Not only is Scheffler playing after his arrest, he birdied two of his first three holes after arriving a little less than an hour before his tee time.

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Photos: PGA Championship 2024 Friday’s second round at Valhalla Golf Club

Here are some photos from the golf course during Friday’s second round.

The second round of the 2024 PGA Championship was delayed Friday after a fatal accident in which a pedestrian was struck and killed by a shuttle bus near the entrance of Valhalla Golf Club in Louisville, Kentucky.

World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler was arrested by police misunderstanding ahead of his second round at the 2024 PGA Championship. Scheffler was booked at 7:28 a.m ET, according to online records accessed by GolfweekESPN was first to report. Jeff Darlington reported early Friday morning that Scheffler attempted to drive past a police officer into Valhalla.

Scheffler was released from custody at 8:40 a.m. ET and arrived at the golf course at 9:15 a.m. ET. According to a PGA of America source on site, Scheffler was personally escorted to the club by an owner of Valhalla and made his 10:08 a.m. ET tee time. He has retained local attorneys for the case.

Here are some photos from the golf course during Friday’s second round.

‘#freescottie’: PGA Tour, LIV Golf players react to Scottie Scheffler’s arrest at 2024 PGA Championship

It’s been a surreal day at the 2024 PGA Championship in Valhalla, to say the least.

It’s been a surreal day at the 2024 PGA Championship in Valhalla, to say the least.

Scottie Scheffler was detained, handcuffed, arrested and booked by Louisville police early Friday morning — the video of that moment was captured by ESPN’s Jeff Darlington — as the second round of the major golf tournament was delayed.

After the incident, which stemmed from Scheffler driving past a police officer into Valhalla Golf Club, golfers from around the world reacted on X (formerly Twitter) as the news continued to break on social media.

PGA CHAMPIONSHIP: Friday photos | Leaderboard | How to watch

Here’s a sampling of what many of them said, including — it was inevitable, wasn’t it? — #FreeScottie:

Kevin Kisner

Ben An

Graeme McDowell

Cameron Percy

Bernd Wiesberger

Min Woo Lee

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The Scottie Scheffler arrest feels both unreal and completely unnecessary at the same time

What an embarrassing situation for all parties involved.

This is For The Win’s daily newsletter, The Morning Win. Did a friend recommend or forward this to you? If so, subscribe here. Have feedback? Leave your questions, comments and concerns through this brief reader survey! Now, here’s Mike Sykes.

Good morning, Winners. Welcome back to the Morning Win. No, I can’t believe Scottie Scheffler was detained this morning, either.

For those of you just catching up on the day’s news, the world’s No. 1 golfer was detained by Louisville Metro Police for what essentially amounts to an over-the-top traffic violation.

READ MORE: Everything we know about Scottie Scheffler’s detainment

To make a long story short, a pedestrian was tragically struck and killed by a shuttle bus this morning around 5 a.m. ET. The pedestrian died. Police moved to the area to handle traffic and tend to the scene.

Scheffler was heading to Valhalla Golf Club, where the PGA Championship is happening this weekend. He tried to use the median to get around traffic. Police tried to stop him. I guess he didn’t stop well enough, so he was arrested.

He arrived back at Valhalla and made his tee time at 10:08 a.m. And I guess that’s supposed to mean everything is fine now. I keep trying to figure out how on Earth we got here. This all reads like one of those “You know, I had the weirdest dream last night,” stories.

It doesn’t feel like any of this had to happen. I’m not saying Scheffler was right or wrong here. I don’t know how traffic was being organized around the scene and maybe what he did was indeed a disruption to the work being done to handle the aforementioned tragedy of someone losing their life.

But for it to escalate to an arrest just feels wholly unnecessary. I’m not here to tell police how to do their jobs, but there had to be more possible steps to take before things went as far as they did. This couldn’t have just been a citation. Couldn’t they have just talked things over?

What feels like it could’ve been a routine traffic stop is now a national news story. That’s embarrassing for everyone.

