Sahith Theegala explains ‘Mongolian Reversal,’ a phrase he picked up from Fred Couples

Theegala closed by saying, “Mongolian Reversal, yes. Don’t cancel me, please.”

MONTREAL – Sahith Theegala heard the laughter.

Seated alongside U.S. Presidents Cup teammates Xander Schauffele, Keegan Bradley and Scottie Scheffler in the interview room, Theegala, a rookie in international team competition who teamed with Collin Morikawa for a 1-up victory over Adam Scott and Min Woo Lee in the second of five Four-Ball matches on Thursday, talked as if he’d done this a million times.

“Match play is a funny, funny thing,” he said. “There’s always some Mongolians and things go the ways that you don’t think it would go. But yeah, it was really intense. To finish how we finished was awesome, to get a point.”

Mongolians? Laughter ensued along the raised platform where the players sat. You could tell that Schauffele and maybe even Scheffler couldn’t wait to get back to the team room and share the knowledge Theegala dropped on the media during their group session. It likely will follow him until at least the next Presidents Cup in 2026. But it almost slipped through the cracks of the remaining allotted time of questions and answers before the players would be whisked out of the room and a handful of International Team players would replace them. Thankfully, Shane Ryan of Golf Digest was granted the last question and he wondered, “Sahith, can you tell me what Mongolians are?”

“I heard them laughing when I said that,” Theegala began. “I realize I didn’t say the full phrase. Not race intended or country intended, but Mongolian Reversal, I don’t even know how it originated.”

Presidents Cup: Scoring | Photos | Yardage book

Who really does? But Theegala noted that the first time he heard the saying a long time ago happened to be when he was watching TV and former three-time U.S. Presidents Cup Captain Fred Couples uttered the phrase. [I’m pretty sure I was in attendance at a press conference in which Couples used this term.] A quick Google search of the saying and Fred Couples returned a handful of returns, including the great Michael Bamberger writing that he was going to keep using the term Mongolian Reversal “because Fred Couples uses it, too.” The equally great Gary Van Sickle credited Couples too for the term in a 2006 story.

Then Theegala explained to Ryan what it meant.

“I guess it’s just when your opponents are in a better place than you on the hole and you do something cool like make a long putt. It looks like your opponents were going to win the hole when you hit the approach shots in, but you make the long putt and they miss the short putt, and all of a sudden looking like you’re losing the hole to winning the hole,” he said.

In a gesture not often heard at an athlete’s press conference, Theegala added, “Thank you for asking to clarify that.”

Blessed with enough self-awareness to realize that this terminology he picked up from Couples may have gone the way of such politically incorrect terms such as Indian burn and Chinese fire drill, Theegala closed by saying, “Mongolian Reversal, yes. Don’t cancel me, please.”

Theegala is salt of the Earth and also spent time praising both his parents for the reason he was sitting on the stage in the first place. After not getting the chance to ask a follow-up question, I approached Theegala as he was exiting the press conference and wondered, what was the Mongolian Reversal in his Four-ball match?

He wasted no time responding. “The seventh hole,” he said. “Collin drained a putt and then Adam missed from 10 feet. It didn’t look we’d win that hole and we could’ve gone 2 down in the match but instead we were back to all square.”

Fred Couples never said it better.

Presidents Cup 2024 odds and picks for Royal Montreal Golf Club

Here are a few picks for the week at Royal Montreal.

The 2024 Presidents Cup gets underway Thursday with a fourball session scheduled for 11:35 a.m. ET at Royal Montreal Golf Club in Quebec, Canada. Jim Furyk will lead Team USA, while Canadian Mike Weir is set to captain the Internationals in his home country.

Some of the big names on the American side include world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, Xander Schauffele and Collin Morikawa. For the Internationals, they’ll lean on veterans Adam Scott, Jason Day and Hideki Matsuyama while boasting young stars Tom Kim and Min Woo Lee.

Team USA leads the all-time series at 12-1-1 and hopes to once again raise the Cup coming Sunday afternoon.

