On his way to securing a first Major title at the 2024 PGA Championship, Xander Schauffele hit an awful lot of impressive shots – especially during the final round.
Yet, there was one strike of club on golf ball that arguably sealed the deal and proved just how special a talent Schauffele is.
Stood on the par-5 18th tee box tied on 20-under with LIV Golf’s Bryson DeChambeau and knowing that a birdie would be enough to taste glory, Schauffele drilled his drive down the left and watched his ball just come up short of the fairway bunker but roll into the first cut of rough.
It wasn’t ideal, with the World No.2 perhaps preferring to end up fully entrenched in the sand. As it was, Schauffele’s feet were inside the bunker while his golf ball was almost a foot higher on the grass in front.
The shot he was faced with was a treacherous one given there was a creek running right down the middle of the 72nd hole and plenty of hungry rough just waiting to gobble up an errand strike.
Attack an awkward lie with confidence like 2024 PGA Champion Xander Schauffele with these key tips from Ryan Adams, PGA. 🏆@TMobile | @PGAChampionship pic.twitter.com/0Y66NzUnsRMay 19, 2024
Neither of those nasty situations materialised, thankfully, as Schauffele hooked his ball 219 yards and into the middle of the fairway left of the green. One tidy pitch shot and a successful putt later, and the Californian was a Major champion at last.
The key shot along the final hole was the second, though, so – as he has become accustomed to doing – Golf Channel analyst Johnson Wagner skipped down to the 18th after the celebrations had died down to see if he could recreate Schauffele’s genius.
Wagner – who is a three-time PGA Tour winner and once a member of the World’s top-100 – had little luck, however. And not for the first time this week. On Thursday, the Texas-born golfer-turned-entertainer suffered from the chipping yips as he tried to reproduce a chip from Schauffele on the fourth.
The 44-year-old fared slightly better this time, but it was far from perfect still – proving just how difficult Schauffele’s shot was. And that isn’t even taking into account the nerves of trying to close out your first Major.
But Wagner gave it a good go. Starting off by explaining Schauffele’s thought process, the Golf Channel…
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