Great job, LMPD. You’ve outdone yourselves this time.


Wolves fixed

Minnesota Timberwolves guard Anthony Edwards (5) laughs after the game against the Denver Nuggets during game six of the second round for the 2024 NBA playoffs at Target Center
Mandatory Credit: Brad Rempel-USA TODAY Sports

Game. Seven. The two greatest words in sports. We’re about to be treated to a good one between the Timberwolves and the Nuggets on Sunday after Minnesota responded in Game 6 with a 45-point beatdown. “They kicked our [expletives],” Nikola Jokic said after the game. You know exactly what the expletive there is. And yes, Nikola. Yes, they did.

I can’t wait for this game on Sunday, man. There’s so much riding on it.

On one end, this is a huge chance for Jokic to prove his mettle. He’s largely regarded as the best player in the NBA. This is supposed to be the moment when the best player does best player things.

On the other, we’re talking about a franchise that has lived in poverty for two decades with the Timberwolves. Minnesota hasn’t made a Conference Finals appearance since 2004. If anybody is going to take the Wolves there, of course, it’s going to be Anthony Edwards.

READ MORE: Ant Man told them he’d be back for Game 7. He meant it. 

Hurry up and get here, Sunday. Enough is enough.


Chris Kreider is magical

(Photo by Grant Halverson/Getty Images)

Everything about the Rangers’ run right now feels improbable, but I don’t know if I’ve ever seen anything quite like Chris Kreider’s performance on Thursday night.

The Rangers were down 3-1 to the Hurricanes with about 13 minutes left to go in the third period. Kreider rattles off not one, not two, but three goals to give New York the win. The Rangers are going to the conference finals.

This moment. It just gives you chills, man.

To do that on the road, too? That’s insane. Y’all got something cooking, New York. Keep the party going.


Photo Friday: Caitlin Clark’s week in a photo

Mandatory Credit: Grace Hollars-USA TODAY Sports

It’s been a rough week for the Fever’s star rookie. She only scored 9 points against the New York Liberty on Thursday. Here she is after missing one of her seven three-point attempts on the night.

The good news is that it’ll only get better from here.


Quick hits: The WNBA fumbled its charter flight rollout … Dabo being Dabo … and more

— Here’s Meg Hall on how bad the WNBA charter flight situation has been.

— Cory Woodroof has more on Dabo Swinney being unsurprisingly arrogant about ignoring the transfer portal.

— Blake Schuster has more on Scottie Scheffler’s PGA Championship odds barely changing after he was arrested. Wow.

— Christian D’Andrea listed the 10 worst primetime games of the NFL season for you here.

— Here’s Robert Zeglinski with more on the Cavaliers’ impending chaotic offseason.

— And here’s Bryan Kalbrosky with the latest consensus NBA mock draft.

That’s a wrap, folks! Thanks for reading! Let’s lock in again next week. Until then! Peace. We out.

-Sykes ✌️

Live updates from Scottie Scheffler’s round at 2024 PGA Championship

Keep up with Scottie’s wild Friday at Valhalla.

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LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Hush comes over any outdoor sporting event when a soft rain is falling. But Friday morning at Valhalla Golf Club, site of the 2024 PGA Championship, you can feel a stunned disbelief in the air. This as if people don’t really know what to say.

After a one-hour delay in play, T-shirts are now flying in as spectators are starting to fill the size of the fairways and ring themselves around the greens, but it’s eerily quiet. Yes, people are applauding when players are introduced on the first and 10th tee boxes, but otherwise this venue is quiet.

Umbrellas are everywhere in the practice area. There’s a soft rain falling, which should make the golf course vulnerable and produce low scores. Players and caddies are chatting, but you would not know that there had been a detention of the world’s number one player a few hundred yards away a few hours before.

PGA CHAMPIONSHIP: Friday photos | Leaderboard | How to watch

World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler was arrested by police ahead of his second round at the 2024 PGA Championship. Scheffler was booked at 7:28 a.m ET, according to online records accessed by Golfweek.