Presidents Cup: Leaderboard | Gala photos | Photos

Golf course

Royal Montreal Golf Club | Par 70 | 7,319 yards

Scottie Scheffler of the U.S. Team warms up on the range prior to the 2024 Presidents Cup at The Royal Montreal Golf Club on September 24, 2024 in Montreal, Quebec. (Photo by Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images)

Presidents Cup teams

Team USA International Team
Scottie Scheffler Hideki Matsuyama
Xander Schauffele Sungjae Im
Collin Morikawa Adam Scott
Wyndham Clark Tom Kim
Patrick Cantlay Jason Day
Sahith Theegala Byeong Hun An
Keegan Bradley Christiaan Bezuidenhout
Sam Burns Corey Conners
Tony Finau Mackenzie Hughes
Brian Harman Si Woo Kim
Russell Henley Min Woo Lee
Max Homa Taylor Pendrith

Presidents Cup format, schedule

Thursday: Fourball (best ball). The first tee time is scheduled for 11:35 a.m. ET.

Friday: Foursomes (alternate shot). The first tee time is scheduled for 1:05 p.m. ET.

Saturday: Fourball in the morning, starting at 7:02 a.m. ET. Foursomes in the afternoon, starting at 1:40 p.m. ET.

Sunday: Singles. The first tee time is scheduled for 12:02 p.m. ET.

Presidents Cup odds

Unsurprisingly, especially when you take into account the all-time record, Team USA is -250 to win, with the Internationals sitting at +275. A tie is +1200.

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Presidents Cup picks

2022 Presidents Cup
Team USA golfer Sam Burns celebrates winning the 17th hole during the four-ball match play of the Presidents Cup golf tournament at Quail Hollow Club. Mandatory Credit: Peter Casey-USA TODAY Sports

Pick: Sam Burns, top Team USA scorer (+750), top captain’s pick (+210)

Take: Let’s start the card with some value. Burns didn’t win a match two years ago at Quail Hollow, going 0-3-2. However, I think it’s time Burns gets some payback.

He enters the Presidents Cup in fantastic form. Over his last four starts, he’s finished T-12 (3M Open), T-5 (FedEx St. Jude Championship), T-2 (BMW Championship) and T-12 Tour Championship.

In these match-play competitions, it’s all about making putts. Burns ranked 15th in Strokes Gained: Putting on the PGA Tour this season.

Tom Kim of South Korea and the International Team reacts after winning the 11th hole during Saturday morning foursomes on day three of the 2022 Presidents Cup at Quail Hollow Country Club on September 24, 2022 in Charlotte, North Carolina. (Photo by Stacy Revere/Getty Images)

Pick: Tom Kim, top International point scorer (+700)

Take: Some players are born for these team competitions, and I think Tom Kim is one of those guys. The show he put on at Quail Hollow two years ago was his “Hello, world” moment and I think he keeps it going at Royal Montreal.

When his putter gets hot, he can pour them in from all over the place and his tee-to-green game is consistently a strength.

2024 Procore Championship
Sahith Theegala of the United States hits his tee shot on the fourth hole during the third round of the Procore Championship 2024 at Silverado Resort on September 14, 2024 in Napa, California. (Photo by Eakin Howard/Getty Images)

Pick: Sahith Thegala, top USA rookie (+250)

Take: Like Kim, I think Theegala has the personality to thrive in this team environment. Plus, he’s coming off a stellar performance at the Tour Championship (third) and most recently tied for seventh at the Procore Championship.

Sahith Theegala’s at peace with losing $2.5 million for calling a penalty on himself

When pressed on the matter, Theegala said, “I wouldn’t be able to sleep [if I didn’t call the penalty].”

NAPA, Calif. – As the longtime PGA professional at El Prado Golf Course in Chino Hills, California, Rick Hunter taught his students that if they cheated on the golf course, they wouldn’t be able to sleep at night.

During the third round of the 2024 Tour Championship in Atlanta, Sahith Theegala, Hunter’s most famous student, reported a penalty on himself at the third hole, immediately calling over playing partner Xander Schauffele and notifying a rules official that he believed he may have touched a grain of sand in a bunker on his backswing, a violation of Rule 12.2b, testing the sand. Not even video could determine conclusively whether Theegala had grazed the sand but he was docked two strokes. He earned $7.5 million for finishing third but had he not been penalized he would have earned $10 million and tied Collin Morikawa for second place.

“Pretty sure I breached the rules, so I’m paying the price for it, and I feel good about it,” Theegala said after the fact.

His honesty cost him $2.5 million. When pressed on the matter, Theegala said, “I wouldn’t be able to sleep [if I didn’t call the penalty].”

“Sure enough, the exact phrase I always taught him, that’s what he came up with,” Hunter said. “But the way he handled the (infraction) was a reflection of the kind of person he is.”

