Scottie Scheffler joins Tiger Woods to become the commemorative reenactment champion

Dublin, Ohio - Scottie Scheffler never lost the lead and never gave anyone a lot of chance in another ruthless show Sunday, ending a four-shot win with a 70-under 2-shot to join Tiger Woods as the only repetitive winner at the memorial.

Scheffler made a total stride at the beginning of the year following the accident, with one of the majors already in the bag and the other major on the corner of the U.S. Open.

"It was always a tough week, and he ended up in a 278-under 10 game. We worked very hard on the weekend. Overall, it was a great week."

In one of the most stringent PGA Tour tests of the year, Scheffler bogeed the last 40 holes of Muirfield Village.

"Okay, you did it again," tournament host Jack Nicklaus told him as he walked out of the green.

According to ESPN Research, Scheffler is a player who has won four consecutive PGA Tour games since 1945 and 1946. Nelson was from 1944 to 46 years old.

Ben Griffin tried to block the ball on two shots, two shots, two shots, and two games to play in both games with a 12-foot Hawk and a 25-foot birdie putt on the third 16. But Schefler did not make any mistakes. Griffin had a double bogey on the 17th.

Griffin finished 4-foot par at 18th with a 73-shot, behind second place at $2.2 million, more than he won in the Colonial last week.

Sepp Straka (70) scored another shot.

"You know Scotty might play a round of golf. This guy is relentless. He loves the game and he doesn't like to give up shooting," Straka said. "But that's one of those lessons that it can always happen, so you have to be prepared for it. I feel like I've given myself a lot of opportunities to push."

Schaffler has won three titles in his last four games – the exception is Colonial, the fourth tie after winning the PGA title and expanding his world No. 1 profit to a level that has never been seen since Woods’ peak.

Woods won five championships at the Memorial Hall, winning three straight games from 1999 to 2001. Since then, no one has repeated it in Muirfield Village.

Recently, his performance looks more like Nicklaus, like the way he rarely leaves his position.

Rickie Fowler scored his top ten this year in due course.

He finished seventh in 18th and he won a spot in the open championship. Fowler tied for 287 with Brandt Snedeker but received a public waiver based on the higher world rankings - Fowler ranked 124th and Snedeker ranked 430th.

"This is the timeline I want," Fowler said.

Both received sponsor waivers for the memorial, a signature event on the PGA Tour.

For Scheffler, this is his fifth victory in a $20 million signature event held in the past two years. This seems inevitable, but only after the last nine developed rapidly.

Schefler hit his lead with 31 holes at Tough Muirfield Village on the 10th hole without bogey. Griffin has a 4-foot bird on 5111. Schefler missed his 15-foot birdie putt and Griffin.

Griffin bo burned the next two holes, and like that, Scheffler shot four forwards. That's what it looks like in the PGA Championship - a tense minute, a blowout in the next minute and a 18th green sweetest walk to win safety.

It was a handshake with Nicklaus, who said earlier in the week of Scheftler: “He acted like me.”

Nicklaus said he was all involved in fairways and the Greens, with plenty of opportunities and giving them enough opportunities to post scores. This is also how Scheffler is, even if it doesn't always start the final round.

The mud on the golf ball on the first fairway, spin too much short iron in the next few holes, and there is no birdie putt until the fifth hole. He saved seven five shots in the final round, including the last hole.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.