Scottie Scheffler and Tiger Woods ‘silly’ comparisons
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Scottie Scheffler wins the 2025 Open Championship at Royal Portrush by four shots, finishing with a score of 267 — 17 under par. Scheffler bested runner-up Harris English by four strokes and third-place finisher Chris Gotterup by five.
This British Open was never in doubt Sunday as golf’s No. 1 player delivered another dominant performance to win his second major this year and grab the third leg of the career Grand Slam.
Scheffler, 29, won the 2025 Open by four shots over Harris English, completing the third leg of a career grand slam. But golf wasn’t the focus when he stood in front of reporters. His heart was somewhere else, back home with his wife, his son, and his friends from childhood.
On the eve of The Open, the world’s best golfer revealed a startlingly honest insight into the emptiness of winning. Lawrence Ostlere unpacks Scheffler’s words
Harvard's Arthur Brooks has spent years thinking, writing and talking about the keys to a life of happiness and fulfillment.
When Scottie Scheffler sealed his first Open Championship title at Royal Portrush, he wasn’t the only one cashing in. Right beside him, as always, was Ted Scott, his veteran caddie, strategist, and on-course psychologist, who walked away with a serious payday of his own.
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Golf Digest on MSNBritish Open 2025: If you can't appreciate Scottie Scheffler, that's your problemI'd like to give the microphone first to Jordan Spieth, who, with his usual insight, had some essential analysis on your 2025 Champion Golfer of the Year: "He doesn't care to be a superstar. He's not transcending the game like Tiger did.
As major champions Rory McIlroy and Scottie Scheffler head to The Open, the world's two best golfers are battling their own success.