To Theegala, he simply couldn’t have lived with himself if he hadn’t spoken up on what he described as “90 percent sure” he touched the sand.

https://twitter.com/PGATOUR/status/1829967978437488655

“I guess it was just the way my dad instilled values in me as a kid with golf specifically and my mom with the non-golf stuff,” he said. “It was just second nature. I felt I did something wrong, I just want to clear it up.”

As for the FedEx Cup Playoffs overall, Theegala described it as a rollercoaster ride. He was disappointed in his performance at the FedEx St. Jude Championship, where he finished T-46. Then he injured the hamate bone on his right hand on the Tuesday before the BMW Championship.

“It was just out of place and it was just pressing on a ligament and it was just painful,” he said. “We got it back in. It still hurt a lot, but it was back in.”

He sat out the pro-am but finished dead last in the 50-man field at a tournament for the first time in his career. On the eve of the Tour Championship, he reinjured a rib that had bothered him earlier that year. A team of personal trainers worked on his wrist and other injuries but he still didn’t feel great after his warmup before the opening round of the FedEx Cup finale. Hunter stepped in and dished out the tough love Theegala needed.

“I looked him right in the face,” Hunter recalled, “and I said, ‘Listen, we’re here to do something special.’ I said, ‘Don’t play golf swing, just go ahead and play the game.’ And he looked at me, and he says, ‘OK.’”

“It was just the kick I needed,” Theegala said. “It fired me up.”

Theegala ended up finishing third in the Tour Championship, making 29 birdies for the week, and he called it the best he’s played in a PGA Tour event. Hunter, for one, is confident it could be a turning point in his student’s career.

“Now he knows for sure he can whoop up on these top guys,” Hunter said of his performance in the elite 30-man field of the season’s top finishers. “He needed that.”

This week, Theegala returns to Silverado Resort’s North Course for the Procore Championship, site of his debut PGA Tour victory a year ago. In two weeks, Theegala takes the next step in his career, representing the United States in international competition for the first time at the Presidents Cup in Montreal.

“He was born to do stuff like this. This was part of his purpose in life,” Hunter said. “The boys on a mission, he wants to be one of the best and he’s got the gumption to do it. He’ll never have a so-called perfect swing but, boy, he’ll play with anybody.”

Sahith Theegala self-reported a two-stroke penalty Saturday at 2024 Tour Championship

Theegala “will have the opportunity to review the penalty with a rules official following his round.”

Sahith Theegala used rounds of 67-66 during the first two rounds of the 2024 Tour Championship in Atlanta to play himself into contention heading into Moving Day.

After a lengthy birdie make on the par-3 second Saturday, a unique rules situation dropped Theegala from 13 under to 11 under.

Theegala self-reported a two-shot penalty after he grazed the sand in a fairway bunker on the third hole. He made par, but it turned into a six after speaking with an official.

According to the PGA Tour, Theegala “will have the opportunity to review the penalty with a rules official following his round.”

Tour Championship: Photos | Best Merch | Leaderboard

https://twitter.com/PGATOUR/status/1829967978437488655

Theegala was 1 over through five holes, 11 under total and nine back of Scottie Scheffler.

Golf equipment used by contenders at the 2024 PGA Championship

Close-up and in-hand images of golf equipment being used by players who are on the first page of the leaderboard at the 2024 PGA Championship.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — The rain subsided and the sun eventually came out at Valhalla Golf Club, and as players went through their warmup routines and prepared to take on the course on Saturday and Sunday, Golfweek’s resident gearhead, senior writer David Dusek, was there. Along with his camera, David spent plenty of time in the practice area, observing what each player had in his bag.

The gallery of images below was created throughout the weekend and includes close-up shots of most of the golfers who were in contention to win the Wannamaker trophy and clinch the second major championship of the 2024 season, including the eventual winner, Xander Schauffele.

PGA: Tournament hub | Photos

Teams, rosters, format and more: Everything you need to know for the TGL’s debut

TGL debuts in 2025.

After TGL’s stadium collapsed at the end of last year, its debut was pushed back to 2025. But as the date draws closer, we now have a significant information about the start-up technology-driven league started by Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy’s TMRW Sports.

The first night of matches will take place on Jan. 7, 2025, in primetime on ESPN.

