Seduce

Scottie Scheffler and Jon Rahm in 2024 masters.
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Consistency of Scottie Scheffler – both in and out of the golf course – It’s admirable.
The world’s highest rank player is ruthless from Tee to Green. His course management skills and the ability to avoid tour change errors have Rory Mcilroy and others trying to imitate the winning ways of the masters sample twice.
Scheffler has also never waved in his position over Liv Golf and why the men’s golf remains in a constant state of fracture.
“If the fans are upset, then look at the guys left,” Scheffler said last year in the 2024 players championship. “We had a tour, we were all together and the people who left are no longer here. At the end of the day, here comes the split.”
In a pre-masters of conference with the Global Golf Media on Wednesday, Scheffler was asked if he lost to play against all the best players more than four times a year and was open to the reason why the Golf game remains in a forgotten state.
“I definitely miss competition,” Scheffler said. “They got some good players in their tour. I still think PGA Tour has the best players in the world so far. The depths of our fields and the competition we have is still the hands of the best competition it has in the golf game. That is why I am still playing in the tournament. I want the competition.
“They did what they wanted to do, and I can’t control their lives. I won’t sit here and say they should have done something different. They make their choice. If we want to figure out why the golf game is not together again, go ask those boys. Go wherever they are playing this week and understand when the game will come back together.”
Last week at TPC Sawgrass, PGA Tour Jay Monahan commissioner declared the tournament The desire to reunite the game but shared all the test questions about the state of Talks with Saudi Arabic Investment Fund (PIF) that finances Liv Golf.
Adam Scott, who is part of the subcommitte of PGA Tour transaction, was a little more next regarding the seemingly blocked state of union talks.
“I think the biggest hanging is the way we see the highest level of competitive golf that goes ahead,” said Scott, player-regional council of PGA Tour’s advisory council, who, along with Monahan, recently met with President Donald Trump to discuss negotiations. “The Liv product and the PGA Tour product work in very different ways. So I think the challenge is to understand how it can come together and be really a reunion, which is the type of what everyone is shooting.”
“I think it’s part of the obstacles,” Scott told Later for PGA Tour and Liv who have different goals. “The tour is very careful and respectful for everyone and wants to give everyone, golf and media and players, the product they want. But we’re starting from two different sides of this, so I think it’s hard to find the balance that is acceptable to everyone.
One of the biggest questions in the search for reunification is how PGA Tour will reintegrate those who left. It is right to assume that all the players who set out for Liv will not want to return, but that PGA Tour would be quick to re-increase Jon Rahm’s likes, Brooks Koepka, Bryson Dechambeau and Cameron Smith if they want to return.
Scheffler and Rahm have had their part of the duels in the past. The duo have won the last three masters. They have also been faced in the part of the last two Ryder cups, with Scheffler winning in 2021 and both halving their match in 2023.
“One of the great joys of my career is going against Jon,” Scheffler said Wednesday. “He is an extraordinary player, an extraordinary talent. I was undoubtedly surprised when I saw him leave last year and probably lost playing against him. We had some excellent battles over the years. We had some great battles in Ryder Cup.
“He’s a great guy to compete against. So, I definitely miss playing against him. I wish we would do more often, but I would definitely dive into all the opportunities for me to compete against him moving forward.”
Golf game will return together to Augusta National in three weeks. But in terms of long -term reunion, it can take long before the division wounds recover in professional golf.

Seduce
Golfit.com editor
Josh Schrock is a writer and reporter for golf. com before entering Golf, Josh was the interior of Chicago Bears for NBC Sports Chicago. He previously covered 49ers and Warriors for NBC Sports Bay Area. A native Oregonian and Uo alum, seduces and spends his free time walking with his wife and dog, thinking about how the ducks will break his heart again, and trying to become half a professor into pieces. A true romantic for golf, Josh will never stop trying to break the 90 and will never lose confidence that Rory Mcilroy’s main drought will end. Josh can be reached in josh.schrock@golf.com.