
Scottie Scheffler, the world’s No. 1 golfer who won two major championships this year, has committed to playing at the Procore Championship at Silverado Resort in Napa in September, organizers announced Friday on social media.
This will be Scheffler’s first time competing at the Procore Championship, which officially kicks off the PGA Tour’s FedExCup Fall schedule and serves as a tune-up for some players ahead of the Ryder Cup between the United States and Europe from Sept. 26-28 at Bethpage State Park in Farmingdale, N.Y.
Scheffler, who will lead the U.S. into that event, has already won five tournaments in 2025, including the PGA Championship in May and The Open Championship in July. He also captured the CJ CUP (Byron Nelson) in early May, the Memorial Tournament in June, and most recently, the BMW Championship two weeks ago as part of the FedEx Cup playoffs. Scheffler finished tied for fourth at the Tour Championship in Atlanta last week.
Scheffler, 29, also won the Masters Tournament in 2022 and 2024 and has 18 career PGA Tour victories.
Scheffler is the first player since Tiger Woods to win five-plus events in back-to-back years, and has drawn comparisons to Woods with his consistency and dominance in certain events. He has been the world’s top player for 154 consecutive weeks, a streak longer than anyone since Woods was No. 1 for 281 straight weeks from June 2005 to Nov. 2010.
Scheffler has now finished in the top 10 in 14 straight tournaments.
“It’s very silly to be compared to Tiger Woods,” Scheffler said last week. “I think Tiger is a guy that stands alone in the game of golf, and I think he always will. Tiger inspired a whole generation of golfers. You’ve grown up watching that guy do what he did week in, week out, it was pretty amazing to see.”
Two-time Masters champion
Champion Golfer of the Year
Current PGA Championship winner
World #1
Scottie Scheffler is officially making his Procore Championship debut! pic.twitter.com/WRMnrdgi2K
— Procore Championship (@ProcoreChamp) August 29, 2025
Scheffler’s commitment to playing in Napa next month highlights a field that also includes past tournament champions Sahith Theegala (2023) and Max Homa (2021, 2022), Patton Kizzire (2024), Cameron Champ (2019), and Kevin Tway (2018).