Scottie Scheffler
Scottie Scheffler is the American golfer who has sat at world No. 1 for most of the mid-2020s, a four-time major champion known for his relentless consistency and unflashy dominance. He arrived at the 2026 Open Championship at Royal Birkdale as the defending Champion Golfer of the Year, chasing the first back-to-back Open title since Padraig Harrington.
Who is Scottie Scheffler?
Scottie Scheffler is an American professional golfer who has defined the top of the men’s game through the mid-2020s. Born on 21 June 1996 in Ridgewood, New Jersey, he moved to Dallas, Texas at the age of six and grew up on the courses of north Texas before a decorated amateur career at the University of Texas. He turned professional in 2018 and won PGA Tour Rookie of the Year in 2020.
What sets Scheffler apart is not flair but relentless quality. He is widely regarded as the best tee-to-green player of his generation, a golfer who piles up top finishes through elite iron play, patient course management and an unusually calm temperament. By the start of the 2026 season he had spent most of the previous three years as world No. 1 and had been named PGA Tour Player of the Year four seasons running, a stretch of dominance last seen in the Tiger Woods era.
His major record backs it up. Scheffler won the Masters in 2022 and 2024, the PGA Championship in 2025 and the Open Championship in 2025 at Royal Portrush, where he finished four shots clear. He also claimed Olympic gold for the United States at Paris 2024. Those four majors and the Olympic title make him one of the most accomplished players of the decade before turning 31.
Off the course, Scheffler keeps things quiet. He married his high-school girlfriend Meredith in 2020, and the couple have two young sons, Bennett and Remy. He arrived at Royal Birkdale for the 2026 Open Championship as the defending Champion Golfer of the Year, chasing a piece of history: no golfer has won back-to-back Opens since Padraig Harrington in 2007 and 2008. Sources: Wikipedia, PGA Tour, NBC Olympics, Britannica.