As gloomy skies sit over Valhalla Golf Club prior to the second round of the PGA Championship, players practice on the putting green. (Photo: David Dusek/Golfweek)

Scheffler was charged with second-degree assault of a police officer, third-degree criminal mischief, reckless driving and disregarding signals from an officer directing traffic but was subsequently released.

Live updates at PGA Championship 2024

8:53 a.m.: While Scheffler’s situation is certainly something everyone is aware of, the job at hand is to win a major championship and keep up with the leader, Xander Schauffele, who tees off this afternoon. The only thing you can really hear in the practice area is the dull drone of electrical generators in the trucks nearby and in the television broadcast compound.

9:33 a.m.: Scheffler arrived in the practice area to a round of applause from the fans. After walking down the hillside, he did a fist bump with Rickie Fowler, who asked “You OK buddy?” Scottie replied, “Yeah, thanks,” and kept walking.

A lone fan yelled out “Free Scottie!”

9:44 a.m.: Brendan Todd walked by Scheffler at the range and added, “It’s great to see you a buddy.”

9:47 a.m.: Scheffler’s tee time is 10:08. Typically he would start preparing hours ahead of time. He’d eat breakfast, stretch and workout, hit balls and prepare mentally for the challenge of the course. Today, it looks like that will be condensed into a soggy hour or so.

9:49 a.m.: Does anything rattle Ted Scott, Scheffler’s caddie? He’s holding an umbrella, cleaning clubs, and smiling. You’d never know his guy had been handcuffed, in a police car and charged with crimes earlier this morning.

2024 PGA Championship
Scottie Scheffler and caddie Ted Scottlooks on from the tenth tee during the second round of the 2024 PGA Championship at Valhalla Golf Club on May 17, 2024 in Louisville, Kentucky. (Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

9:55 a.m.: Scheffler’s last drive of his warm-up had a carry distance of 292 yards. The ball speed was 177 mph. The morning’s events do not seem to have diminished his speed and he’s putting on his typical stripe on the range.

10:01 a.m.: After walking over the stair bridge and hitting a few bunker shots, Scheffler grabbed his putter and headed to the practice green. Few players, including Camilo Villegas, turned their heads. It was impossible to ignore the group of reporters, camera men, and TV people who are following Sheffler wherever he goes right now. Brian Harman is continuing to practice his putting with a mirror. Wyndham Clark and Will Zalatoris are going through their routines too. It’s the second round of a major championship and none of the things that are swirling around have anything to do with them.

10:28 a.m.: Kentucky is behind Scottie Scheffler. As he walked onto the 10th tee, chants of “Scottie! Scottie! Scottie!” erupted. While it will obviously be a very hard day for the world No. 1 player, the whole situation has created a very tough situation for Wyndham Clark and Brian Harman, too. This was always going to be a marquee group, but there’s a circus element to it now as well. As Scheffler was announced on the tee, an ocean of iPhones sprang from everywhere.

One fan yelled: “Scottie, I need your lawyer’s number!”

10:31 a.m.: Scheffler has always been a popular player, but never as popular as he is today here at Valhalla. After making a birdie on 10, he was cheered wildly walking to the 11th tee.

As is customary, the police officers providing security for Scheffler, Clark and Harman this morning. It’s a common practice with marquee players at every event, but this morning, after Scheffler was charged with assaulting one of their own, you have to wonder what is going through the minds of the police officers now assigned to ensure Scheffler’s safety.

11:39 a.m.: Scheffler released a statement to ESPN, saying “it was a very chaotic situation, understandably so considering the tragic accident that had occurred earlier, and there was a big misunderstanding of what I thought I was being asked to do.”

11:58 a.m.: The golf world reacts on X to the news of the arrest, with #freescottie trending.

12:10 p.m.: Check out some photos from the golf course on Friday, where fans are flocking to get a glimpse of Scheffler.

12:35 p.m.: Scheffler mug shot T-shirts have already been created, printed, sold and worn by fans at Valhalla Friday morning.

