Scottie Scheffler hails influence of English putting guru after Masters win
Scheffler putts under the watchful eye of his putting coach Phil Kenyon before he teed off in the final round.
Scottie Scheffler has hailed the influence of English putting guru Phil Kenyon after claiming his second Masters title in the last three years.
Scheffler compiled one of the best ball-striking seasons ever seen in 2023, his adjusted scoring average of 68.63 being the seventh-lowest in PGA Tour history and the best by anyone not named Tiger Woods.
In total Scheffler was ranked first in nine different categories, including greens in regulation and strokes gained off the tee, but was ranked 162nd out of 193 players in putting.
That prompted the world number one to turn to Kenyon for help and the move has paid massive dividends, with Scheffler winning the Arnold Palmer Invitational and Players Championship in successive weeks and finishing second in his next start before travelling to Augusta.
âAfter East Lake last year, ride home on the plane, sitting there talking to Blake [Smith, his agent] and we kind of look at each other, and I think we both were thinking the same thing,â the 27-year-old American explained following his nerveless four-shot Masters win over Swedenâs Ludvig Aberg.
âAnd we both looked at each other, and I was like, âYou know, I want to see a putting coachâ. Blake goes, âI think thatâs a good idea. Letâs talk to Randy [Smith, his coach].
âI had watched Phil before and watched him coach players. When youâre out here as long as Iâve been, I just see stuff, and I loved the way Phil coached his players.
âYou look at a guy like Fitzy [Matt Fitzpatrick] who lines up his putts and uses a putter that has a lot of swing to it, and you look at a guy like Keegan Bradley, doesnât use a line on the ball, uses a big giant putter cross-handed, and he putts good.
âAs I watched Phil, I could tell that he was open-minded, and thatâs the type of people I like to work with. And we kind of hit the ground running in the fall.
âI canât speak highly enough of the decision that Randy also made to be open-minded, not take an ego to it, sit there, watch us work, watch Phil do his thing.
âPhil is also a guy that doesnât have a big ego. He just wants whatâs best for his players. Iâm really, really fortunate to have those two guys as part of my team.
âRandy had taught me for almost 20 years every single aspect of the game. And so for me to have to bring in somebody else could have been a shot to his ego and he may not have wanted me to do it.
âBut Randy sat there and he said, âYou know what, I think itâs the right timeâ. We called Phil and about a week later he came in, had a visit. We worked for a couple days, and, yeah, now weâre here.â
Another key member of Schefflerâs team is caddie Ted Scott, who formerly worked for two-time Masters champion Bubba Watson.
âTed, itâs going to be hard to catch up with you on all these Masters titles if you keep working for me,â Scheffler joked during the green jacket presentation ceremony.
The pair had met in a bible study class on the PGA Tour and Scheffler and Watson played together in the Zurich Classic team event before Watson and Scott parted ways.
âWhen he called me I had no idea he was that good,â Scott said.
âWe were his partner in New Orleans. I was like, yeah, heâs a good player, and heâs a great guy. Iâd love to hang out with him. After two weeks, I was like, this guy is really good. Now itâs like, wow, is he really good. Iâm surprised too.
âIâm just pinching myself honestly. I donât really know what Iâm seeing. The guy is special. Heâs a different kind of special. I think weâre all seeing it, and weâre all questioning where did this come from?
âI think discipline is a word that comes to mind. Iâve heard stories that when he was seven years old he would show up at the golf course wearing pants [trousers], talking about heâs going to be on the PGA Tour.
âAnd he just does all the little things well, and he does them consistently. He doesnât skip. He doesnât miss a day. He has that mentality of like âIâm going somewhere with all this, Iâm actually doing it for a reasonâ.
âThen when he gets in a moment, heâs got all the tools.â







