Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Scottie Scheffler sits atop the golf world at AT&T Byron Nelson

Scottie Scheffler sits atop the golf world at AT&T Byron Nelson

MCKINNEY, Texas — Scottie Scheffler tied for 47th in last year’s AT&T Byron Nelson at TPC Craig Ranch, a forgettable result for a promising player who at the time did not possess a PGA TOUR win. What a difference a year makes. He returns this year as the No. 1 player in the world, the Masters champion and the clear front-runner in the FedExCup race. He’s a four-time TOUR winner, with all of those victories coming since February. His hometown TOUR stop was the site of his PGA TOUR debut eight years ago (he tied for 22nd, including a hole-in-one), and now it is a homecoming for the newly-minted Masters champ, who this week is playing his first individual tournament since his victory at Augusta National. Scheffler is making his fourth career start in the Nelson, playing Thursday with another local kid who’s had some success in this game, Jordan Spieth, in a 1:06 p.m. group that also includes defending champion K.H. Lee. Scheffler, 25, feels a special kinship to the tournament, which dates to 1968. He met Byron Nelson as a boy, long before he strafed the competition in high school tournaments for Highland Park, long before he won the 2014 U.S. Junior or became an All-American and Walker Cupper at the University of Texas. “I had the pleasure of meeting him a handful of times,” Scheffler said. “Byron Nelson’s always been very gracious with people, and he was gracious with me.” Their connection goes back to New Jersey. Scheffler was born in Ridgewood, a village in Bergen County, north of New York City. Nelson was an assistant professional at Ridgewood Country Club in 1935 and 1936. He minded the golf shop, played with members, gave lessons and adapted his “caddie” swing — flat and rounded, with loose legs and busy feet, fashioned in winds of Fort Worth — into the more upright move that led to 52 PGA TOUR titles in a World Golf Hall of Fame career. Nelson’s first two TOUR wins came during his tenure at Ridgewood, and it was that success that inspired him to continue creating the modern swing, which he is credited with being the father of. With the advent of steel shafts, Nelson was the first to use the “big muscles” of the body to square the clubface instead of rolling the hands. Nelson was known for aggressively driving the legs at the initiation of the downswing. “When I came into the ball, it seemed as though I was driving off my right foot, and in the impact area I felt that I almost gave a shove off that foot,” Nelson once wrote. It’s a defining characteristic of Scheffler’s swing, which was molded not far away at Royal Oaks Country Club, which the Schefflers joined after moving to Dallas from New Jersey when Scottie was 6 years old. Nelson died in 2006. Scheffler was 10, already carving it up with Spieth and Will Zalatoris on the Texas junior tours. Observers suspected he might have a future in the sport. Scheffler worked diligently on his game at Royal Oaks. He was taught by Randy Smith, whose other students include Justin Leonard and Ryan Palmer, Scheffler’s partner at the recent Zurich Classic of New Orleans. Scheffler won three Texas individual high school championships. Only Spieth, who went to Dallas Jesuit, has won that many, which is quite a feat, considering the deep well of golf talent in the state. The AT&T Byron Nelson offered Scheffler a sponsor’s exemption in 2014, back when the festive tournament was at TPC Four Seasons Las Colinas. The high-school senior made the best of his chance. He made the cut, for one. Then he aced the second hole on Saturday with a 5-iron from 221 yards. He beat a lot of good players that week. He even nipped Speith by two. His sister, Callie, caddied. “We had like half our high school watching,” Scheffler said. “We had a ton of fun.” The observers seemed to be right. Scheffler met his wife, Meredith, in geometry class at Highland Park. She went to Texas A&M, but their relationship nonetheless endured. They married in 2020. The rehearsal dinner was at Royal Oaks. Now, two years later, Meredith has rushed the greens in Phoenix, Orlando, Austin, Texas, and Augusta, Georgia, where Scheffler has lifted her off of her feet after his winning putts. “What a gift,” Meredith Scheffler said Wednesday after a charity event. “It just doesn’t feel real.” But it is quite real. He’s played and prevailed on a Ryder Cup team, beating the then-No. 1 Jon Rahm in Singles. It was Rahm who Scheffler supplanted atop the world ranking after winning the World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play in the same town where he attended college. He’s earned $18.2 million. Kids stop him when he’s out, blushing when he gives them a fist bump and a smile. Since winning the Masters, Scheffler has thrown the ceremonial first pitch at a Texas Rangers game, dropped the puck at a Dallas Stars game and attended a Dallas Mavericks playoff game. “I enjoyed those a lot,” he said. “Other than that, (I’ve) just been hanging out and practicing.” He neglected to mention a recent Monday, when he and Zalatoris played an outing at Preston Trail, an old-school Dallas course, dripping with Texas golf history, that hosted the Nelson when Nicklaus, Watson and Trevino were the names to watch. Zalatoris shot 66. He felt pretty good. Then Scheffler added his scores. He shot 63. “Good grief, man,” Zalatoris said Wednesday, feigning exasperation. “Like, have an off day.” This week, the Schefflers are hosting Sam Burns, Seth Reeves and their families. The three players prepared steaks Monday night. They conducted the TOUR’s Bible study Tuesday. They’ve played board games to pass the time before Scheffler, the toast of the game since the WM Phoenix Open, makes his first start in Texas. “The beginning of the week was really fun,” Scheffler said, “and the tournament will be a good time too.” “Tomorrow afternoon will be a bit crazy,” said Spieth, “and I think we’ll embrace it.” Scheffler plans to. “It’s good to be at home,” Scheffler said. “I love Texas, I love Dallas and to have an event here is really special. I’m definitely looking forward to this week a lot.”

