By: Josh Schrock March 24, 2025 During the week at TPC Sawgrass, Scheffler was clearly frustrated with parts of his game. He was irritable during media sessions and lost his cool a bit as his chance for a three-peat fell apart during an uneven third round. “I’ve worked really hard. I feel like I’m a […]
Josh Schrock

“I’ve worked really hard. I feel like I’m a way more complete player than I was a few years ago,” McIlroy said after the win at the Players. “Even in conditions like this. That little 9-iron into 17, the little 8-iron into the [18], I said to Harry there, that little shot will take us a long way.
Wyndham Clark (+7500 for the Masters)
Tony Finau (+5000 for the Masters)
Max Homa (+10000 for the Masters)McIlroy (+650 odds-to-win for the Masters) opened the season with a win at the Pebble Beach Pro-Am, where he debuted a new mindset molded after his observations of world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler. McIlroy aimed to do a better job at course management, hoping to minimize big mistakes and give himself more opportunities to hang in and win tournaments. Coupled with intense work to fix an issue with his takeaway, McIlroy plodded his way around Pebble Beach before hitting the gas on Sunday for PGA Tour win No. 27.We’ll start with McIlroy, who now has two wins in five starts and, stop me if you’ve heard this before, seems primed to finally win the green jacket.
‘Complete’ Rory McIlroy
World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler (+460 odds-to-win for the Masters) came back from a hand injury suffered making homemade ravioli in February. He has three top-11 finishes so far this season, including a T3 at the Genesis Invitational, but it’s clear he’s not quite all the way back yet.The young Swedish star missed the cut at TPC Sawgrass. While an MC at Pete Dye’s torture chamber isn’t a red flag, Aberg is currently ranked 102 in approach play and 140 around the green. Those strokes gained numbers were damaged by a tough showing at TPC Sawgrass, but some polishing is in order if he’s going to contend at Augusta. “So I’m very, very proud of myself. It sucks not winning when you’re that close and have a great chance, but I just hopefully put myself in the same position in two weeks at Augusta and finish it off better.”
He heckled Rory McIlroy. Now this college star is facing consequences
By:
Alan Bastable
Spieth gave himself a chance at the Valspar with a solid third round but could not get anything going on Sunday, finishing in a tie for 28th. Also on the hunt for his old game is Jordan Spieth, who has shown flashes of his old self after offseason wrist surgery but hasn’t been able to put it all together as he works to get the bad habits out of his swing. Getty Images“Start,” McIlroy said, “as you mean to go on.”
Scottie Scheffler’s rust
Ludvig Aberg (+1500 for the Masters)
Collin Morikawa (+1600 for the Masters)
Justin Thomas (+2000 for the Masters)Spieth ranks 79th in Strokes Gained: Approach and 91st in Strokes Gained: Putting as he grinds to get ready for Augusta, where he almost always plays well regardless of form.McIlroy arrived at TPC Sawgrass one month later and won his second Players Championship by defeating J.J. Spaun in a Monday playoff. The week started with McIlroy involved in an incident with a heckling spectator. It ended with him becoming just the fourth player to win multiple Players titles and multiple major championships. That McIlroy won at Sawgrass while hitting less than half of the fairways speaks to where his overall game is as Augusta looms. Exhibit A of this different version of McIlroy? The flighted, non-stock 9-iron he hit into the famed 17th green during the playoff to knock off Spaun.
Scottie Scheffler reveals how hand injury still impacts his play
By:
Josh Schrock
Rory McIlroy is firing on all cylinders as the Masters approaches while Scottie Scheffler is still knocking off the rust.All 2025 Masters betting odds as of Monday, March 24, 2025. Download the Fanatics Sportsbook app to see the full list of odds and bets for the Masters.Scheffler’s irritation with his game flared up after a missed par putt on the 17th hole. He tapped in for bogey, tossed his ball in the water, slammed his putter in his bag, and walked to the 18th tee by himself, muttering under his breath.
Two stars searching
Golf.com Editor“It was a pretty good chunk of time where I wasn’t able to do the things that I normally did. So when you come back, it takes a little bit of time. … I’m very structured in the way that I do things here at home. So not being able to do those things is definitely an adjustment. So, did it set me back a little bit? Maybe so. But I feel like I’m learning a lot right now, and I definitely did some things really well to start the year.”Josh Schrock is a writer and reporter for Golf. com. Before joining GOLF, Josh was the Chicago Bears insider for NBC Sports Chicago. He previously covered the 49ers and Warriors for NBC Sports Bay Area. A native Oregonian and UO alum, Josh spends his free time hiking with his wife and dog, thinking of how the Ducks will break his heart again, and trying to become semi-proficient at chipping. A true romantic for golf, Josh will never stop trying to break 90 and never lose faith that Rory McIlroy’s major drought will end. Josh can be reached at josh.schrock@golf.com.The start of this season has been different for Schauffele. He missed a month due to a rib injury and has spent his first three weeks back trying to find the swing feel that led to that success last year. This search led to hours on the range at TPC Sawgrass with coach Chris Como as Schauffele finished last among players who made the cut. Schauffele shot 77-81 on the weekend at TPC Sawgrass and is grinding to rediscover the right feel. During a pre-Masters conference call last week, Scheffler revealed that while he has no pain in his right hand, he is still working to get back to 100 percent. World No. 3 Xander Schauffele (+1750 for the Masters) won two majors during a breakthrough season in 2024.
