Scottie Scheffler Converts Nearly 70% Of Missed Greens Into Par Or Better. Here’s His Strategy

What makes Scottie Scheffler extra dangerous is not that his game is always perfect. It is that he can save it when it is not.

Scheffler misses greens like everyone else. The difference is how often he turns those situations into pars or better instead of bogeys. When you look at the numbers, he converts nearly 70 percent of missed greens into par or better, putting him among the Tour’s elite scramblers.

I went back through some videos Scheffler has done with TaylorMade to see if he dropped any short-game secrets. None of these is magic. You still have to execute. But if you are trying to get better at scrambling, these ideas are a solid starting point.

He decides on trajectory before he worries about spin

One thing that shows up immediately in Scheffler’s short-game videos is how early he commits to trajectory.

Before he talks about spin, club selection or feel, he addresses whether the shot needs to be high or low.

That decision is driven primarily by:

  • the lie
  • the shape of the green

If the ball is sitting cleanly and there is a reason to fly it higher, he is comfortable doing that. If the lie is questionable or the green adds complexity, he defaults lower.

He builds shots that work when they are not perfect

Even the greatest golfer in the world leaves himself room for error. If you ask me, that’s likely how he got himself to this position.

In multiple clips, he talks through landing the ball into:

  • an upslope
  • a valley that feeds the ball forward
  • a section of green that protects against long or short misses

He is choosing landing spots that give the shot room to work even if the strike is not perfect. Amateurs often pick more difficult shots, leaving themselves very little room for error.

His “hooky” feel is really about shallow contact and using bounce

One phrase Scheffler uses often in his TaylorMade videos is that he likes to feel a little “hooky” on short-game shots. He’s not really trying to hook the ball. Instead, it’s a feel that helps him execute the type of shot he wants.

Most importantly, this “hooky” feel helps him avoid getting steep and cutting across the ball.

Scheffler explains that when he chips poorly, it is usually because he starts exposing too much leading edge. That leads to digging, thin strikes and inconsistent spin. The hooky feel helps him shallow the club and let the bounce work.

The “hooky feel” may not automatically be the right solution for your game. What matters is that it is a feel tied to a measurable change in club delivery and contact.

In the short game, simple cues often work better than mechanical thoughts. For me, it is easy to overdo a hooky feel and get too shallow. When that happens, I sometimes need to feel a little steeper. The point is that there is not one universal feel. Just like Scheffler, it is having a consistent feel you can trust for your game.

Final thoughts

You do not need Scottie Scheffler’s speed or touch to learn from this. What translates is how often he chooses shots that reduce potential poor outcomes.

If you want to scramble better, start with the same priorities:

  • Pick trajectory first.
  • Keep shots lower when the lie or green adds uncertainty.
  • Use the bounce instead of trying to be precise with the leading edge.
  • Choose landing areas that allow you to survive small misses.

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