WRITING IN BLACK TEXT BUT THINKING OF A PINT OF THE BLACK STUFF, U.S.A. ā One of my favorite thoughts from a week of thoughts came from Bryson DeChambeau, whoās always thinking.Ā
It was in response to this question, asked by GOLFās Michael Bamberger:
Your YouTube numbers suggest that youāre a superstar and youāve transcended traditional golf. Could you see Scottie ever doing that in his own way?
āI think heās a family man,ā DeChambeau said. āHe really respects his family, and he believes and wants that to be the most important thing for him. I have full respect for that. At some point, I will have a family. For him, I think itās more important to take care of his family, which heās done a great job and tremendous job of balancing the two, being the best golfer in the world and being a family man.ā
Not a yes. Not a no. Which is about spot on for Scottie Scheffler, your Open Championship winner and now a four-time major winner. The question above, though, begs another question to chew on today:
Is Scheffler a transcendalist, period, at this point?
To answer it, perhaps turn to previous transcendentalists. Tiger? He was mythical before he turned pro, mythical for a stretch as a pro, and maybe even more mythical now. He achieved things no one had ever achieved before, by doing things no one had ever done before. Shots over, under or around trouble. Shots while in trouble. Shots through his opponentsā souls. You probably have a moment or 10 in mind. MJ was like that. And Brady. They kept coming too.Ā
They were a form of escapism. For the length of a round or a game, we could tune away from the routine to witness ridiculousness.
So what about Scheffler, then? Heās flawless, outside of a funky delivery and an occasional flaky putter. Heās an inextinguishable flame āĀ who sucks the oxygen out of everyone else. And all of this fails to mention his off-the-course life, which heāll tell you trumps anything from his on-course one. (Weāll get to all of that shortly.)Ā
But, again, does that transcend?
I think itās how you define it. Or maybe Scheffler is changing your definition. Isnāt how he goes about his business the way youād want to? Isnāt that inspirational?Ā
Isnāt that more real?
Scottie Schefflerās most revealing Open moment came after heād wonBy: Michael Bamberger
As we look back at the Open Championship week that was, letās make that observation No. 1 then. Weāll try for 49 more, and weāll be fueled by the anticipation of drinking a Guinness, which will be had as soon as the keyboarding concludes.
2. I danced around it there, but Scheffler is a bit boring ā but a bit boring is what you want in golf. Ask any pro. Three-hundred-yard drive down the middle, iron to 8 feet, putt, rinse and repeat.Ā
3. One of Schefflerās issues is heās doing something they tell you never to do, though by no fault of his own:
Heās following a superstar in the public eye.Ā Ā Ā Ā
Every stroke, tournament and word are measured against Woods ā who entered pro golf at a time mostly absent of megastars.Ā
4. That said, I wonder that whatever Scheffler accomplishes might get somewhat lost, that if he goes on to win, say, seven majors, the accomplishment is diminished somehow.
Which would be silly.Ā
5. We do seem always in a rush to crown the ānext,ā arenāt we?Ā Ā
6. So, how many majors does Scheffler win? Can he win 11 (!) more to catch Woods? Can he win 14 (!) more to catch Jack Nicklaus? At this pace, right here, right now, that seems doable.Ā
Which we wouldāve also said about a decade ago with Rory McIlroy. And with Jordan Spieth. And five years ago with Brooks Koepka. Funny things can happen because golf is a funny game.Ā
But if youāve come this far looking for a number, letās put it at 8.5.Ā
7. So about The Quote.Ā
If you missed it, it came Tuesday from Scheffler, after the Associated Pressā Doug Ferguson asked the following question:
You talk about the show goes on, which it does. What would be the longest youāve ever celebrated something? What was the most crushing loss or the time it took to get over one?
Schefflerās response is below:
Scottie Scheffler just gave one of the best (and deepest) press conference answers ever heard. pic.twitter.com/SUIRKuLwgb
ā Golf Digest (@GolfDigest) July 15, 2025
Afterward, seemingly everyone, from the players to those who watch the players, weighed in, and the subject followed Scheffler ā all the way until Sunday, when it was brought up again, and the exchange is below:
From a kid in Texas wearing pants in the summer⦠to Champion Golfer of the Year.
