logo
Scottie Scheffler hits a perfect shot and plenty of great ones for a 62 to share lead at Travelers in Connecticut

Scottie Scheffler hits a perfect shot and plenty of great ones for a 62 to share lead at Travelers in Connecticut

Boston Globe14 hours ago

'This is a nice tonic compared to last week in terms of it's a slightly more benign golf course and the penalty for missing isn't quite as severe,' McIlroy said.
Advertisement
Scheffler faced the hot afternoon when a refreshing breeze turned into a strong wind, and he wasted no time getting in the mix with four birdies in six holes and a 30 on the front nine.
And then came the par-5 13th, 236 yards away into the wind, over a pond to a pin on the right. It was perfect — that's coming from golf's No. 1 player — and settled 10 feet away for eagle.
'That 3-iron I hit in there was really nice,' Scheffler said. 'It was pretty much exactly what I was trying to do. It was kind of one where I had to hit it really solid in order to get it there with the water short, and I just did pretty much exactly what I wanted to and it felt nice.'
Advertisement
Dialed on a Thursday 😎
Scottie Scheffler eagles the 13th to move to 8-under and in a tie for the lead.
📺 Golf Channel
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR)
McIlroy was at 6 under along with Ryder Cup captain Keegan Bradley and Wyndham Clark. Another shot back was Cameron Young. He was in the mix late on Sunday at Oakmont, and started the Travelers Championship by going from the rough to the bunker, and then a three-putt from 25 feet for a double bogey.
'I managed to get around Oakmont for four days with no doubles and I made it zero holes here,' Young said. 'Typically that's not kind of what you expect around here.'
Not to worry. He followed with eight birdies in a day with a new routine. His caddie went down with a stomach virus and the best option was to turn the bag over to his father, Dave Young, recently retired as the longtime pro at Sleepy Hollow.
The surprise was Eckroat, already a two-time winner on the PGA Tour but struggling so much this year that he has only two finishes in the top 20 and eight missed cuts. The last two weeks served him well, however, as Eckroat said he figured out how to eliminate the miss to the left.
He played the last six holes in 5-under par, starting with a 35-foot eagle putt on No. 13.
'I wasn't fearing the left ball today, which is huge, and then whenever you're feeling comfortable with other things, other things start to fall in line,' Eckroat said. 'Felt great over the putter, and just a really solid day, and I felt confident, which it was nice to feel that this season. It's been a while.'
US Open champion J.J. Spaun felt the fatigue, and the steamy heat didn't help the cause. Playing along Scheffler, he was hanging in there until it took him two chips and two putts to cover 40 feet for a double bogey on No. 12, and a bogey-bogey finish for a 73.
Advertisement
Jordan Spieth didn't even make it to the finish line. This was the first time Spieth didn't need a sponsor exemption for a $20 million signature event, and he only lasted 13 holes when his shoulder blade got tight on the range, spread across the back of his neck to the other side and left him no choice but to withdraw.
Related
:
Scheffler saying he hit a great shot is worth paying attention to because it doesn't happen very often. He rarely hits it offline. But this was something special.
'Hit it really solid and really straight, just barely right of the pin, and kept it nice flat flight, get it to go through the wind, and it was good,' he said.
In fact, he could only recall two other shots in recent years — a 6-iron on the fifth hole in the final round at the 2022 Masters, a 9-iron he hit on the par-3 third hole in the final round of the 2023 Players Championship.
'Those are shots that kind of get lost in terms of the tournament,' he said. 'I'm not even sure if I birdied No. 3 at The Players, and I know I didn't birdie No. 5 during the Masters. But those are the shots when you're playing and you're in the moment, those are the ones that give me a lot of confidence.'
Scottie Scheffler starts strong at
Sit back and enjoy highlights from his 8-under 62 at TPC River Highlands ⬇️
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR)
It's hard to imagine him needing much more of that. He hasn't finished out of the top 10 since The Players in March, a stretch of eight tournaments. He didn't hit the ball very well for two days at the US Open and still had an outside chance on the back nine
Advertisement
And in his 19th round at the TPC River Highlands, he posted his lowest score at 62.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Jordan Spieth's 'Unfortunate' Update After Withdrawing From Travelers Championship
Jordan Spieth's 'Unfortunate' Update After Withdrawing From Travelers Championship

