Nobody better understands how monumental and historic Sunday at the 2026 U.S. Open could be for Scottie Scheffler than Scottie Scheffler himself. Yet, less than 48 hours before beginning his journey in the third major championship of the year, he put forth his best effort to downplay the enormity of the situation.
This week’s test at Shinnecock Hills will, no matter how the leaderboard falls, forever be the site of Scheffler’s first attempt at completing the career grand slam. If he were to find the winner’s circle come Sunday, which is also Father’s Day and his 30th birthday, he would become just the seventh player in the game’s history to complete the slam. Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods and Gene Sarazen are the only three career grand slam winners to accomplish the feat on their first attempt.
Scheffler will never step foot on a bigger stage than he will this week on Long Island.
While it would become overly consuming for Scheffler to solely focus on the importance of the potential situation that he could find himself in over the weekend, he’s still human.
The thought of entering the game’s most exclusive club at just 30 years old had to have taken over at least a portion of his brain almost immediately after he hoisted the Claret Jug in 2025 to complete three-fourths of the slam.
Scheffler isn’t letting what is at stake motivate him as he enters the week, or at least that’s what he’s telling himself.
“For me, would it be a dream to win the U.S. Open? Of course. But at the end of the day, like I — the grand slam has never been a motivating factor for me,” Scheffler said during his Tuesday news conference at Shinnecock. “I always just wanted to be the best version of myself, and that got me this far.
“So when it comes to this golf tournament, like I said, I’m going to step on the first tee and remind myself I’ve done everything I possibly could in order to play well, and now it’s just a matter of going out there and trying to execute and kind of going back to enjoying the competition versus feeling like you have to win for some reason.”
Perhaps this is Scheffler trying to trick his own brain into thinking that this week’s U.S. Open is just another golf tournament, even though nothing about it is normal. Executing that tactic is likely the easiest path to accomplishing the goal come Sunday, but as an admitted, freakishly competitive professional athlete, the history at stake cannot be ignored by the man who is trying to create it.
While his claim of not being motivated by what he can accomplish this week is difficult to believe, another claim he made about expectations on Tuesday could not have been more accurate.
“It’s kind of a funny thing. It’s like, yeah, if I win this tournament, that would be amazing, but I think then I show up the next week, and it’s like, okay, now Scottie’s won the grand slam, he’s won all these golf tournaments. Now, where do we go from here?” Scheffler stated.
“So no matter what, I think as a player and as a professional athlete, you’re never going to live up to the expectations of people. I think sometimes that’s a little bit of the fallacy in our sport is like, if I win the U.S. Open, then I’m going to be satisfied. I’ve won all the tournaments, and my career is essentially over, and I’ve accomplished everything I could want to accomplish. But I think the goalposts are always just moved further and further.”
Scheffler’s comments are fair and honest, but also the production of greatness. Expectations seemingly never stop expanding when you’ve been the de facto No. 1 player in the world for nearly 200 consecutive weeks.
The expectations are what create the intrigue from all of those on the outside looking in, but for the athlete in the moment, they’re a necessary evil that they’re constantly trying to get the best of.