When you’re sitting at the top of the golf world, it’s easy for people to assume there’s nothing left to chase. Scottie Scheffler has racked up major wins, held the No. 1 ranking, and built a resume most players spend a lifetime pursuing. From the outside, it looks like he’s operating at full throttle with very few weaknesses to pick apart. But elite athletes rarely see themselves the way fans do.

Even after dominating leaderboards and collecting trophies, there’s often a quieter, more personal standard they’re measuring against. And recently, Scheffler opened up about exactly that, offering a refreshingly honest take on where he believes his game truly stands, and why reaching the top doesn’t necessarily mean feeling finished.

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Scottie Scheffler hits from the rough on the 14th hole. Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images

(Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images)

While speaking to the media at a recent press conference, Scheffler was asked how he how he measures how good he is. To this the 29-year-old said, “I have no idea. That is why we keep practicising. You never get to a place where you feel you’ve got it figured out. Golf is an endless pursuit of trying to figure something out, and I’m never gonna get there but there is no harm in trying.”

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