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Struggling Brian Harman Honestly Wishes Scottie Scheffler ‘Doesn’t Play’ RBC Heritage: ‘He Didn’t Bite’

Brian Harman almost wishes it didn’t happen. Not Scottie Scheffler winning the Masters. Perhaps that was inevitable. But the reigning Open Champion wished Scheffler wasn’t in the RBC Heritage field right after earning his second major title. “There’s lots of parts of me that hope he doesn’t play,” Harman, who is playing at RBC Heritage after crashing out of the Masters, quipped. And he didn’t stop at that.

Now Scheffler has been accused of many things. Playing ‘boring’ golf. Being boring as a person. Most recently, he’s also been accused of not carrying the Masters TV ratings on his broad shoulders. However, Harman’s statement exemplified his cultivated personality, which has made him an unparalleled talent.

Harman, a University of Georgia alum, was picking on Scheffler when he first came on the Tour. The former Texas Longhorn was a 23-year-old rookie. Harman was trying to needle him and get him to react. But he didn’t succeed.

“I can remember when he first came out he, I was razzing him about Texas football. I was trying to get a reaction out of him. Wouldn’t give it to me. I was joking with him. I was impressed that he didn’t bite on that.”

Again, in 2020, Scheffler and Harman were paired together for the first two rounds of the Rocket Mortgage Classic. The world no. 1 opened with a 79. Harman with a 71. There was no chance for Scheffler to make the cut. Yet, going into the second round, the nine-time PGA Tour winner shot 65. He didn’t qualify for Saturday, but Harman, who again carded 71 to crash out as well, was impressed.

“I felt like most guys that were first-year, they would have kind of mailed it in, but he just went through his routine and shot a great score. Scottie’s success has not surprised me. He’s got like the perfect mental strength and demeanor to do what he’s doing.” So, the three-time PGA Tour winner is not surprised at what Scottie Scheffler is doing. In fact, he doesn’t have any qualms about accepting that Scheffler is miles ahead of most PGA Tour pros.

The gap between Scottie Scheffler and the rest is widening
Scheffler is gaining almost a stroke (SG: Total 2.812) more per round than the next best, Xander Schauffele (1.934). The two-time Major champion has reached 416 greens in regulation from 558. That’s a whopping 74.55% GIR. The Tour average is 65.28%.

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