Portrush, Northern Ireland – I feel bad that Zandershaufele has to return a jug of Clarett when he arrives at Royal Portrush to defend his title in the Open Championship. It’s not as if he had anywhere to keep it.
Schauffele has won eight PGA Tour careers including Open, The PGA Championship and The Tour Championship. There will also be an Olympic gold medal from Tokyo in 2021.
Where do you keep it? It’s not his home. Schaufele said his parents “have probably put all of his trophies in the bank safe.” They have a home in San Diego, and his father built a place in Kauai and lives in what Stephen Schaufele calls “containers.”
gold medal?
“I don’t know where it actually is, if you’re completely honest,” Schaufele said.
It’s not so surprising given how much Schauffele and his wife, Maya Lowe, likes to live. He celebrates a bit more than Scotty Schaeffler, but like the world’s number one player, he’s starting all over again towards the next tournament.
“What am I going to do with that? I really don’t invite people to my house. Am I going to go see it myself?” Schaufele said. “I don’t want to step into a trophy room like, ‘See how amazing you are’. I was raised to think that way, and it’s kind of stuck. ”
That asks for a question: what are the shelves of Florida homes, if not trophies?
“My wife cut me a picture at the gym where she won an Olympic medal at my gym. She made it very high. “I have to get a ladder now and it bothers me. If there is, I put me in my master jacket.”
If that led to Shaufele, he would hang a picture of his dog. Or nothing. Probably a clock.
“I’m always late so maybe a clock is good for me,” Schaufele said.
He says that Ryder Cup captain Keegan Bradley told him to enjoy a big victory, and Shaufele thinks he will do it at some point.
“But now, I really want to keep my head down and recharge,” he said.