ā GOLF.com (@GOLF_com) July 20, 2025
Scottie Scheffler addresses the viral moment from earlier this week and puts his Open Championship win into powerful perspective. pic.twitter.com/3PPFBizmu8
So whatās the takeaway?
You donāt hear such admissions from athletes, so itās jarring. Weāre conditioned to watching those who desire to conquer all ā though thereās no such thing. For a golfer, thereās always another tournament. For a doctor, thereās always another patient. For a writer, thereās always another story. So cherish the victories. Cherish that you made your fans cheer. And cherish getting a chance to try again.Ā
And then go home. To use some of Schefflerās words, go fill the deepest wants and desires of your heart, whatever that may look like.
But really, if Schefflerās figured out the ever-confounding issue of proper work-life balance, watch out.Ā
That 8.5 number listed above will be considered very low.Ā
8. In regards to Schefflerās comment on Tuesday (the first video above), I thought Padraig Harrington added some good thoughts in response in the video below:
PƔdraig Harrington did not understand what Scottie Scheffler was trying to articulate in Tuesday's viral press conference. pic.twitter.com/gZyBFQFUkp
ā GOLF.com (@GOLF_com) July 16, 2025
9. In regards to Schefflerās comment on Sunday (the second video above), I wonder what his Chipotle order is.Ā
In his honor, I ate there on Sunday night. (I had a bowl with chicken, white rice, black beans, mild salsa, cheese and guac, if youāre wondering.)
10. What would Scheffler have done this year without the hand injury?
11. This Scheffler moment below was, well something.Ā
Doesnāt matter how old you get, a well-timed fart will never not be funny pic.twitter.com/fsJcvBu24J
ā Patrick McDonald (@pmcdonaldCBS) July 17, 2025
12. Letās talk about some other players, and weāll go down the leaderboard.Ā
Harris English wins an Open at some point. His mentality is built for links golf.Ā
13. Chris Gotterup wins an Open at some point. His game is built for links golf.
14. Matt Fitzpatrick breaks the Englishman drought at some point. No one from England has won an Open since 1992.Ā
15. Haotong Li will make some headlines when he reaches the PGA Tour. Heās electric.Ā
16. Break time! Letās talk about that dateline at the start of this article. I didnāt travel out for the Open, but before this story publishes, a Guinness will be had in the city where I live, New York. After careful research, Iām going to the Long Hall Pub & Grocery, which most every well-intentioned reviewer says has the best Guinness in town.Ā Ā
17. Maybe itās his accent, maybe itās the way he seems to reflect before he speaks, but I think Robert MacIntyre is turning into one of my favorite interviews in golf.Ā
This was good (the reporterās questions are in italics):
Whatās your mental look like? Youāre on your own?
āI can do whatever I want for an hour,ā MacIntyre said. āJust anything I want. You can break things. You can literally do whatever I want for an hour. After that hour is gone, my jobās done. For an hour and a half before my round, two hours before my round, Iām preparing, so nobody gets in my way. Itās warmup, stretching, gym work, all of that. So thereās a five-, six-, seven-, eight-hour window that Iām working.
āIf you have a bad day at work, youāre going to be annoyed. It happens more often than not for me as well. Itās just about once thatās gone, itās been difficult in the past for me to reset, but nowadays, thereās so many golf tournaments and you donāt know whatās coming the next week.ā
That fire is what can be the difference in making you feel ready to win a major? Thatās what you need?
āIām fiery on the golf course when Iām in tournament rounds,ā MacIntyre said. āIāll drop, I was going to say the odd, but a few bad words in there. Iāll hit the bag. Iāll say some harsh things, but thatās what gets me going.
