It's not quite a Tiger-like vibe, even if crowds at Players Championship love big names
PONTE VEDRA BEACH – If any further evidence is needed to confirm how different life is on the PGA Tour without Tiger Woods, a 36-hole pairing the past two days of the world’s top three golfers at The Players Championship provided it.
For entertainment and shot-making purposes, it’s hard to get a much better grouping for fans than Scottie Scheffler, Rory McIlroy and Xander Schauffele.
They own a combined eight majors between them and three Players titles, including Scheffler raising the trophy the past two years.
So, name or facial recognition of golf’s current Big Three wouldn’t be much of a problem for even casual golf fans. They know all three just by their first names.
But that power-packed trio didn’t translate into producing the same wow factor as when Tiger is on the Players Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass or anywhere near the leaderboard.
During their 4-hour, 57-minute round on Friday, where McIlroy shot a four-under-par 68 to stand two shots behind co-leaders Min Woo Lee and Akshay Bhatia, and Scheffler (70) finished six shots off the pace, there was clearly not the same buzz despite comparable crowd numbers.
While fans periodically called out their names, including a polite teenager saying in a moderately loud tone, “Let’s go, Mr. McIlroy!” as he walked up the 14th fairway, it was by no means a boisterous gallery considering the group’s phenomenal accomplishments.
Schauffele, who shot 73 Friday and was disappointed to be flirting with the cut line at one-under-par 143 in relatively easy scoring conditions, had a simple explanation for why his group doesn’t generate a Tiger-like vibe from the crowd.
“Yeah, I mean Scottie, Rory and I, we’re not going to be throwing our shoulders out fist-pumping anything, so I’m sure that would fire a crowd up a little bit more,” said Schauffele.
The Tiger presence is just different
Among the people walking the entire 18 holes with the world’s top three golfers was Bobby Stewart, a Tour security consultant the past eight years and former captain with the St. Johns County sheriff’s office.
Stewart has probably spent as much time on a golf course with Woods as anyone except maybe his caddies or people from his small inner circle.
During Woods’ 71 rounds at the Players since 1997, and dozens of various elevated Tour events at non-majors over the past three decades, Stewart was almost always assigned security duty whenever Woods teed it up.
“I did the math a few years ago and it was over 550 miles walking with Tiger,” said Stewart.
As he walked up the 12th fairway with the Scheffler-McIlroy-Schauffele group Friday, it didn’t take Stewart long to pinpoint what felt different about accompanying these stars on a golf course in comparison to Woods.
“I think the [crowd] numbers are pretty much the same,” said Stewart. “But in the old days, it was always Tiger versus the other guys [in his group]. So after he hit his shot, the crowd would start walking instead of waiting for his playing partners to hit.
“In this group, the interest is pretty much divided, so you don’t have people doing that.”
Stewart was spot on with that assessment. While Scheffler appeared to have a slight edge as the crowd favorite over McIlroy and Schauffele, it’s nothing like the popularity gap between Woods and anybody else.
The Players simply has a different feel when Tiger is lurking near or atop a leaderboard.
Crowd more polite than rambunctious
To be fair to Players crowds, this isn’t the Ryder Cup, a New York-based U.S. Open or the former Phoenix Waste Management Open (now W.M. Open), where fans tend to take rowdiness to a different level.
Plus, Scheffler, McIlroy and Schauffele competing together on a Friday morning isn’t the same as them dueling for the lead on late Sunday afternoon, where crowds have had time to indulge in a few more libations and up their verbosity.
But if Tiger had been in McIlroy’s position to start the day and shot himself either into the lead or into a first-place tie — as Rory did for a good two hours — it’s hard to imagine the decibel levels around the Stadium Course not being significantly higher.
Nobody around the 10th green at 8:25 a.m. needed a liquid jolt of java, espresso or any form of coffee. McIlroy woke everybody up by chipping in for a birdie from 26 feet, 4 inches to move into the first of several temporary ties for the lead.
“That seemed pretty loud,” Scheffler said of the crowd reaction. “But after that, he just played solid, boring golf.” Then he jokingly added: “Man, how terrible is that. I hate that for him.”
Despite McIlroy stringing together six birdies on his first 11 holes without a bogey — and arguably being the world’s biggest global golf star outside of you-know-who — the Players crowd provided little more than polite applause as he stayed atop the leaderboard or close to it.
Schauffele was willing to accept some blame for the lack of fan rowdiness around their group, saying he played “really bad” shortly after signing for his 73.
“I mean, I didn’t really do a whole lot to fire them up today,” Schauffele said. “Rory did some good stuff there, but he didn’t hole out or do anything crazy.”
Schauffele can be excused for forgetting about McIlroy’s opening hole chip-in, seeing as how it happened over five hours before his media interview.
But the 31-year-old Californian, who captured the PGA Championship and The Open last year, was right about why his group couldn’t elicit the kind of crowd buzz associated with the golf icon who wears red on Sunday.
