Scottie Scheffler has been the world number one golfer for longer than most careers last. He has won two Masters titles. He has the most wins on the PGA Tour over the last three seasons. He is so consistently excellent that golf writers run out of things to say about him — which is also, paradoxically, why his Boromarket prices are sometimes more generous than they should be.
The Boring Consistency Premium
Golf prediction markets overvalue narrative. The player on a hot streak, the Major first-timer with an intriguing backstory, the veteran making a comeback — they all get outsized market attention. Scheffler provides none of this. He's consistently excellent, almost never in dramatic headlines, and wins like he's doing paperwork. The market systematically undervalues boring excellence.
Scheffler Markets on Boromarket
- →Will Scheffler win the Masters in 2026?
- →Will he end 2026 as world number one?
- →PGA Tour wins in 2026: Over/under 4?
- →Will Scheffler win 2 or more Majors in 2026?
- →Career: Will he break Jack Nicklaus's 18 Major record?
"Scheffler doesn't make mistakes. He doesn't have drama. He just wins golf tournaments. Which is another way of saying his prediction market prices are often wrong on the low side."
— Boromarket golf desk analysis
The Long-Term Market
The most interesting Scheffler market isn't the next tournament — it's the career trajectory. He's 29. He's in his athletic and mental prime. The 'Will Scheffler break the Major record?' market on Boromarket is still priced generously enough to represent genuine value if you believe his trajectory continues. The base rate for that kind of dominance is rare, but it exists.
Scheffler's strokes-gained total is the most reliable predictor of his tournament results. When it's above 3.0 for a week, he wins at an extraordinary rate. That stat is public every week.