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Scottie Scheffler hit an ugly shank. But the real surprise came later

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Scottie Scheffler after making a double-bogey 6 on the 3rd hole at the RBC Heritage on Thursday.

If you watched Scottie Scheffler at the Masters last week — or on the PGA Tour for the better part of the last two years, for that matter — you’d be forgiven for thinking that his iron game is infallible. In 2023, he led the Tour in SG: Approach the Green, picking up, on average, 1.194 strokes on the field. This year, he is leading that category again and by an even more dominant margin, gaining 1.347 strokes on his opponents. He has hit 75% of his greens in regulation in 2024 (also tops on Tour), which is nearly 10 percentage points better than the Tour average. “He just seems like he’s playing on the driving range every day,” Max Homa said earlier this week of how easy Scheffler is making the game look.

Truth is, of course, Scheffler is not perfect. He showed that on Thursday.

Scheffler is back at it this week, as are most of the Tour’s stars, at the RBC Heritage, the fifth of eight limited-field Signature Events on the calendar. After the excitement of winning his second green jacket on Sunday, Scheffler said he came into Harbour Town feeling both mentally and emotionally fatigued. He also said he was unable to carve out enough prep time, especially on the greens, and thus didn’t feel as dialed as he typically would be in the lead-up to an event.

Scheffler opened par-birdie then arrived on the 465-yard par-4 3rd, where he dumped his approach into a bunker right of the green. What came next from the world’s undisputed best male golfer was jarring: a cold shank. Scheffler’s ball shot off the hosel of his wedge at a 45-degree angle and nearly flew the green entirely before rolling off the back.

“Did that go in the other bunker?” he asked his caddie, Ted Scott.

It had not. But it will go down as one of the more improbable shots you’ll see in 2024 from the Tour’s most unflappable player. The misplay led to a double-bogey 6 for Scheffler, but as Scheffler does so well, he didn’t let the gaffe unravel him, playing the next 15 holes in three under to sign for a two-under 69 and extend his consecutive rounds of par or better streak to 37.

After his round, Scheffler wasn’t asked directly about the messiness at the 3rd, but he elected to address it head-on, anyway. When asked an innocuous question about how it felt to be playing again in the wake of his Masters win, Scheffler admitted to feeling frustrated that he wasn’t his usual sharp self and to struggling to adjust to Harbour Town’s greens. He also said, “I shanked the bunker shot on 3. I shank it a decent amount, but never in competition.”

Scheffler didn’t expound, but the little that he did say on the topic still was a surprising admission, because it’s not often you hear Tour pros, unsolicited, rehash train-wreck swings or use the s-word to describe them. Then again, Scheffler isn’t most pros. Beyond his otherworldly ball-striking talent, he has learned to play the game with an equanimity that many of his opponents lack. That wasn’t always the case — Scheffler ran hot as a junior and early in his professional career — but, as Homa says today of Scheffler’s mental fortitude, “He is pretty amazing at letting things roll off his back.”

Take the third round of the Masters, when Scheffler played 10 and 11 in three over. How did he respond? With an eagle on 13 and birdie on 15. Boom, mistakes erased.

Scheffler’s honesty about his propensity for shanking wasn’t just surprising, though, it also was refreshing. The notion that Scheffler hits a “decent amount” of shanks in practice is surely of some solace to weekend hackers who themselves are susceptible to soul-crushing, confidence-shattering hosel rockets. (Scheffler is one of us!) More emboldening still: Despite Scheffler’s assertion that he “never” hits shanks in competition, the incident Thursday, in fact, wasn’t a one-off.

Take the third round of the Masters, when Scheffler played 10 and 11 in three over. How did he respond? With an eagle on 13 and birdie on 15. Boom, mistakes erased.

Scheffler’s honesty about his propensity for shanking wasn’t just surprising, though, it also was refreshing. The notion that Scheffler hits a “decent amount” of shanks in practice is surely of some solace to weekend hackers who themselves are susceptible to soul-crushing, confidence-shattering hosel rockets. (Scheffler is one of us!) More emboldening still: Despite Scheffler’s assertion that he “never” hits shanks in competition, the incident Thursday, in fact, wasn’t a one-off.

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