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Power Rankings: Charles Schwab ChallengePower Rankings: Charles Schwab Challenge

The Charles Schwab Challenge is where it all restarted. Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas, possesses one of the richest histories of all golf courses, but it’s most valuable moment in time may have been as the backdrop for the Return to Golf following a three-month shutdown due to the pandemic last year. To steal the line from “Field of Dreams,” Colonial reminded us all that once was good could be again. The experience has come full circle, and in more ways than one. As Daniel Berger is poised to defend his title on the 75th anniversary of the tournament – all staged at Colonial – we are further reminded that he prevailed in a playoff over Collin Morikawa sans fans in attendance. How far have we come since? Well, you know you won’t forget where you were and how you felt as 50-year-young Phil Mickelson was striding toward victory among the throng of spectators at Kiawah Island on Sunday. That was good, indeed. As unpredictable as it was for Mickelson to capture a sixth victory in a major and his second at the PGA Championship, we shift to one of the most consistent profiles for success anywhere on the PGA TOUR. For more on that, how Colonial sets up and other intel, scroll past the ranking of projected contenders. Capsules open with ages and total appearances for the fifth consecutive edition of the Power Rankings dedicated to this tournament. RELATED: The First Look | How the field qualified POWER RANKINGS: CHARLES SCHWAB CHALLENGE Tony Finau, Gary Woodland, Charley Hoffman and former champions Kevin Na, Kevin Kisner and Sergio Garcia will be among the notables reviewed in Tuesday’s Fantasy Insider. Although there’s no such thing as normal, only average, etched onto the Wall of Champions at Colonial Country Club is a smattering of profiles that are, let’s say, customary of most winners of the Charles Schwab Challenge. For starters, there hasn’t been a breakthrough champion in 20 years. If you’re a regular reader of this space, you may have quizzed others on this fact because it’s populated every Power Rankings in recent memory. Sergio Garcia not only is the most recent first-time winner (in 2001), he also prevailed in his first appearance, something no other winner since can claim. Meanwhile, Garcia’s makeup as a consistently strong ball-striker very much is woven into the DNA of the winners crowned at Colonial, except most have been of a certain age – 36. That’s exactly the average age of the 19 champions since 2002. The outliers are Jordan Spieth, who was 22 in 2016, and three guys who were at least 44 years old at the time of victory. Fifteen have been at least 33. The construct of the field at Colonial all but rigs the competition for a talent in his prime to be added to the Wall of Champions at Ben Hogan’s Alley. The Charles Schwab Challenge is an invitational reserved for only 120 golfers, many of whom have experienced victory on the PGA TOUR (thus reducing the possibility of a coronation). The top 80 in the previous season’s FedExCup standings and a smattering off the current season’s ranking fill the field, so golfers who recently have been in form at this level essentially define the field. This year’s field is at 121 as of Monday. Keith Clearwater is an add-on as a winner (1987) prior to 2000. It’s a legacy exemption, so he is not in place of an automatic qualifier among more active members. It also means that if he withdraws prior to his opening round, he will not be replaced and the field will drop to its floor of 120. Comparing the 2020 Schwab in detail to what we should expect this week would be irresponsible. Last year’s contest was different. It got golf around the world going again. The field was expanded to 144 (plus four legacy exemptions) and the strength-of-field rating as determined by the Official World Golf Ranking was 651, seventh-highest of all tournaments on the planet in 2020. This week’s value should fall somewhere nearer that of the 2019 edition, which was 347. Until now, it was the only staging that immediately followed the PGA Championship since it shifted to May that season. Also as of Monday, 64 in this week’s field competed in the PGA Championship last week, including Mickelson. Of them, only Sebastián Muñoz (MC), Lee Westwood (T71) and Will Zalatoris (MC) are debutants at Colonial this week. Other than the fact that a first-time participant hasn’t won in 20 years, the average number of starts for each of the last 19 winners prior to the first win at Colonial is six. Experience matters. Colonial Country Club itself is as transparent as its litany of conquerors. It’s a stock par 70 stretching 7,209 yards for the sixth consecutive year. Small bentgrass greens are prepped to touch 12-and-a-half feet on the Stimpmeter, while bermudagrass rough is clipped to two-and-a-half inches. The historic freeze that blanketed Texas in February negatively affected turf around the greens, but fairways and greens were all but unscathed. It wouldn’t be a golf tournament in Texas without wind and the threat of inclement weather. Wind forecasts should be checked daily but gusts north of 20 mph already are expected for Thursday’s opening round. The chance for rain and boomers enters that night and lingers into Friday, and again into Saturday. Sunday’s finale should go off without a hitch. Daytime temperatures will climb easily into the 80s. ROB BOLTON’S SCHEDULE PGATOUR.COM’s Fantasy Insider Rob Bolton recaps and previews every tournament from numerous angles. Look for his following contributions as scheduled. MONDAY: Power Rankings TUESDAY*: Sleepers; Fantasy Insider SUNDAY: Qualifiers, Reshuffle, Medical Extensions, Rookie Watch * – Rob is a member of the panel for PGATOUR.COM’s Expert Picks for PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf, which also publishes on Tuesday.

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