Scottie Scheffler took his right arm back, arched his back backward to the point where that arm was just above the back of his right knee, planted forward with his left leg — and threw.
A good hand wedge.
Maybe even a hand 9.
But a good riddance. Now his ball had taken root among the trees near Riviera Country Club’s 11th green, where, two years ago at the Genesis Invitational, Scheffler had just sent a 5-foot birdie putt 4 feet past the hole.
The point here, though, besides wondering whether golf’s top-ranked player could have also been a quarterback of his hometown Dallas Cowboys?
What’s the point?
If playing golf drives us to such frustration, why play golf? Clearly, there are other pursuits. A throw-a-ball-in-the-trees payoff sounds unpleasant. Scheffler said Wednesday that he doesn’t even have a proper method for measuring how good he is.
Then again, maybe not being boxed in is freeing. Perhaps immeasurability is undeniably good.
At the least, Scheffler’s press conference ahead of this week’s Genesis Invitational wasn’t mundane. The session was reflective. Golf, he said, is limitless in its chances to learn. And if you’re the learning type like he is — “my mind has always been my greatest tool,” he said — that’s as welcome as a sunny day for a weekend tee time.
“I think that’s why we keep practicing,” Scheffler said. “You never get to a place where you feel like you’ve got it figured out. I always like practicing and trying to improve and creating new shots.
“I think golf is kind of the endless pursuit of trying to figure something out and I’m never going to get there, but there’s no harm in trying.”
Scheffler brought up rounds with Jordan Spieth, a fellow pro and longtime friend who he plays with often.
More learning.
“You talk about golf being this kind of endless pursuit of trying to figure this game out,” Scheffler said.
“I play golf with Jordan a lot at home. I can learn so much just by watching and asking Jordan questions about the way he plays shots, and he does some things that are — work really well for him that wouldn’t work well for me and then certain ways he approaches things, I like asking questions and trying to figure things out.”























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