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topicnews · July 17, 2025

Scottie Scheffler's attitude to success in the Golf – “Where is it from?”

Scottie Scheffler's attitude to success in the Golf – “Where is it from?”


Portrush, Northern Ireland – shortly before a tournament that could bring Scottie Scheffler at the age of 29 to four big victories and three of the four legs of the career -Grand Slam, said the undisclosed best player in the world on Tuesday that he will not find any true fulfillment when winning.

“This is not a fulfilling life,” said Scheffler. “It is fulfilled from the feeling of performance, but it does not fulfill a feeling of the deepest places in her heart.”

Scheffler won two Masters, added the PGA championship at Quail Hollow a third major when he won the PGA championship at Quail Hollow and has won 16 career winners since his professional. In the past, he spoke in detail not to root his identity in the Golf, although he recognized how much he would like to win every time he builds it up.

“This is something I rings with every day,” said Scheffler at Royal Portrush, where the Open Championship begins on Thursday. “It is like I appear at the Masters every year. Why do I want to win this golf tournament so much? Why do I want to win the open championship so much? I don't know because it will be great for two minutes.”

Scheffler said on Tuesday that he sometimes did not understand the winning point, even a big championship, because he knows that the nature of sport will simply go into the next week, where he is asked the same questions about where he is going from here.

“Is it great to win tournaments and achieve the things I have in golf play?” I think it's a pretty cool feeling of having such a feeling of performance. It is very special to live out your dreams, but at the end of the day I am not out here to inspire the next generation of golfers. I am not out here to inspire someone to be the best player in the world, because what is the point? “

As an example, Scheffler raised the Byron Nelson event on the PGA tour, which is a tournament, he said that he tried to work to win “his whole life” because his hometown is. At the beginning of this year Scheffler shot 31 on the way to win the event outside of Dallas, and he was still impressed how fleeting the moment felt.

“You win it, you celebrate, my family are allowed to hug, my sister is there, it's an astonishing moment. Then it is, ok, what will we eat for dinner? Life continues,” said Scheffler. “It feels like working all their lives to win a tournament for a few minutes. It only takes a few minutes.”

Nevertheless, Scheffler admitted that he couldn't help but continue to search for this feeling, like fleeting, even if he loses statistically rather than win every time.

“It's shit. I hate it, I really do it,” said Scheffler about lost. “We work so hard for such little moments. I am somehow sick. I love to get the work to work, I love to practice, I love to live out my dreams. But sometimes I just don't understand the point at the end of the day.”

For many players, the point this week is to increase the Claret jug on Sunday. Scheffler is not immune to share this feeling, and he does everything in his power to prepare to win his fourth big championship.

In four appearances at Open, Scheffler has two top 10 places and two placements outside the top 20. It is proof of its consistently high game at big championships that this tournament is likely that its performance does not quite match its other main start.

“When I am second this week or when I finish dead, no matter what happens, we are always the next week,” said Scheffler. “This is one of the beautiful things on the golf, and it is also one of the frustrating things because they can achieve such great performances, but the show goes on. That's how it is.”