Home » Scheffler shines at US PGA despite arrest and police assault charge

Scheffler shines at US PGA despite arrest and police assault charge

by Marko Florentino
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By James Corrigan in Louisville and Ben Rumsby

Scottie Scheffler has revealed how his body was “shaking in shock” after he was arrested for assaulting a police officer early on Friday morning and that he started his warm-up for the second round of the US PGA Championship in a jail cell.

The world No 1’s startling comments make his 66 at Valhalla even more remarkable, as he fought his way into contention at the season’s second major within hours of being pictured in an orange jumpsuit.

Scheffler, 27, is certain that “this situation will get resolved fairly quickly”, although as it stands he is facing four charges after a police report accused him of not following an officer’s instructions when driving through the gates of the course and, after failing to stop, of dragging the officer along when he accelerated.

After finishing his round and moving to nine-under and within two of early pacesetter Collin Morikawa, Scheffler reiterated his claim from an earlier statement that it was “a chaotic situation and a big misunderstanding”.

However, the Texan did not blame the actions of Detective Bryan Gillis, who was hospitalised after the incident, and instead praised the police. After passing on his condolences to the family of John Mills, the Louisville resident who died after being knocked over by a shuttle bus in the 5am accident that caused the traffic restrictions, he recounted his emotions.

‘I was shaking for an hour’

“My head is still spinning,” Scheffler said. “I can’t really explain what happened this morning. I did spend some time stretching in a jail cell. That was a first for me. That was part of my warm-up. I was just sitting there waiting and I started going through my warm-up, I felt like there was a chance I may be able to still come out here and play. I started going through my routine and I tried to get my heart-rate down as much as I could.

“I was pretty rattled to say the least. But the officer that took me to the jail was very kind. He was great. We had a nice chat in the car and that kind of helped calm me down. I was sitting there waiting to go in [to the Louisville Metropolitan Department of Correction] and I asked him, ‘Can you just come hang out with me for a few minutes so I can calm down?’ I was never angry. I was just in shock, and my body was shaking the whole time. I was shaking for like an hour.”

Scheffler’s detention was captured on film outside Valhalla Golf Club in Louisville, Kentucky, in the early hours of the morning when he “refused to comply” with instructions from Detective Gillis. Police had been called to a fatal collision between a shuttle bus and a tournament worker, Mills, on the road leading to the golf course and had closed it in both directions.



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