05/11/25 11:47:00
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05/11 08:44 CDT Scottie Scheffler's craziest day at the PGA Championship:
Handcuffs, jail, no appetite and a 66
Scottie Scheffler's craziest day at the PGA Championship: Handcuffs, jail, no
appetite and a 66
By DOUG FERGUSON
AP Golf Writer
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) --- Scottie Scheffler is not someone who likes to rate
anything over the other, whether it's a tournament he won or a round he played
or a shot he hit.
He can let the facts speak for themselves on the craziest day of his career,
which occurred at the PGA Championship last year.
Scheffler was handcuffed and placed in the back of a police car outside the
gates of Valhalla Golf Club in the morning darkness. He had his fingerprints
taken, stared into a camera wearing an orange jumpsuit for his mug shot and was
put in a jail cell. He got out of jail and arrived back at the golf course 56
minutes before his tee time.
All this in just over three hours. He shot 66.
"Pretty good," Scheffler said with a smile. "It was definitely one of my best
performances, for sure. I think it would have been a really easy scenario to
get frustrated with the situation or have a ?Woe is me' type of moment and be
like, ?I can't believe this has happened.'
"Hit a few balls, got on the course, birdied the first hole and got into the
round," he said. "I used whatever I had in the tank for good."
One year later, the scene is no less surreal.
The red-and-blue lights from police cars flashing like strobes in the dark
rain. The images on ESPN --- courtesy of reporter Jeff Darlington, who also was
stuck in traffic --- showing the Masters champion and No. 1 player in handcuffs
being led away.
Police were investigating a traffic fatality involving a pedestrian,
69-year-old tournament volunteer John Mills. Scheffler was arrested for not
following police instruction. The felony charge for assaulting a police officer
and three misdemeanors were later dropped.
Scheffler said when his round was over, "I feel like my head is still spinning."
Also in disbelief were Brian Harman and Wyndham Clark, who played alongside
him. Harman figured an ice breaker was in order.
"I said: ?Yesterday was your first round as a father. Today it's your first
round as a convict,'" Harman said. "He laughed. We poked some fun to lighten
the mood. When something like that happens, I can't imagine how stressful it
is. It's bizarre."
He might not have seen a 66 coming from Scheffler.
"It was a clean 5 under, too," Harman said. "Got him back in contention."
In the four hours since his arrest, which included a rain delay, some
spectators already were wearing "Free Scottie" shirts. The best player in golf,
Scheffler had never had this much attention or heard so much support.
"He was visibly shaking on the first tee," Clark said. "And then perfect
Scottie fashion, he pipes it down the middle and birdies the first hole. I just
remember Harman and I --- because we're buddies with Scottie and we knew it was
a crappy situation --- we said: ?Let's get it out of the way. What happened?'
He told us down the 10th hole. I think it calmed the nerves for him.
"That was a crazy day for golf."
Scheffler crashed the next day, which was to be expected. He fell back with a
73 --- his first round over par all year --- and eventually tied for eighth.
"The craziest thing of that day is I didn't eat basically the whole day,"
Scheffler said. "I didn't feel the need to eat. I had a couple of eggs for
breakfast, but at that point I couldn't really take it down, just shoveled it
into my mouth."
What about the sandwich he was offered in jail?
"No, I wasn't going to eat that," he said with a laugh.
"I'm a big eater. I eat a lot of food," Scheffler said. "That was the weirdest
part. Looking back on it, that's how much adrenaline and fight or flight you
had in your system. I didn't even feel like eating. Crazy."
Scheffler is fond of saying what happened in the past has no bearing on what he
does today, though that's usually related to scores and results. He can only
hope for a smooth week in Charlotte, especially off the course.
A year ago, he came into the PGA Championship having won four of his last five
tournaments, including The Players Championship and the Masters. But he had
taken three weeks off before Valhalla to be home for the birth of his first
child, a boy named Bennett.
This year is entirely different on so many levels --- the freak hand injury on
Christmas Day, not winning until after the Masters. But he at least arrives at
Quail Hollow coming off a victory --- instead of a three-week break --- when he
won by eight shots in Dallas two weeks ago.
"It will definitely be different in terms of preparation," he said. "I would
not want to take that much time off before a big tournament like that,
especially in the middle of the year. My preparation will be more in my normal
routine this year."
Normal. After last year at Valhalla, that's all he should want at this PGA
Championship.
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AP golf: https://apnews.com/hub/golf
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