“As we plan the 2025 launch of TGL presented by SoFi, we now have the first three Tuesdays in January circled to introduce sports fans to this new form of team golf. January is a tremendous time of year for fans looking for prime time sports and TGL’s launch will complement the start of the PGA TOUR season and take advantage of ESPN’s promotional machine across their coverage of the NFL and college football playoffs,” said Mike McCarley, founder and CEO of TMRW Sports.

Countless PGA Tour stars are involved in the new circuit, including Woods, McIlroy, Max Homa, Justin Thomas and Rickie Fowler, among others.

Learn everything you need to know about the TGL below.

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2024 Zurich Classic of New Orleans prize money payouts for each PGA Tour player

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour.

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour. Just ask this week’s winners, Shane Lowry and Rory McIlroy.

The Ryder Cup teammates won the 2024 Zurich Classic of New Orleans at TPC Louisiana in Avondale on Sunday after a one-hole playoff against Chad Ramey and Martin Trainer. The win is the 25th of McIlroy’s career and third of Lowry’s on the PGA Tour.

McIlroy and Lowry will each bank $1,286,050, while Ramey and Trainer will earn $525,100 as a consolation prize. Ryan Brehm and Mark Hubbard finished a shot back in third and will take home $343,763 a piece.

With $8.9 million up for grabs, check out how much money each PGA Tour player earned this week at the 2024 Zurich Classic of New Orleans.

Prize money payouts

Position Players Score Earnings (each)
1 Rory McIlroy and Shane Lowry -25 $1,286,050
2 Chad Ramey and Martin Trainer -25 $525,100
3 Ryan Brehm and Mark Hubbard -24 $343,763
T4 Garrick Higgo and Ryan Fox -23 $234,181
T4 Sam Stevens and Paul Barjon -23 $234,181
T4 Zac Blair and Patrick Fishburn -23 $234,181
T4 Nico Echavarria and Max Greyserman -23 $234,181
T8 Greyson Sigg and Chesson Hadley -22 $149,075
T8 Thomas Detry and Robert MacIntyre -22 $149,075
10 Nick Taylor and Adam Hadwin -21 $122,375
T11 Kelly Kraft and Kevin Tway -20 $69,070
T11 Austin Eckroat and Chris Gotterup -20 $69,070
T11 Brice Garnett and Sepp Straka -20 $69,070
T11 K.H. Lee and Michael Kim -20 $69,070
T11 Matt Fitzpatrick and Alex Fitzpatrick -20 $69,070
T11 Charley Hoffman and Nick Watney -20 $69,070
T11 Corey Conners and Taylor Pendrith -20 $69,070
T11 Callum Tarren and David Skinns -20 $69,070
T19 Chandler Phillips and Jacob Bridgeman -19 $37,380
T19 Peter Malnati and Russell Knox -19 $37,380
T19 Luke List and Henrik Norlander -19 $37,380
T19 Zach Johnson and Ryan Palmer -19 $37,380
T23 Collin Morikawa and Kurt Kitayama -18 $23,763
T23 Mac Meissner and Austin Smotherman -18 $23,763
T23 Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele -18 $23,763
T23 Davis Thompson and Andrew Novak -18 $23,763
T23 Aaron Rai and David Lipsky -18 $23,763
T28 Nick Hardy and Davis Riley -17 $19,135
T28 Brandon Wu and James Nicholas -17 $19,135
T28 Doug Ghim and Chan Kim -17 $19,135
T28 Kevin Yu and C.T. Pan -17 $19,135
T28 Dylan Wu and Justin Lower -17 $19,135
T28 Ben Kohles and Patton Kizzire -17 $19,135
T28 Harry Hall and Scott Piercy -17 $19,135
T28 Keith Mitchell and Joel Dahmen -17 $19,135
36 Matt Wallace and Thorbjorn Olesen -16 $17,533
37 Ben Taylor and Sean O’Hair -15 $17,177
38 Nate Lashley and Rafa Campos -14 $16,821
39 Vincent Norrman and Jorge Campillo -13 $16,465
40 Chez Reavie and Brandt Snedeker -9 $16,109

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2024 RBC Heritage prize money payouts for each PGA Tour player

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour.

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour. Just ask this week’s winner, Scottie Scheffler.

The 27-year-old won the 2024 RBC Heritage at Harbour Town Golf Links in Hilton Head Island, South Carolina, on Monday after play was suspended for two-and-a-half hours on Sunday due to inclement weather and then later for darkness. The win is the world No. 1’s fourth in his last five starts and 10th of his PGA Tour career.