Yahoo

time38 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Jordan Spieth's 'Unfortunate' Update After Withdrawing From Travelers Championship

Jordan Spieth's 'Unfortunate' Update After Withdrawing From Travelers Championship originally appeared on Athlon Sports. On Thursday at TPC River Highlands, Jordan Spieth was forced to withdraw mid‑round from the Travelers Championship, a first in his 297 PGA Tour events, after suffering sudden tightness in his shoulder blade that made swinging impossible. Advertisement Spieth, a three‑time major champion, began the first round visibly laboring through the opening holes, posting a 5‑over par score through 12 holes before he halted play on the par‑5 13th. Despite receiving on‑range treatment from his physio, the pain intensified, compelling Spieth to concede the round and depart the course via cart. 'It was just like midway through on my irons,' Spieth explained during a press conference on Thursday. 'Everything was great in my gym session, and I've been very, very excited to go out and play. Things have been getting better and better, and then my right (shoulder) just kind of locked, like tightened midway through the warm‑up." "I just kept hitting, and then all of a sudden it was moving up," Spieth added. "Everything around it started to and then it was over the left and then it was like everything, so I stopped. It was both sides of my neck and upper back.' Jordan Spieth crouches while grabbing his upper body on the 12th hole.© Bill Streicher-Imagn Images After ending his warm‑up 30 minutes early, Spieth consulted Marnus Marais, who also treats Scottie Scheffler and Justin Thomas, but couldn't regain mobility. Advertisement "I was just going to try to see if I could somehow get through at even... just finishing even if it's ugly, and then I hit my tee shot on 13, and it legitimately really hurt," Spieth admitted. "It's only going to get worse to finish the round, and it's not worth it. I thought that was the time." Spieth remains unsure of the cause of the issue, labeling the sequence of events as "unfortunate," "I've never withdrawn from an event ever anywhere at any level, so I didn't really know what to do. It just became too much. It's unfortunate," He said. "I've been doing everything right, and I think it was just very random." Advertisement Related: Jordan Spieth Drops Personal Family Update Amid Injury This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 20, 2025, where it first appeared.

U.S. Open winner J.J. Spaun's health issues posed greater threat than Oakmont
U.S. Open winner J.J. Spaun's health issues posed greater threat than Oakmont

