Why Ernie Els sees some Tiger Woods at Scottie Scheffler

Josh Schrock
Scottie Scheffler’s dominance is compared with Tiger Woods.
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Some may be afraid to say that, but Ernie Els is not.
Over the past 13 months, Scottie Scheffler’s dominance has been compared with Tiger Woods. Scheffler won a huge victory at the 2025 PGA Championship, with Scheffler joining Woods and Jack Nicklaus, the only player to have 15 wins and 3 professionals since World War II, before he was 29 years old. Woods, Scheffler and Nicklaus are also the only three players to win multiple Masters Wins, multiple player championships, multiple player championships and PGA championships.
Woods’ presence on the main championship rankings puts his competitors on the extra pressure. This made them feel like they had to play almost perfect golf to beat him, knowing he wouldn’t beat him. Scheffler has the same effect as Quail Hollow proved last week.
This is a good place to start for Els, who won four major titles during the Woods era.
“I see similarities with Schefller [and Woods],” Els said before Congress’ senior PGA champion. “It seems like he played the best golf ball under the greatest pressure, which is a sign of the championship. With more confidence, he won by winning these tournaments. It only got harder for that group to try to get into the mentality he was in. I think tigers bring this intensity.
“You won four majors in his time, and a lot of others won professionals in that time, but we never reached six, seven, eight, eight, eight. Mickelson ended up winning six majors; he got six majors. But he got us. But he got us. But he got us. You know you were in the tough game around him, and I think it happened with Schefl.”
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Josh Schrock
On Sunday at Quail Hollow, Scheffler entered the final round with three shots. He took a five-shot lead on Jon Rahm and a six-shot advantage on Bryson Dechambeau. With Scheftler ahead, the main champions behind him feel they have to execute perfectly to give themselves a chance to catch him.
“Sometimes I feel like I’m being crushed,” Dechambeau said after the end of T2. “Green Mile did it for me [Saturday] I did it to me again today, that’s golf, man. I had to become more precise and fix the issues I could solve to make myself more consistent and stand there like what Scottie is doing right now. ”
That’s the pressure of Scheffler participating in the competition. Tigers have similar functions, but multiplied by.
“I’ve always been a scoreboard observer, especially after that [the 1994 U.S. Open],” Ayles said. “If I saw his name on the rankings, obviously, he was doing well, he wouldn’t walk away. So you know you’ve already traveled a long distance. ”
Scheffler’s rankings Aura may feel similar to Woods, but the 15-time Grand Slam champion pointed to other links that would put the two: the organized nature of their attacks on the game.
“We saw the green shot very similarly, how we missed the golf ball into the right position,” Woods said in a video released by the PGA Tour. “It’s not always pretty, but it’s not about now. It’s about the long game. It’s over 72 holes. It’s not a sprint; it’s a marathon. I think it’s a similarity in the way we play the game.”
Comparing anyone with Woods’s is what has been a huge achievement in his legendary career. Although Scheffler may continue this huge stretch and eventually consolidate himself with rare air.
But there is no doubt that Schaffler has been suspended for a year among everyone else in men’s professional golf, showing no signs of slowing down. Until he is no longer defeated, his presence will continue to be felt in the Big Championship.
Given what we just witnessed at Quail Hollow, this may not be a while.
;)
Josh Schrock
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Josh Schrock is a writer and journalist at Golf.com. Before joining golf, Josh was an insider of Chicago Bears in NBC Sports. He has previously reported 49 people and fighters in the NBC Sports Bay area. Josh, an Oregon native and UO alum, spent time hiking with his wife and dogs, pondering how ducks will be sad again and trying to become half-mature. For golf, Josh will never stop trying to break the 90s and never lose Rory McIlroy’s major drought will end (update: he did). Josh Schrock can be contacted at josh.schrock@golf.com.