
Scottie Scheffler plays a shot from a bunker on the 18th hole during the final round of the THE CJ CUP Byron Nelson golf tournament at the McKinney, Texas, USA on May 4, 2025.
Reuters
An emotional Scottie Scheffler flirted with golf history at his hometown tournament on Sunday, tying the PGA Tour scoring record for his first win of the season at the CJ Cup Byron Nelson in McKinney, Texas.
Scheffler finished with a 31-under par 253 to equal the tour record for the lowest 72-hole score at the tournament where he had his first professional start as a teenager 11 years ago, with his sister serving as his caddie.
It was his 14th PGA title but arguably among the most meaningful for the American, who became emotional after the win as he addressed the fans with his baby son in his arms.
"I grew up coming to watch it. This was my first start on the PGA Tour when I was in high school. The girl I was dating at the time is now my wife," said Scheffler.
"My family was all able to be here, and it was just really, really special memories, and I think at times it all comes crashing down to me at once. We have a lot of great memories as kids coming to watch this tournament.
"I just dreamed to be able to play in it, and it's more of a dream to be able to win it."
Scheffler finished eight shots clear of Erik van Rooyen of South Africa and he nearly clinched the PGA scoring record outright until he suffered a bogey on the par-3 17th hole, finishing the final round with an eight-under par 63.
"It feels like a lifetime of hard work and sacrifice for little moments like these, and they're pretty special," said Scheffler, who won seven titles last year, including his second Masters.
South Africa's Erik van Rooyen was the runner-up, also shooting 63 for the final round and ending at 23 under.
‘What he's doing is inspiring’
Joining Scheffler with the hometown vibes for this tournament were Sam Stevens and Jordan Spieth.
"What he's doing is inspiring," Spieth said of Scheffler.
Stevens shot 64 for third place at 20 under. Spieth's 62 tied his personal best on the PGA Tour and allowed him to rise to fourth place at 19 under.
Scheffler led each step of the way for his first victory since wrapping up the Tour Championship on Sept. 1.
After a weather-related interruption Friday and a late-afternoon tee time for Saturday's third round that finished after dusk, it was smooth sailing for Scheffler on the tournament's last day.
He began the round with an eight-stroke lead and recorded five birdies, a bogey and then an eagle on No. 9 for a front-nine score of 30. He was 29 under through the tournament's first 63 holes.
Van Rooyen also notched a front-nine 30 but made up no ground.
The hometown favorite then moved into record territory with birdies on Nos. 11, 14 and 15. He was in the rough off the tee on No. 17 and, after his chip shot rolled back off the green, settled for bogey.
But winning a tournament named after Nelson added to the importance for Scheffler.
"He was a great person, a family man, and I'm proud to be the champion at his event," he said.
Spieth and Scheffler are longtime friends. Being near the top of the leaderboard together was special, but because of the margin they weren't exactly jockeying for position.
"I don't think this counts," Spieth said. "I went off two hours ahead of him. Yeah, it would have been really cool if I were the one in that last group, and at least we were going back and forth a little. That would have been pretty fun, just being hometown players."
Stevens soaked in the atmosphere. He had his best round of the tournament Sunday, bouncing back after Saturday's 70.
"It was nice to kind of keep the pedal down a little bit," Stevens said.
Spieth embraced what has been a steady recent rise. He said good fortune contributed.
"I got a bit lucky on 18. I thought I hit it in the water, and I ended up making birdie," Spieth said. "Those are the kinds of breaks you need to sometimes shoot 62."
Eight golfers tied for fifth place at 17 under: Sam Burns (65), Mark Hubbard (65), Will Gordon (65), Eric Cole (67), Kurt Kitayama (68), Ricky Castillo (69), Adam Schenk (69) and Japan's Takumi Kanaya (65).
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