[The guy he was competing against] "Scott went on to become the world’s top-ranked amateur and twice represent the United States in the Walker Cup, but struggled as a professional. After six professional seasons, he stopped competing full-time in 2005." He's basically only known as the guy who lost to Tiger in overtime in 1996 :)
I remember watching this. On one of the playoff holes Woods moved his ball marker one club length to avoid obstructing Scott's shot, and when he came back to his putt he almost forgot to move back one club length. It was actually Scott who stopped him and reminded him to make the proper adjustment. Who knows if Woods would have remembered before pIaying his ball, but I thought it was incredible sportsmanship on Steve Scott's part, he would have won the tournament and who knows how history follows from there. I thought Scott was real cool for that, plus his cute blond girlfriend was his caddy.
Well, it wasnt a playoff hole. It was the 34th hole in regulation. And he moved the marker a putter head length. But you were close. And yes, Scott did remind him to move it back.
How about at 8:30 … he tees the ball down further with his driver. On the 18th HOLE!! What confidence, and swag. I’d be psyched out if someone did that to me
Why? Teeing the ball down further takes off height from the driver but not distance, so if anything a lower trajectory shot is safer, especially on the 18th hole.
I played the same way how I am playing now but the difference is my recovery shots and my putting if that comes back I am gonna kick everybody's ass on tour
@@wildcat8797 no, he won the US Amateur 3 times. He won the Jr. Amateur 3 times. Meaning he won 6 straight USGA championships. But, I can't lump them together. The reason why is because Bobby Jones's ones count as majors.
I love how the commentators were shitting on his swing when he’s 20 years old when the commentators probably couldn’t even land one on the green in 2/3 like he could