āIf I walk around and Iām all happy I just made a double bogey or people are clapping, thanks very much, thatās not me. Iām needing to smash something up. I want to rip a glove. I do something to get that anger out. Itās better out than in for me. Some people, itās better holding it, but for me, itās get it out and then just do not let it affect the next shot. Simple.ā
18. The video below was stunning, though.Ā
Easy winner for club throw of the week. Bobby Mac trampolined that bad boy to the high heavens. pic.twitter.com/wifXdKgN3w
ā Patrick McDonald (@pmcdonaldCBS) July 19, 2025
19. Xander Schauffele seems nearly back from the rib injury that shelved him earlier in the season.Ā
20. This was good from Schauffele, who, after revealing that he didnāt know where his trophies were, was asked why he didnāt:
āWhat am I going to do with it? I donāt really invite people over to my house. Am I just going to go look at it myself? Thatās the way I feel about it. I donāt want to walk into a trophy room like, āLook how great I am.ā I was just raised to think that way, and itās kind of stuck. I really donāt sit at home, you know what I mean?
āMy wife hung up some pictures of me in my gym of me winning the Olympic medal, and she put it so high up I canāt reach it. I have to get a ladder now, and it bothers me,ā Schauffele said. āLike if anything, put up like me in a Masters jacket, like that would p*ss me off, you know what I mean? Something like that is more motivating than like, all right, thatās not great. I donāt want to look at that.ā
21. McIlroyās Saturday charge was great theater.Ā
22. McIlroyās second-ball trick on Saturday was great magic.Ā Ā
23. If weāre going to wait 260-whatever days until the next menās golf major, letās make sure we get Scheffler and McIlroy in Sunday singles at the Ryder Cup.Ā
24. Speaking of, Iām not sure golf has ever seen a bigger production than what DeChambeau will produce at the Ryder Cup. āReinventedā DeChambeau will be at full āreinventedā DeChambeau powers at Bethpage.Ā
25. Has he figured out links golf? Letās wait to make that call, though his 65-68-64 run over the weekend impressed.
26. So what about the ball he says heās working on? Stay tuned.Ā
But I thought the video below was interesting.Ā
27. I really thought this was Tommy Fleetwoodās week.Ā
Iāll very likely say that next year at this time.Ā
28. I hope Justin Rose has one more major run in him.Ā
29. Tyrrell Hatton is good for a laugh, but heās also posted 10 top-30s over his past 16 major starts, with just one missed cut.Ā
30. Over that same stretch, Dustin Johnson has missed seven cuts and posted five top-30s.Ā
31. Break time! Next month, my wife and I are going to Dublin for vacation. Gimme your recommendations!Ā
32. Keegan Bradley really does sound like heāll be playing in the Ryder Cup, doesnāt he?
I thought this exchange was interesting, with the reporterās question in italics.Ā
Because this is kind of an unknown territory for most of us, including yourself, have you been talking about how you would actually work through this operationally?
āYeah, itās interesting because so many times in my career Iāve leaned on other players to help me go through situations, whether itās endorsements or certain situations or how I feel in tournaments,ā Bradley said. āI have no one to talk to about this. I canāt call someone whoās done it. Tiger Woods did it at the Presidents Cup. Iāve spoken to him a ton about this. Thereās a few other guys that have done it in the Presidents Cup. The Ryder Cup is a much different animal.
āBut we have a plan. We have a āfor instanceā that could happen. That can obviously change during the week. Youāve got to see how each player is playing. But weāre learning as we go just like everybody else.ā
Hereās my guess for the U.S. team, as of July 21: Scheffler, Schauffele, DeChambeau, English, Bradley, J.J. Spaun, Russell Henley, Justin Thomas, Collin Morikawa, Patrick Cantlay, Ben Griffin and Maverick McNealy.Ā