2024 PGA Championship
Cole Turner with a T-shirt featuring Scottie Scheffler’s LMPD mug shot at the 2024 PGA Championship second round. (Photo: Matt Stone/Louisville Courier Journal)

12:49 p.m.: Scheffler, who had just 30 minutes to warm up before starting his round on the 10th hole, recorded his third birdie in nine holes on the 18th before he made the turn. He’s 2 under on the day and 6 under overall, tied for seventh in the championship. Xander Schauffele, who has yet to start his second round, leads at 9 under.

1:26 p.m.: Another birdie and more cheers for Scheffler, who carded a circled 3 on the par-4 second hole, his 11th hole of the day. That moves him to 7 under and into a tie for fourth. They say very little fazes him and the fact that he’s 3 under just hours after being arrested and charged is kind of amazing. He’s currently two back on the leaderboard of Xander Schauffele and Mark Hubbard.

2:08 p.m.: Scheffler birdied the fourth for his fifth birdie of the day against just one bogey.

3:01 p.m.: And yet another birdie for Scheffler. To a loud road from the fans on the seventh hole, his 16th of the day, Scheffler poured in his sixth birdie of the day to get to 9 under, two back of a red-hot Collin Morikawa, who has zoomed into the lead.

4 p.m.: Scheffler made par on his final two holes to sign for a 5-under 66 and reach 9 under par for the tournament. He’s currently T-3, two shots behind Morikawa.

Golfweek will be updating this story throughout the day.

2024 PGA Championship second round delayed due to fatal accident near Valhalla Golf Club Friday morning

A man was struck and killed by a shuttle bus near the golf course.

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LOUISVILLE, Ky. — The second round of the 106th PGA Championship has been delayed at least one hour and 20 minutes due to a pedestrian fatality near Valhalla Golf Club.

According to a police report, a man, who has been identified by police as John Mills, was crossing Shelbyville Road Friday morning near the golf course when he was struck by a shuttle bus traveling eastbound in the center lane dedicated for buses. Mills, who was reporting to work, was pronounced dead on the scene. Officers received a call to the 15500 block of Shelbyville Road around 5 a.m. regarding a vehicle collision between a bus and a person.

The PGA announced that the second round will begin at 8:35 am. ET. The first grouping was expected to tee off at 7:15 a.m. ET.

Also Friday morning, Scottie Scheffler was arrested and charaged by police after trying to enter the gates of the club ahead of his tee time.

PGA CHAMPIONSHIP: Friday photos | Leaderboard | How to watch

The PGA of America released the following statement: “This morning we were devastated to learn that a worker with one of our vendors was tragically struck and killed by a shuttle bus outside Valhalla Golf Club. This is heartbreaking to all of us involved with the PGA Championship. We extend our sincere condolences to their family and loved ones.”

It later sent an update: “Our primary concern today remains with the family of John Mills, who lost his life in a tragic accident early this morning while reporting to work. As it relates to the incident involving Scottie Scheffler, we are fully cooperating as local authorities review what took place. While the legal process plays out, questions should to be directed to Scheffler’s attorney or local authorities.”

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Scottie Scheffler facing four charges – including a felony – after being arrested at 2024 PGA Championship

Scheffler was booked at 7:28 a.m. ET after trying to enter the golf course.

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LOUISVILLE, Ky. — World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler was arrested by police after a traffic misunderstanding ahead of his second round at the 2024 PGA Championship. Scheffler was booked at 7:28 a.m ET, according to online records accessed by Golfweek. ESPN was first to report.

Scheffler is facing the following four charges: Assault in the second degree of a police officer, criminal mischief in the third degree, reckless driving and disregarding signals from officers directing traffic.

He has retained local attorneys for the case and has an arraignment scheduled for 9 a.m. ET on Tuesday, May 21.

Scheffler was released from custody at 8:40 a.m. ET and arrived at the golf course at 9:15 a.m. ET. According to a PGA of America source on site, Scheffler was personally escorted to the club by an owner of Valhalla and made his 10:08 a.m. ET tee time.