Last week Scheffler won $3.6 million at the Masters and he earned another $3.6 million for his win this week in the PGA Tour’s latest big-money signature event. Sahith Theegala, who finished three shots back in second, banked a hefty $2.18 million for his runner-up showing. Patrick Cantlay and Wyndham Clark, who finished T-3 at 15 under, each banked $1.18 million.

With $20 million up for grabs, check out how much money each PGA Tour player earned this week at the 2024 RBC Heritage in Hilton Head.

Prize money payouts

Position Player Score Earnings
1 Scottie Scheffler -19 $3,600,000
2 Sahith Theegala -16 $2,180,000
T3 Wyndham Clark -15 $1,180,000
T3 Patrick Cantlay -15 $1,180,000
T5 Justin Thomas -14 $711,250
T5 J.T. Poston -14 $711,250
T5 Patrick Rodgers -14 $711,250
T5 Sepp Straka -14 $711,250
9 Collin Morikawa -13 $585,000
T10 Chris Kirk -12 $525,000
T10 Ludvig Åberg -12 $525,000
T12 Brian Harman -11 $397,000
T12 Tony Finau -11 $397,000
T12 Sungjae Im -11 $397,000
T12 Russell Henley -11 $397,000
T12 Séamus Power -11 $397,000
17 Austin Eckroat -10 $325,000
T18 Jason Day -9 $222,000
T18 Rickie Fowler -9 $222,000
T18 Andrew Putnam -9 $222,000
T18 Akshay Bhatia -9 $222,000
T18 Si Woo Kim -9 $222,000
T18 Tom Kim -9 $222,000
T18 Brice Garnett -9 $222,000
T18 Xander Schauffele -9 $222,000
T18 Stephan Jaeger -9 $222,000
T18 Tom Hoge -9 $222,000
T28 Christiaan Bezuidenhout -8 $137,000
T28 Harris English -8 $137,000
T28 Matt Fitzpatrick -8 $137,000
T28 Denny McCarthy -8 $137,000
T28 Thomas Detry -8 $137,000
T33 Erik van Rooyen -7 $106,667
T33 Kurt Kitayama -7 $106,667
T33 Lucas Glover -7 $106,667
T33 Eric Cole -7 $106,667
T33 Alejandro Tosti -7 $106,667
T33 Rory McIlroy -7 $106,667
T39 Grayson Murray -6 $87,000
T39 Mackenzie Hughes -6 $87,000
T39 Jordan Spieth -6 $87,000
T42 Webb Simpson -5 $77,000
T42 Adam Hadwin -5 $77,000
T44 Sam Burns -4 $63,160
T44 Justin Rose -4 $63,160
T44 Adam Svensson -4 $63,160
T44 Corey Conners -4 $63,160
T44 Will Zalatoris -4 $63,160
T49 Cameron Davis -3 $49,867
T49 Tommy Fleetwood -3 $49,867
T49 Matthieu Pavon -3 $49,867
T49 Peter Malnati -3 $49,867
T49 Nick Taylor -3 $49,867
T49 Adam Schenk -3 $49,867
T55 Chandler Phillips -2 $46,600
T55 Keegan Bradley -2 $46,600
T55 Max Homa -2 $46,600
T58 Lee Hodges -1 $45,200
T58 Erik Barnes -1 $45,200
T58 Taylor Moore -1 $45,200
T58 Brendon Todd -1 $45,200
T62 Cameron Young E $44,000
T62 Jake Knapp E $44,000
T64 Gary Woodland 1 $43,000
T64 Shane Lowry 1 $43,000
T64 Emiliano Grillo 1 $43,000
67 Byeong Hun An 2 $42,200
68 Kevin Kisner 5 $41,800
69 Nick Dunlap 6 $41,400

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Scottie Scheffler continues dominant run with 2024 RBC Heritage win

The world No. 1 has now won in four of his last five starts.

Scottie Scheffler spent an extra night in Hilton Head Island, South Carolina, which typically wouldn’t be such a drag if not for his wife Meredith being pregnant back home in Dallas and awaiting the couple’s first child later this month.

But Mother Nature had other plans, forcing Scheffler to return to Harbour Town Golf Links on Monday morning to play his final three holes of the 2024 RBC Heritage and wrap up his fourth PGA Tour title in his past five starts.