A lot could change there.Ā
33. Iād like to see Sergio Garcia in front of the New York crowds. It might be close.
Rory McIlroy lost the Open ā but found something heād been missingBy: Dylan Dethier
Hereās my guess for the European team: McIlroy, MacIntyre, Fleetwood, Hatton, Rose, Fitzpatrick, Shane Lowry, Sepp Straka, Ludvig Aberg, Viktor Hovland, Jon Rahm and Rasmus Hojgaard.Ā
Does maybe one or two of those names change?Ā Ā Ā
34. Iād like to see Lee Westwood and Ian Poulter at Bethpage, too.Ā
35. Or Phil Mickelson.Ā
36. Or Woods.Ā
37. What do we make of the Lowry ruling on Friday? If you missed it, below is summary of what happened, and itās taken from a story I wrote on Saturday:
Lowry took a practice swing ahead of his second shot on the 12th hole at Royal Portrush ā and a TV replay showed that Lowryās ball slightly moved in the process, though he later said he didnāt see it happen in the moment. After the round, officials met with Lowry and his playing partners, Scottie Scheffler and Collin Morikawa, and an agreement was made that Lowry would be given a two-stroke penalty.Ā
Why, though, was Lowry penalized after he said he didnāt see the ball move? Notably, a rule instituted eight years ago limits the use of slow-motion replay in rule decisions. That rule reads: āIf the committee concludes that such facts could not reasonably have been seen with the naked eye and the player was not otherwise aware of the potential breach, the player will be deemed not to have breached the Rules, even when video technology shows otherwise. This is an extension of the provision on ball-at-rest-moved cases, which was introduced in 2014.ā
In its statement on Friday, the R&A said this:
āAssessing whether the movement of the ball was visible to the naked eye in such a situation assumes the player being in a normal address position for the stroke.Ā
āIn Shane Lowryās situation, the movement of the ball to another spot, including the movement of the logo, was discernible to the naked eye. The naked eye test is satisfied whether or not the player was looking at the ball when it moved.ā
On Friday, though, Lowry said he never saw the movement āĀ and he said he took the penalty ābecause I canāt have my name talked about or tossed around like that, and I just get on with it.āĀ
Heās not wrong, which is unfortunate.Ā
38. The video below was also interesting, though not suitable for work:
Shane Lowry has now said "F*** this place" at 3 of 4 majors this year!
ā Austin Sapin (@AustinSapin) July 18, 2025
He'll be looking for the grand slam in '26. pic.twitter.com/7FNh9vv1X7
39. The video below on Ryan Peake, from Golf Channel, was outstanding.Ā Ā
40. Here are a few of my favorite reads this week from the on-site GOLF.com staff. From Michael Bamberger, this story on Schefflerās win was great.Ā Ā
41. From James Colgan, this story on Schefflerās Chipotle habits was great.Ā
42. From Dylan Dethier, this story on Schefflerās superpower was great.Ā
43. From Claire Rogers, this story on the reasons why the Open is the loveliest spectator event was great.Ā Ā
44. From Sean Zak, this story on the Hattonās Guinness drinking tips is an important read.Ā
45. From my personal batch, I was able to track down Richard Teder of Estonia ahead of the Open, and that story can be read here.Ā
46. Our Seen and Heard franchise, shot by Emma Devine, is excellent. You can watch the Open Championship episodes by clicking here and here.Ā
47. Last year, after the Open Championship, I made these predictions for this year:
āMasters: Aberg
āPGA Championship: McIlroy
āU.S. Open: Joaquin Niemann
āOpen Championship: Aaron RaiĀ
As you can see, none of these players won. But weāll try again. Here are some picks for next year:
āMasters: Aberg
āPGA Championship: Fleetwood
āU.S. Open: DeChambeau Ā
āOpen Championship: SchauffeleĀ
I had a thought of picking Scheffler for all of them. Instead, I picked him for none of them. Weāll see.Ā Ā Ā
48. I thought the photo compilation below, from Golf Digestās Jamie Kennedy, was terrific.Ā
Links golf hits differently.
ā Jamie Kennedy (@jamierkennedy) July 20, 2025
Official photographers have taken more than 20,000 photos at @TheOpen so far this week.
I scanned through them all to pick the 25 best.
Enjoy š§µ pic.twitter.com/CzFPBRYi8b
49. I thought the video below, from the Sugar Loaf Social Club, was wonderful.Ā
50. I got my Guinness, as you can see in the pic below.
Editorās note: The author also wrote 50 observations from the Masters, the PGA Championship, and the U.S. Open. Those stories can be found here, here and here.