Good vibes
The four-week romp in Florida gave us a good pulse check on the state of the game’s elite, with the 2025 Masters just two weeks away. “I’m a better putter. I’m better around the greens. I can flight my ball better in the wind. My ability to shape shots both ways,” McIlroy said about being more complete. “Yeah, I’d say those are the things. Really, I’m managing myself more around — by no means did I have my best stuff this week, but I was still able to win one of the biggest tournaments in the world. That’s a huge thing.”“I’ll take a lot of good,” Thomas said Sunday after finishing second to Hovland. “Way, way more good than bad. I mean, today was awesome. I felt so comfortable.
Russell Henley steals Arnold Palmer Invitational title from Collin Morikawa
By:
Josh Berhow
The two-time Masters champion hopes to sharpen things up at this week’s Texas Children’s Houston Open before defending his title at Augusta.While Scheffler has said his ball-striking isn’t up to his lofty standards, the around-the-green game has lagged in his return. So far this season, Scheffler ranks sixth in Strokes Gained: Off the Tee and 11th in Strokes Gained: Approach. But he ranks 41st in Strokes Gained: Around the Greens and 86th in Strokes Gained: Putting. So far this season, Schauffele ranks third in approach play but is outside the top 150 in putting, around the green and off the tee. He did, however, gain over 11 shots on approach during the Valspar Championship, which was the most in his career for a single event, per the PGA Tour. A sign of progress with the Masters on deck.Homa has been in the wilderness really since he left last year’s Masters, where he had a chance to win entering Sunday. Homa hasn’t made a cut in an event with a cut since last year’s Open Championship. He is now outside the top 70 in the Official World Golf Rankings and has yet to earn a trip to the U.S. Open or Open Championship this year. He ranks 182 in approach play (-1.343 shots gained) and 97 off the tee (0.020 shots gained). The four-time major winner has been all systems go to start the season, but only he knows if it will translate once he drives down Magnolia Lane.
Bad vibes
Walking down the 18th fairway on Sunday at Pebble, McIlroy turned to caddie Harry Diamond and uttered a phrase that could wind up prescient if the Northern Irishman finally snaps his major drought this year. At TPC Sawgrass, McIlroy gained only 18 percent of his total shots off the tee (+2.63). Fifty-three percent came via approach play (+7.78), while 34 percent came with the flat stick (+4.96). He ranks first in Strokes Gained: Off the Tee, 16th in approach and 10th in putting so far this season.
LIV check-in
“Just like getting the strength back in the hand and all that stuff,” Scheffler said. “Like I have absolutely no pain in the hand. But getting the full total range of motion out of my hand is a little bit of a different story. Just because you’re not able to use a certain muscle for almost a month’s time, like my hand, I wasn’t able to really use. You have to build back strength in that hand. And not being able to do the exact things that I did in the gym was a challenge as well.Aberg won the Genesis Invitational in impressive fashion. He contended at last year’s Masters before dumping one into the water on 11 on Sunday. That’s a credit to the high bar Scheffler has set for himself. Jon Rahm (+1400 for the Masters)
Bryson DeChambeau (+1900 for the Masters)
Joaquin Niemann (+3500 for the Masters)
Tyrrell Hatton (+3750 for the Masters)
Sergio Garcia (+9500)Niemann is currently gaining 1.69 strokes ball striking (off the tee and approach), while Garcia is gaining 1.28. DeChambeau ranks first on LIV in Strokes Gained: Off the Tee (+1.55) but is losing .21 shots on approach this season. Hatton ranks 41st off the tee (-0.32). Rahm ranks fifth in SG: Tee to Green (+1.58).
Latest In News

Josh Schrock
According to Data Golf, which records Strokes Gained data for LIV events, five golfers on LIV are currently top-40 players in the world: Jon Rahm (4), Joaquin Niemann (8), Tyrrell Hatton (13), Bryson DeChambeau (15) and Sergio Garcia (27).
Niemann has won two of the first four LIV events. Garcia won at LIV Hong Kong. Hatton won the DP World Tour’s Hero Dubai Desert Classic in January.