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Scottie Scheffler rallies to claim golf gold at Paris Olympics

SAINT-QUENTIN-EN-YVELINES, France – The legend of Scottie Scheffler keeps growing, and the latest addition is golden.
World No. 1 Scheffler caught fire on the back nine at Le Golf National, coming from off the pace to swipe the gold medal for Team USA from a group of elite contenders in the final holes of a enthralling Paris Olympics competition.
Opening the final round four shots back of the leaders, Scheffler tied a course record by firing a 9-under-par 62 on Sunday. He birdied his first three holes of the afternoon and then six of nine after the turn, including a pivotal run of four in a row to seize a place atop the leaderboard that he wouldn’t lose.
Scheffler’s tournament total of 19 under beat silver-medalist Tommy Fleetwood of Great Britain by one shot. Japan’s Hideki Matsuyama (17 under) won the bronze medal.
In his first Olympics, Scheffler, 28, hadn’t been thrilled with how he’d played the first three rounds, but he’d played well enough to stay without shouting distance. Eventually, he stepped up while other top players stumbled down the stretch. Spain’s Jon Rahm – who led by four strokes at one point Sunday – played holes No. 11 through No. 14 at 4 over, making a costly double bogey on 14.
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Ireland’s Rory McIlroy hit it into the water on No. 15. That was a costly double bogey for him.
Meanwhile, Scheffler took the solo lead with a 17-foot birdie putt on No. 17, one stroke ahead of Fleetwood, who still had three holes remaining. After a birdie on the par-3 16th to catch Scheffler, Fleetwood drove it into the deep rough on No. 17. From off the green, he chipped a poor third shot too far past the hole and bogeyed to slip to 18 under. Scheffler was on the driving range, preparing for a possible playoff, as Fleetwood missed the green on No. 18 and couldn’t chip in for a birdie.
It was the second Olympic golf gold medal in a row for the U.S. men, with Scheffler matching teammate Xander Schauffele’s gold from Tokyo.
Schauffele opened Sunday’s round tied for the lead but unraveled in the final 11 holes. He bogeyed No. 8. Then on No. 12 and No. 13, wayward drives into the rough led to bogeys, and a double bogey on No. 15 ended dwindling chances for a medal.
Another American – Wyndham Clark – who’d been largely forgotten since shooting a first-round 75, closed with consecutive 65s to go to 11 under for tournament. It was an encouraging weekend for a player who had been struggling of late. And the USA’s Collin Morikawa couldn’t get much going this week, shooting three 70s to finish 6 under.

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