World
No.1 Scheffler wins World Challenge for year’s ninth title
Top-ranked Scottie Scheffler completed a stunning golf season by defending his title at the Hero World Challenge on Sunday to capture his ninth victory of the year.
The 28-year-old American fired a bogey-free, nine-under par 63 to finish on 25-under 263 after 72 holes in the 20-man unofficial invitational event at Albany Golf Club in the Bahamas.
That was good enough for a six-stroke victory over South Korean Tom Kim with two-time major winner Justin Thomas third on 270.
“Very satisfying,” Scheffler said. “I did a lot of good stuff today on the course, played a really solid round of golf. I got off to a good start.”
Scheffler, who birdied three of the first four holes, joined host Tiger Woods from 2006-2007 and Norway’s Viktor Hovland from 2021-2022 as the only back-to-back winners of the event.
Scheffler, who had not competed in a stroke-play event since winning the PGA Tour Championship in August, added to a 2024 trophy haul that includes a second Masters green jacket and Paris Olympic gold.
“Feels nice to take a little break and come back and continue to play some pretty solid golf,” Scheffler said. “Very pleased with the results this week.”
That includes his work on a new putting grip, which delighted him as he prepares for more rest ahead of January’s start to a new campaign.
“Overall, just head home tonight and try and get some rest and continue to work on the stuff I’ve been working on this off-season to get ready for next season,” Scheffler said of his plans.
Thomas, who led compatriot Scheffler by a stroke when the day began, failed to snap a win drought that has lingered since capturing the 2022 PGA Championship.
Thomas followed birdies at the first and fourth holes with bogeys at the par-3 second and fifth.
His stumbling start allowed Scheffler to seize the lead with an eight-foot birdie at the opening hole, a tap-in birdie at the par-5 third and a stunning birdie putt from just inside 50 feet at the fourth.
Kim birdied all three par-5s on the front nine — the third, sixth and ninth holes — and sank a four-foot birdie putt at the 10th to reach 19-under.
But Scheffler pitched inside four feet and birdied the ninth, then rolled in a 20-foot birdie putt at the 10th to reach 21-under and his lead stretched to three strokes when Kim lipped out a two-foot putt to bogey the par-5 11th.
Scheffler pulled away from there by sinking birdie putts on four of the final six holes, three from inside four feet and a 10-footer at the par-4 16th.
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