“We didn’t have a whole lot to pump fist at, to be completely honest,” said Schauffele. “So I mean, there’s a reason it’s called the Tiger effect.
“I think all the guys in the group typically play pretty good golf, but no one does it better than Tiger.”
Not just playing the game, but invoking those Players crowd roars and unmistakable buzz with just one pump of his fist.
Gfrenette@jacksonville.com: (904) 359-4540; Follow him on X, formerly Twitter, at @genefrenette
This article originally appeared on Florida Times-Union: McIlroy, Scheffler keep crowd buzz going at Players, but not at Tiger level
-
Players Championship 2025: Collin Morikawa aware of shortcomings, Justin Thomas admits sloth-like play
A digest from Tuesday at The Players ChampionshipCBS Sports - 3d -
Meghan Sussex? Even Meghan Markle’s Last Name Inspires Debates.
The Duchess of Sussex caused a stir on “With Love, Meghan” when she said Sussex was her last name. But does that break from royal tradition?The New York Times - 1d -
Plenty of big names missed the cut at the 2025 Players Championship. See the list here
Many notables won’t sleep so easy thinking about what went wrong at TPC Sawgrass.Yahoo Sports - 1h -
It's not a competition! The collaborative video game genre loved by players
Josef Fares has found big success with co-operative two player games. Why are more doing the same?BBC News - 1h -
Ludvig Åberg, Viktor Hovland, Tony Finau among notable golfers to miss cut at Players Championship 2025
Some big names will be heading home early after two rounds at TPC SawgrassCBS Sports - 2h -
30 MLB teams, 30 players to fade at their fantasy baseball ADPs
It's not easy fading big-name players in fantasy baseball — luckily, Dalton Del Don can help.Yahoo Sports - 1d -
Players Championship 2025: Full field at TPC Sawgrass
Here's the initial full field for the PGA Tour's flagship event, The Players Championship.Yahoo Sports - Mar. 7 -
After 18 holes at 2025 Players Championship, who's in danger of missing the cut?
The cut at the 2025 Players Championship will be the top 65 and ties.Yahoo Sports - 1d -
Where the world's top 3 stand — in game and mind — after 36 holes together at The Players
The top three in the world played alongside each other over the first 36 holes at The Players, and the vibes vary wildly.Yahoo Sports - 5h
More from Yahoo Sports
-
No. 1 Duke holds off furious North Carolina rally to win 74-71, reach ACC title game without Flagg
Kon Knueppel scored 17 points and No. 1 Duke held off a furious second half rally by rival North Carolina to beat its rival for the third time this season, 74-71 on Friday night to reach the ...Yahoo Sports - 13m -
Siakam scores 27 points and helps Pacers rally with big second half to beat the 76ers 112-100
Pascal Siakam scored 17 of his 27 points in the second half, and the Indiana Pacers beat the Philadelphia 76ers 112-100 on Friday night. Myles Turner added 18 points and seven rebounds, while ...Yahoo Sports - 19m -
Detroit Red Wings find their wind too late in 4-2 loss to Carolina Hurricanes
Detroit Red Wings score: Michael Rasmussen got the Wings within a goal early in the third, but that was it in a 4-2 loss to the Carolina Hurricanes.Yahoo Sports - 21m -
17-year-old Andreeva advances to Indian Wells final, beating Swiatek in chilly conditions
Yahoo Sports - 32m -
F1 Australian GP LIVE: Qualifying start time and practice updates as Ollie Bearman crashes again
Follow live build-up to qualifying in Melbourne with Charles Leclerc top of the leaderboardYahoo Sports - 32m
More in Sports
-
No. 1 Duke holds off furious North Carolina rally to win 74-71, reach ACC title game without Flagg
Kon Knueppel scored 17 points and No. 1 Duke held off a furious second half rally by rival North Carolina to beat its rival for the third time this season, 74-71 on Friday night to reach the ...Yahoo Sports - 13m -
Bruno hits back at Ratcliffe's 'overpaid' comments
Bruno Fernandes has hit back at Sir Jim Ratcliffe's suggestion that some Manchester United players are overpaid by telling the British billionaire "the club agrees to do the contracts."ESPN - 15m -
Siakam scores 27 points and helps Pacers rally with big second half to beat the 76ers 112-100
Pascal Siakam scored 17 of his 27 points in the second half, and the Indiana Pacers beat the Philadelphia 76ers 112-100 on Friday night. Myles Turner added 18 points and seven rebounds, while ...Yahoo Sports - 19m -
Detroit Red Wings find their wind too late in 4-2 loss to Carolina Hurricanes
Detroit Red Wings score: Michael Rasmussen got the Wings within a goal early in the third, but that was it in a 4-2 loss to the Carolina Hurricanes.Yahoo Sports - 21m -
75 years of innovation: How F1 has evolved since 1950 and where it's headed
To celebrate F1's 75th anniversary, ESPN charts the sport's evolution since 1950 through its most iconic cars, and details where it's headed in 2026.ESPN - 27m