One week and one day after Scheffler slipped into the famed Green Jacket awarded to the Masters champ for the second time in three years, the 27-year-old Texan added another colorful jacket – this time in trademark Tartan – to his closet and became the first reigning Masters champion to win the RBC Heritage since Bernhard Langer in 1985.

Scheffler, who was 4-under through 15 holes in the final round and 20-under overall when play was suspended due to darkness on Sunday, made two pars and a finishing bogey and signed for a 3-under 68 on Monday, three shots better than Sahith Theegala (68) and four better than reigning U.S. Open champion Wyndham Clark (65) and past FedEx Cup champion Patrick Cantlay (68). Scheffler banked another $3.6 million to surpass $18 million in earnings this season – and it’s still April.

“I didn’t show up here just to have some sort of ceremony and have people tell me congratulations,” said Scheffler of avoiding a post-Masters victory hangover. “I came here with a purpose.”

CBS Sports roving reporter Colt Knost, who grew up with Scheffler following him around Dallas’s Royal Oaks Golf Club, already has one of the best nicknames in golf: The Big Gravy. But he may have earned another one – Knost-radamus – for a prediction seemingly as accurate as those of the 16th century French astrologer Nostradamus. In February 2022, when Scheffler won his first Tour title at the WM Phoenix Open, Knost proclaimed him to be “a worldbeater,” and added, “Now that he’s got that first one, I think the floodgates are going to open for him.”

Scheffler’s latest triumph is his 10th career title, the first player to win that many times (or more) in three seasons since Dustin Johnson did so between 2015-16 and 2017-18. There’s no indication that this flood of success for the world No. 1 will stop any time soon. Did Knost imagine Scheffler would dominate on the PGA Tour? “I really did,” he said. “He never plays badly and he’s one of the most competitive people I’ve ever met. He will never just go through the motions.”

Theegala, who recalled playing against Scheffler for the first time in the Starburst Junior Golf Classic at Waco, Texas, didn’t remember ever beating Scheffler, who is a year older than him, in a single junior tournament. Competing with Scheffler, who leads the Tour in 30 statistical categories this season, hasn’t gotten any easier lately. “It’s pretty epic,” Theegala said of Scheffler, who has shot even par or better in all 40 rounds this season and became the first player to win four times in five starts since Tiger Woods in 2007-08. “I was talking to Carl, my caddie, walking to 15 tee box. I was like, I grew up watching the end of Tiger, got to see Rory, DJ, Jordan, like all these guys kind of dominate for a period of time, and I was like, we could be in the midst of something really, really special.”

Some observers suggested that Scheffler would skip the RBC Heritage but Scheffler said he never wavered in his commitment to the tournament. After winning the Masters, Scheffler flew home to Dallas to be with Meredith and didn’t show up to Hilton Head until Tuesday. He played only a nine-hole practice round on Wednesday and spotted much of the field a head start, shanking a bunker shot at his third hole in the first round, making double bogey and needing two late birdies to post 69. He trailed by six and complained of fatigue. But after recharging his batteries, he didn’t make a single bogey or worse until the 72nd hole of the tournament, and even in that case Scheffler said he was counting that one as a par as he played the smart shots with a comfortable lead. He stormed back with a 65 on Friday and was lurking three back before reminding everyone who is boss with a bogey-free 63 to claim a one-stroke lead.

In the final round, Scheffler laid down the hammer early, chipping in at the par-5 second hole from 53 feet for eagle. His bump-and-run, executed to perfection, marked his 11th hole-out of the season. He tacked on a birdie at the par-5 fifth and strung together six consecutive pars before the horn blew. When play resumed he wedged to 6 feet for another birdie at 13. When he made his lone blunder, pull-hooking a 4-iron into the water due to mud on his ball at the par-5 15th, he took a penalty drop and carved a beautiful shot to 11 feet. Darkness had fallen and he could’ve wait until Monday to strike the par putt but he opted to play on and sank it for good measure. While that snapped a streak of 53 consecutive holes without recording a score of more than a four on his card, dating to the 15th hole in his first round, he pumped his fist with glee for keeping a clean card (to that point).

“I felt like I was due for one to drop,” said Scheffler, whose closing bogey gave him a winning total 19-under 265. “So I figured might as well hit it now.”