PGA CHAMPIONSHIP: How to watch | Tournament hub | Friday’s photos

Jeff Darlington reported early Friday morning that Scheffler attempted to drive past a police officer into Valhalla Golf Club and that officer attempted to “attach himself to Scheffler’s car, and Scheffler then stopped his vehicle at the entrance to Valhalla.” The officer reportedly began to scream at Scheffler to get out of the car, and when the 27-year-old exited the car, he was shoved against the vehicle and placed in handcuffs. He was then detained in the back of a police car.

“They told him to stop,” Darlington said in an appearance on ESPN. “When he didn’t stop, the police officer attached himself to the vehicle. Scheffler then traveled another 10 yards before stopping the car. The police officer then grabbed at his arm attempting to pull him out of the car before Scheffler eventually opened the door, at which point the police officer pulled Scheffler out of the car, pushed him up against the car and immediately placed him in handcuffs.”

In a statement provided to ESPN.com, Scheffler called it a “very chaotic situation” and said there was a “big misunderstanding of what I thought I was being asked to do. I never intended to disregard any of the instructions.”

After a brief hiatus for the birth of his child, Scheffler returned to competition this week with a 4-under 67 on Thursday and sat T-12 on the leaderboard after the first round. So far this season Scheffler has four wins at the Masters, Arnold Palmer Invitational, Players Championship and RBC Heritage. In 10 starts this season, he has nine top 10s, with a worst finish of T-17.

This story will be updated. Golfweek’s David Dusek contributed to the report.

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Louisville Sluggers: Bob May, Tiger Woods traded blows in epic PGA Championship at Valhalla in 2000

For that one week in 2000, they put on one of the greatest shows the game has ever seen.

It’s so easy now, with more than two decades of hindsight, for all the victories to converge into one uninterrupted stretch of dominance. The Tiger Woods of 1999 and 2000 won 17 PGA Tour events in his early 20s and suddenly, explosively, was the dominant force in golf.

He had fully burst into the spotlight with his eye-popping performance at the 1997 Masters, shattering the scoring record with the most dominant display in major championship history. After a relatively quiet year in 1998 in which he reworked his swing, he stared down a young Sergio Garcia to win his second major title at the 1999 PGA Championship at Medinah Country Club in Illinois.

Entering the 2000 PGA Championship at Valhalla Golf Club in Louisville, Kentucky, Woods was without doubt the star, capable of shotmaking and power and putting prowess unmatched by his older peers.

Spoiler alert: Woods won that PGA Championship, part of the greatest streak in golf history. But that 2000 PGA Championship was special, because Woods was pushed to an extent he rarely experienced during the peak of his powers. Almost every great shot he hit was matched in the final round, and for once, the ultimate frontrunner had a running mate down the line at Valhalla.

Woods had started the year on a heater, winning early-season Tour events in Hawaii, California, Florida and Ohio. And he was just getting warmed up.

Woods blew away the field at the 2000 U.S. Open in June at Pebble Beach, notching a 15-shot win for the largest victory margin ever in a major. He then claimed his fourth major title and second in a row at the Open Championship in July at the Old Course at St. Andrews, this one by a mere eight shots. He had claimed three titles in a stretch of four major championships, and he had locked up the career Grand Slam before his 24th birthday.

If it seemed as if Woods couldn’t lose, it was because he wasn’t doing much losing. He headed into the PGA Championship as the strong favorite at Valhalla Golf Club, and he had exposed this fact to all who dared challenge him. Tiger was the man to beat, and nobody seemed able to do it.

Enter Bob May

Nobody wants to be called a journeyman, but that description perfectly fit May, then a 31-year-old who had split time between the PGA Tour and the European Tour. He had never won on the PGA Tour, but his impressive junior-golf record in California had once been a target for a younger Woods. At the start of the PGA Championship at Valhalla, May had climbed to No. 48 in the world.