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

U.S. Open winner J.J. Spaun's health issues posed greater threat than Oakmont

U.S. Open winner J.J. Spaun's health issues posed greater threat than Oakmont As soon as J.J. Spaun won the 2025 U.S. Open at Oakmont on Sunday, Andy Bessette fired off an email to Spaun to congratulate him. 'For a man with Type 1 diabetes to win the U.S. Open with four days of pressure – pressure is the enemy of Type I diabetes – I said with your burden there is nothing more amazing than you winning the U.S. Open,' said Bessette, executive vice president and chief administrative officer at Travelers and a hammer thrower on the 1980 U.S. Olympic Team. 'To me, it's one of the greatest accomplishments in sports given the burden he lives with.' In the fall of 2018, Spaun was diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes. 'I wasn't feeling great, so I knew something was up,' he said Wednesday during his press conference ahead of the Travelers Championship in Cromwell, Connecticut. The 34-year-old started taking medicine for Type 2 but still felt lethargic, kept losing weight and, most concerning, losing distance. By mid-2021 his ranking dipped to No. 584 in the Official World Golf Ranking. Before COVID canceled the 2020 Players Championship, Bessette was chatting with pro Harold Varner III, who expressed his concern that his pal Spaun was struggling with diabetes. Bessette's son, Chris, had been diagnosed with Type I diabetes at age 18, and Bessette was familiar with the disease – the beta cells in the pancreas stop working and produce zero insulin. Spaun goes into insulin shock if he doesn't control his insulin levels. Varner called Spaun via FaceTime to connect him with Bessette, who listened to his list of symptoms. 'I said, 'Are you sure you have Type 2?' You should get yourself checked by a good endocrinologist to make sure,' Bessette recalled advising. He made some calls on Spaun's behalf to the CEO of the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (since renamed Breakthrough T1D), which funds research for the development of new therapies and treatments for type 1 diabetes. Spaun eventually discovered he was misdiagnosed. 'I just was kind of going through the whole learning experience of what diabetes is and how to treat it and how to approach this disease,' Spaun said. He has been approved by the Tour to wear a Libre blood-sugar monitor and check his levels while competing. If his blood sugar is low, he can faint. If it gets too high, his vision starts to blur. Later that year at the Travelers Championship, Spaun wedged to 19 inches in a closest-to-the-pin contest at the red floating umbrella in the middle of a lake dubbed hole No. 15 ½ at TPC River Highlands. As the winner, Spaun could donate $10,000 to the charity of his choice. He chose JDRF. Bessette was touched by Spaun's gesture and personally matched the donation. 'So that initiated our connection,' Spaun said. 'He's kind of been there for me the whole way, where if it was doctors I needed to get in touch with or CEOs of JDRF, it's been nice to have that connection and his network to kind of help me along this journey because I had just been diagnosed with it, but diagnosed incorrectly. Even when I got my diagnosis corrected, I guess, it was even more so helpful to have JDRF and Andy on my side to kind of help me navigate another new territory.' Bessette was moved again Sunday when Spaun achieved a career-defining moment at Oakmont – Type I Diabetes be damned. 'It changed his life,' Bessette said of being diagnosed correctly. 'It's a brutal disease.'

JJ Spaun Shares Dodgers Star Who Reached Out amid U.S. Open Win
JJ Spaun Shares Dodgers Star Who Reached Out amid U.S. Open Win

Newsweek

time3 hours ago

  • Newsweek

JJ Spaun Shares Dodgers Star Who Reached Out amid U.S. Open Win

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The popularity of golf among celebrities is booming more than ever, as evidenced not only by Pro-Am events. Celebrities swing clubs whenever they have the opportunity, but they also follow professional events with the same enthusiasm as any other fan. Another example of this was the numerous calls and messages from celebrities that JJ Spaun received after winning the U.S. Open. During his pre-Travelers Championship press conference, Spaun revealed some of the stars who reached out to congratulate him on his victory at Oakmont: "I heard from George Lopez, comedian and actor from Los Angeles; [Los Angeles Dodgers star] Mookie Betts, who was actually my Pro-Am partner at Pebble Beach; [renowned sportscaster] Scott Van Pelt; a lot of people." "I'm still like halfway through my messages. [1988 and 1989 US Open winner] Curtis Strange, [1974, 1979 and 1990 US Open winner] Hale Irwin, just some great champions that have been there and know what it's like, people that I have never even talked to, but it was great." J. J. Spaun of the United States kisses the trophy after winning the 125th U.S. OPEN at Oakmont Country Club on June 15, 2025 in Oakmont, Pennsylvania. J. J. Spaun of the United States kisses the trophy after winning the 125th U.S. OPEN at Oakmont Country Club on June 15, 2025 in Oakmont, also shared some details about the days after his win at Oakmont, which turned out to be quite a rollercoaster: "We were off to New York City. Had a nice dinner with my family on Monday night. We went to do all the media 6:00 a.m. on Tuesday morning." "It was literally nonstop. Didn't finish until 3:30, 4:00, hopped in a car, got driven up here. That was about 3 1/2 hours. Didn't walk through the front door of the hotel until 8:00 p.m." JJ Spaun won the U.S. Open with a score of 1-under, becoming the only player in the field to finish with a 72-hole score of par or better. His final-round performance was spectacular, as he birdied the final two holes to take a lead that proved to be definitive. To top it off, he sank a 64-foot putt on the 18th hole to secure his victory. With this victory, Spaun became the first PGA Tour Americas alum to win the US Open. The victory propelled him to the eighth spot in the world rankings and to the third spot in the rankings to make the Ryder Cup team. More Golf: Paige Spiranac Has Hilarious Request of New PGA Tour CEO

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store