Clark mounted an early charge, making an eagle and six birdies in his first 11 holes to inch within a stroke of the lead. But his effort to run down Scheffler was spoiled at the 12th hole when Clark tried to punch between trees. His ball struck one of them squarely and ricocheted out of bounds. He made double bogey.

“It was kind of fun for a little bit,” said Clark, who improved to a career-best ranking of No. 3 in the world. “Seemed like maybe we had a chance to do something crazy.”

Only Mother Nature could prolong Scheffler’s victory another day. Play was suspended due to inclement weather at 4:28 p.m. ET, for two hours and 32 minutes. The delay meant they ran out of daylight.

But on Monday, Scheffler capped off winning for the fourth time this year, all of them Signature events. He finished tied for second in the only tournament he did not win during his scorching run. For the week, he topped the field of 69 in Strokes Gained: Off the Tee, SG: Tee to Green, SG: Approach the Green and scrambling.

“We’re watching greatness right now,” CBS’s Jim Nantz said. “It doesn’t happen all the time, but it sure is fun when you find yourself witnessing something like this.

Nantz’s NFL broadcast partner, former Dallas Cowboys QB Tony Romo, who played in the Invited Celebrity Classic on PGA Tour Champions last week, estimated he’s played around 500 rounds with Scheffler and said he’s never failed to break 70.

“Which is insane,” said Romo who played with him the week before the Masters at Brook Hollow, a Dallas club. “I have not seen a guy hit a golf ball like this since Tiger back in the 2000s when I played with him, the way he was striking the ball, the compression, the trajectory, the spin rate. It was impressive, and I was like, ‘He ain’t losing that tournament.’ ”

No one stopped him at the RBC Heritage either. Could Scheffler be on his way to a season for the record books? That may depend whether history repeats itself — all 10 of his wins have come in the months of February, March and April. So, time will tell if Scheffler can continue to dominate when the calendar flips to May – just don’t bet against the floodgates closing any time soon.

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J.T. Poston has his own ‘Scottie’ good-luck charm among first-round takeaways from the 2024 RBC Heritage

There’s another important Scottie at Harbour Town this week.

Another week, another signature event on the PGA Tour.

The first round of the 2024 RBC Heritage is in the books, and numerous players took advantage of softer conditions at Harbour Town Golf Links in Hilton Head Island, South Carolina, meaning birdies were aplenty on Thursday.

J.T. Poston holds the solo lead, and he has Scottie (no, not that one) to thank. Meanwhile, the Masters champion got off to a slow-ish start, but he finished strong after grinding through the middle of his round.

And in between, there are plenty of players crowding the top of the leaderboard with no major separation after 18 holes of play.

RBC Heritage: Photos

Here’s what you need to know from the opening round of the 2024 RBC Heritage:

There’s another important Scottie at Harbour Town this week. Katherine “Scottie” Poston, J.T. Poston’s daughter, who was born March 20, is with Poston for the first time since she was born. Along with wife Kelly, the Postons are off to a great start on Hilton Head Island.

Poston opened in 8-under 63 on Thursday to take the solo lead at the RBC Heritage. The 63 is the fifth time Poston has opened in 63 during a Tour event since the 2016-17 season, tied with Jordan Spieth for the most during that span. He had nine birdies and a lone blemish on the card to complete a stellar opening round.

“Maybe that has something to do with it. Maybe she’s a good luck charm,” Poston said of his daughter. “It’s been great. It’s definitely an adjustment. I think my wife and I were figuring it out. My mom is here. She’s helping us out, too. So we’ve got plenty of help. We’re just kind of figuring it out. But it’s good to have them here and sort of takes away the pressure of — I’m not worrying about golf when I’m at home. I’m trying to change diapers and take care of her.”

In the last five years at the RBC Heritage, Poston has finished in the top 10 three times while missing the cut in 2021 and 2023.

His 8-under start has opened up a two-shot lead on Seamus Power and Collin Morikawa.

He said the tournament is one he has circled on the calendar at the beginning of every year because he enjoys Harbour Town so much. Even with the extra responsibilities off the course, Poston is focused on playing strong golf on it. And he had no issues with that Thursday.

“My wife has been great,” Poston said, “She knows this is just how it is. We have to spend some time on the golf course. I’ve got to work on my game. I’ve got to stay sharp. She’s been awesome giving me the time to do that, and I’m not taking it for granted. I’m trying to be productive and get back home when I can help.”