As the Championship progressed into Sunday’s final round, May vs. Woods had all the makings of a classic David-vs.-Goliath matchup that nobody saw coming. It’s easy to look back now and say the outcome seemed predetermined based on Woods’ sterling record as a closer, but that would be a case of hindsight being 20/20 because May was determined to take it to Woods.

And Woods, coming into Valhalla on an 18-month hot streak, looked entirely human for a spell in the third round and again early in the fourth.

Valhalla’s course was designed by Jack Nicklaus with major aspirations, having first hosted the 1996 PGA Championship won by Mark Brooks in a playoff over Kentucky native Kenny Perry. The layout featured thick bluegrass rough and tricky Nicklaus greens, many of which included several tiers.

Jack’s swan song

By the 2000 PGA Championship, the 60-year-old Nicklaus was nearing the end of his major championship career. The course he built in Kentucky would be the last he would play in the PGA Championship. But there was one more reason to watch the Golden Bear. He was paired with Woods in the first two rounds, Vijay Singh occupying the third spot in their group.

2000 PGA Championship
Vijay Singh, Tiger Woods and Jack Nicklaus walk from the first tee during the first round of the 2000 PGA Championship at Valhalla Golf Cub in Louisville.

It was the first time Nicklaus and Woods played competitive rounds together.
Woods wasted no time showing off in front of the man whose records he was chasing, shooting 6-under-par 66 to share the first-round lead with Scott Dunlap. A second-round 67 gave Woods the outright lead by one over Dunlap, who was playing some of the best golf of his life.

By and large, Woods did it by manhandling Valhalla’s four par 5s. With length to spare, Woods was 7 under par on those holes after playing each of them twice, seven birdies in eight attempts.

“I knew that he was good, but I had never played with him in a tournament before,” Nicklaus, who missed the cut by a shot, said during a televised interview after the first two rounds. “And he is so much better than I thought he was. It just absolutely amazed me. It was a unique experience for me to play with him the last two days.”

May, meanwhile, didn’t get off to the greatest start. By then a Las Vegas resident, May was an incredible longshot after opening with an even-par 72. A talented iron player, he climbed into the fringes of contention with a bogey-free 66 in the second round, but he was five shots behind Woods on a packed leaderboard.

Nobody could have predicted what would come

In Saturday’s third round, May racked up seven birdies in a 10-hole stretch and hung a second consecutive 66 on the board. Woods, meanwhile, started struggling a touch with his putter — nothing too alarming, but not every putt was dropping as some fans had come to expect. He was still dominating the par 5s in general, but a double bogey on the par-4 12th included a missed 3 footer.

Woods hung tough for a 2-under 70 and a one-shot lead over May, who was one shot clear of Dunlap and JP Hayes. But, unexpectedly, there appeared to be gaps in Woods’ armor.

Sunday turned into one of the greatest two-man duels in major championship history. Woods and May, paired together in the final group, distanced themselves from the field. And despite many expectations, it was May who started hot.

Woods struggled early with two bogeys in the first six holes, including a three-putt on a par 5. Meanwhile, May flipped the script with birdies on two of the first four holes. He bogeyed the sixth, but as the pairing walked to No. 7 tee, the journeyman had a two-shot lead and appeared fearless, throwing great iron shot after great iron shot at a Woods who couldn’t seem to dodge the blows. David had Goliath on the ropes.

2000 PGA Championship
Bob May at the 2000 PGA Championship.

But No. 7 is a par 5, and Woods did what he does on such holes, making birdie to cut May’s lead to one. Woods then reheated his putter with a 12-footer that found the cup on No. 8 to reach 13 under par and square what soon would become a two-man match. The contestants took a breather with pars on No. 9 before heading to the back nine.

After the turn, they threw birdies at each other hole after hole. May had three birdies in a row on Nos. 10-12 to take a 1-up lead despite Woods birdieing Nos. 10 and 12. They both birdied the long par-3 14th, May again knocking his approach inside Woods’ before each rolled in a putt. May again struck a beautiful approach on 15, but this time he misread his birdie putt and settled for par after Woods had made a 15-footer for his par, later calling that save a deciding point of the tournament.

Woods stuck a wedge approach tight on 17 to pull even with May as they lapped the rest of the field, and with the title on the line each man reached the par-5 18th green in two shots. Neither eagle putt came close, with May actually running his off the green and onto the fringe before Woods missed by 5 feet.

By this point, each player had four birdies on that back nine, and with everything on the line in regulation, neither backed down on 18. May knocked in his long birdie putt from the fringe, fist-pumping on his way to retrieve the ball from the hole. Woods then rolled his shorter putt home to tie May at 18 under par at the end of regulation, generating a Woods fist-pump of his own.

Each man shot 5-under 31 on that back nine, no bogeys between them. Woods had to birdie seven of the final 12 holes to catch the underdog May: No player had pushed Woods to those extremes in any of his previous major victories.

A playoff first at the PGA

They set off for a three-hole aggregate playoff, the first time that format was employed in the PGA Championship, replacing the previous sudden-death method. And Woods struck early.

May drove left into tall rough on Valhalla’s 16th, and his second shot found more rough short and right of the green. From there, an exceptional pitch-and-run trundled across the green, up to the back tier and to within a few inches to secure a par.

But Woods, having found the fairway with a 2-iron tee shot and having hit the green with his approach, rolled in a 25-footer for birdie. And it wasn’t just that Woods made the putt. He followed the ball toward the hole, quick-stepping as it approached the cup and pointing as it tumbled in, giving the cameras one of his most iconic reactions. His birdie drew the first and only blood of the playoff.

Both men struggled on No. 17, May getting up and down from a greenside bunker while Woods was forced to pitch out of the trees with his second, bouncing his ball off a cart path and over the green before scrambling for a par to maintain his one-shot playoff lead.

Then came one of the luckiest breaks of Woods’ career. On the third and final hole of the playoff, he badly tugged his drive toward trees and bushes. After a few tense seconds in which nobody seemed to know where the ball was, it could be seen on the television coverage rebounding down a cart path to a much better location, albeit still in light rough.

Tiger Woods 2000 PGA
Tiger Woods celebrates making a birdie putt on the 18th hole to force a playoff at the 2000 PGA Championship at Valhalla Golf Club in Louisville, Kentucky. (Photo: Donald Miralle/Allsport)

There has been speculation that Woods’ ball was either kicked or thrown by a fan, but there’s no solid evidence to promote such a claim. If his ball had remained in the thickest trouble, his one-shot lead would have been in peril.
May also pulled his drive into the rough, and both men missed the fairway with their ensuing layups on the par 5. Woods then found the front bunker with his third shot, while May blasted his approach from deep grass onto the green within 25 feet of the hole. This thing wasn’t over yet, as a make by May or a bad bunker shot by Woods could yet square the playoff.

Woods then did what he does, blasting from the sand to within 18 inches to guarantee his par. May needed to sink that 25-footer for birdie, and for most of its length it appeared as if he might have done it. But the putt broke hard near the end and missed by inches, and Woods had his third major victory in a row.

“Anytime you get to play against the best, and be able to come out on top against the best, it’s always going to be more satisfying,” Woods said after the round. “The last two years the PGA Championship has drawn the best field, and I’ve been very fortunate to be able to win. But to be able to tee it up and go toe-to-toe against the best players in the world, that’s what you dream about.”

May had come within a whisker of knocking the wind out of Woods, ultimately falling one shot shy of victory in regulation and then losing by just one shot in the playoff.

“I wanted to concentrate real hard out there today and, you know, prove to people I can play out here,” May said in a post-round television interview. “It’s not a question anymore. I went out and played a good solid round of golf, and was just one shot too short.”

The two players’ careers diverged greatly after that PGA Championship before suffering similar infirmities.

Woods kept winning, racking up a total nine PGA Tour victories in 2000. He added the Masters title in 2001, giving him all four major trophies in a row. Call it a non-calendar- year Grand Slam if you like or not, but there’s no denying it was the greatest professional major streak in the history of the game.