As Austin Eckroat explains it, he was struggling with “everything” last week at Augusta National, resulting in him missing the cut.

“I came off a really good stretch, and all of a sudden I couldn’t hit the golf ball,” he said. “It’s never far away from good golf, but it’s also — you’re never that far away from struggling a little bit.”

Eckroat didn’t touch a golf club on the weekend, instead taking a spot outside the ropes as a patron on Saturday at Augusta National to get away a bit and have a different experience.

And it paid off. Eckroat’s refocused approach resulted in an opening 5-under 66 on Thursday. The winner of the Cognizant Classic earlier this season had six birdies and a lone bogey, and he said his weekend refresh contributed to the quick start.

“It was honestly a really enjoyable weekend to go and watch the Masters,” Eckroat said. “I had never done it and tried to take some notes on some guys playing well. Sunday I watched at home and then ended up driving over here and took it easy.

“I went and watched Amen Corner. That was a really cool area. I wanted to see Tiger at least hit one shot, so I watched Tiger hit his tee ball on 10 and then I just hung out on 13. We had a good spot where we could see the second shots, and it was a really cool spot.”

Theegala wants to play every week on the PGA Tour. It irritates him when he’s off because he still watches golf on TV and wonders why he isn’t in the field. But he knows that’s not possible.

He went into this year with a goal of building a smarter schedule to handle the signature events and majors better. And thus far, he feels as if it is paying off.

Theegala is in the group of players at 5 under and three back of Poston. He fired a bogey-free 66 on Thursday coming off a T-45 at the Masters last week.

“I haven’t played quite as much, and my body is thanking me,” Theegala said. “I feel like I have more energy for the bigger events, which is awesome. It’s really worked out well at the start of the year.

“I joke with my buddies all the time. I would always say I’m playing every event I get into, half-jokingly, but I was like, I’m not missing a Tour event. We’ve grinded our whole lives to get here and now I’m just going to be skipping a bunch of events. It feels weird to take it off, but I see the benefit in doing so. That’s probably been the number one answer when I’ve asked guys that have played out here for a long time, what’s their secret to the longevity. It’s really not pushing it.”

Scottie Scheffler and Jordan Spieth were paired together for the first round of the RBC Heritage, and through five holes, Spieth was 4 under and Scheffler was 1 over. By day’s end, Scheffler nicked his fellow Longhorn and Dallas resident by a shot.

Scheffler’s incredible consistency again showed Thursday, as he opened in 2-under 69, just four days removed from his second Masters victory. Scheffler didn’t get to Harbour Town until later in the week and played only nine holes on the back side during the pro-am portion of his warm-up. Yet even after an early shank on a bunker shot that resulted in a double, Scheffler settled in and birdied Nos. 16-17 to card 2 under.

“It would have felt better if I got off to a better start, but I tried to give myself a little bit of grace there, but I got pretty frustrated towards the middle of the round because I was playing good, felt like I was hitting good putts, and my speed was maybe a touch off,” Scheffler said. “I think I was maybe too settled down to start the day. I wasn’t quite into the competition. I think maybe it was a bit of fatigue, whatever it was. But I felt like I was still kind of getting adjusted to the golf course.”

Scheffler made birdie on the par-5 second before the double on the third. He carded the second of his four birdies on the par-3 seventh and then had eight straight pars before his consecutive birdies.

In his last four starts, Scheffler has three wins and a T-2. And in that T-2, Scheffler was a couple putts away from forcing a playoff or even winning outright. He mentioned he didn’t get as much work in on the greens at Harbour Town this week, but who can blame him? He has plenty of things going on in his life, including his first child being born in the coming weeks, as well.

“I think sometimes that frustration from not playing my best I think kind of helps me focus sometimes,” Scheffler said. “You can use that as good energy and you can use that as bad energy, so I tried to use it as best I could for the good stuff today.”

Up until last week, Collin Morikawa was searching for his game. Yet for the second straight week, he looks like the player who won two major championships.

Morikawa is two shots back after an opening 65 that included seven birdies and one bogey. And a week after a T-3 at the Masters, Morikawa is in great position after the opening 18 holes at Harbour Town.

“Especially the way I’ve been playing, you never know how it’s going to be. But when you find this little rhythm and you find this kind of — just pathway, just to play golf, it’s very simple. Sometimes when you’re playing bad, you look back and you wonder why it can’t be that simple.”