May kept swinging well in the weeks after the PGA Championship, finishing third at the Reno-Tahoe Open the next week and adding three more top-20 finishes on Tour that year. Over the next several seasons, he continued on Tour before hurting his back in 2003, the spinal injury eventually leading to surgery. After more than a year away from golf, he returned to play a handful of more seasons before more pain led to a second surgery. After turning 50 in 2018, he tried to qualify for the PGA Tour Champions but has played only a handful of events. Much of his focus has shifted to the eponymous golf academy he operates in Las Vegas.

Woods, meanwhile, went on to arguably the best career in professional golf history with 15 major titles and 82 PGA Tour victories before suffering a series of injuries himself, including his own back problems that led to multiple surgeries.

All these years after his stunning showdown with May in Louisville, Woods is also trying to prepare his body for PGA Tour starts.

The two players were on divergent paths that eventually led to similar pain and limited play. But for that week at Valhalla, each was in his prime, and they put on one of the greatest shows the game has ever seen.

Scottie Scheffler lurking after first round of 2024 PGA Championship

“I felt like there was a couple things I can clean up going into tomorrow.”

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Scottie Scheffler started with a bang and showed little rust in his first competitive round since taking three weeks off for the birth of his son.

Scheffler’s approach from 167 yards at the first hole bounced a few feet in front of the hole and hopped into the cup for an eagle. Welcome back!

“It was a stock 9-iron. I was trying to hit it right at the pin because I felt like if I hit it the right way, the shortest it was going to go was on the pin,” he explained. “I felt like it was going to go a little past the pin if anything, and it was nice to see that one go in, obviously.”

Scheffler fired a 4-under 67 at Valhalla Golf Club on Thursday in the opening round of the 106th PGA Championship, extending his streak to 41 consecutive rounds at par-or-better dating to an even-par final-round 70 at the 2023 Tour Championship. He sits T-12 and trails leader Xander Schauffele by five strokes.

“I mean, there’s nothing I can do. Xander went out and played a great round this morning and I’m not really going to worry about trying to shoot 9 under. I’m just going to go out and try to hit good shots and play my own game,” said Scheffler.

The world No. 1 has been a force to be reckoned with, winning in four of his last five starts, including the Masters and RBC Heritage back-to-back before heading home to Dallas to await the birth of son Bennett.

“I’m in amazement,” Keegan Bradley told CBS. “There are certain guys that can excel extremely at one aspect of the game but it seems like Scottie is excelling at almost everything.”

PGA: Tournament hub | Friday tee times | Photos

The last two No. 1s who teed it up in a PGA Championship at Valhalla – Tiger Woods (2000) and McIlroy (2014) – won the tournament. That’s a good omen for Scheffler. Just how good has his recent run been? Scheffler has four wins in 10 starts this season. That is a higher winning percentage than the current records of Major League Baseball’s Rockies, White Sox, Marlins, Astros, and Angels. He’s bidding to become the first player since Jordan Spieth in 2015 – and only the fifth player since 1960 – to win the first two majors of the year.

2024 Masters
Scottie Scheffler holds up his trophy at the green jacket ceremony after winning the 2024 Masters Tournament. (Photo: Adam Cairns-USA TODAY Network)

But Golf Channel’s Paul McGinley pointed out that if Scheffler has five gears, he only used three on Thursday. He still made an eagle and four birdies against two bogeys, one of which was a three-putt at No. 14 in which he seethed afterward lipping out from 4 feet, but bounced back with his final birdie of the day at 15. Scheffler’s tee-to-green was on point as usual: according to stats maven Justin Ray, Scheffler gained 5+ shots on the field in a major championship round for the sixth time since the beginning of 2022. No other player in that span has more than three such rounds. Nevertheless, after a long round and with an 8:48 am. ET tee time on Friday, Scheffler still rushed to the range to iron out a few wrinkles, working with swing coach Randy Smith and putting coach Phil Kenyon.

“I felt like there was a couple things I can clean up going into tomorrow, but overall today was a solid round,” Scheffler said.