Unbreakable bond: How Scottie Scheffler's life changed from James Ragan's cancer fight

ASFN Admin

Administrator
Administrator
Moderator
Supporting Member
Joined
May 8, 2002
Posts
435,422
Reaction score
44
Who the heck does this kid think he is, Jack Nicklaus?

Those were the words of a Corpus Christi Country Club member sitting on the side of a hill watching 14-year-old Scottie Scheffler play in the club’s member-guest.

Scottie was member James Ragan’s ringer guest, in from suburban Dallas. Who would ever suspect this gawky teenager and his pal, a 16-year-old cancer patient, were about to clean the adults’ clocks. James told his older sister, Mecklin, “Nobody’s going to know who Scottie is. We’re going to win this thing.”

You must be registered for see images attach


Later, during an alternate-shot nine-hole match, one of five they would play against older, more experienced golfers, James hit a pitch that rolled across the green and settled in a back bunker. As Scottie surveyed the situation, he asked James to pull the flag.

This was the actual moment that prompted the spectator’s Nicklaus remark.

“I’m sitting there as the dumb dad, and I’m not a golfer and I’m not going to open my mouth, though I wanted to,” recalled Scott Scheffler, the ringer’s dad. “Scottie got up there and I thought, if there’s a time and a place to make a golf shot, this would probably be it.”

Sure enough, Scottie being Scottie, he holed it, and Mr. Scheffler, being as humble a man as you’ll ever meet, resisted rubbing it in. Instead, he turned to the men, hands spread wide and palms up, shoulders shrugged and said, “Sometimes the hole just gets in the way of the ball.”

Dumbfounded, the man on the hill asked, “Who is that kid?”

“Oh, that’s my son,” Scott Scheffler replied.

The same son who the night before the final day of the member-guest stayed up late trying to chip in on the backyard practice green built special for James. Jim Ragan, father of James, guessed that Scottie must’ve attempted 200 chips without holing one. He went to bed disappointed but in the next day’s shootout, when it mattered most, Scottie chipped in to ensure they advanced to one of the final holes on their way to victory. Reminiscing on the day, Scottie cracked that it was the last time members of the club ever let teenagers play in the tournament. Fourteen years later, members at Corpus Christi recite their own joke about that day, noting Scottie Scheffler is the only Masters champion to also win the Corpus Christi Country Club member-guest.

After retiring to the Ragans’ home, Scottie and James drank Dr Pepper out of the trophy. When James tried to hand Scottie the prize to take home, Scottie refused. “I didn’t come here for the trophy,” he said. “I came here for you.”

Think of all the kids, let alone the adults, who would have wanted the trophy for themselves. Here were two friends who were genuinely happy for each other. Perhaps no moment better exemplified their bond through golf, and through James’ struggle with pediatric cancer.

“He just never stopped smiling,” Scottie said.

Ultimately, James had two inoperable tumors near his heart. He died on Feb. 17, 2014, during his sophomore year at Rice University, more than seven years after his diagnosis. Scottie and his father attended the viewing and rosary service, and heard loved ones at James’s funeral service take turns sharing stories of all his efforts to put the lives of others first. The Scheffler family never has forgotten James and his mission to save children from dealing with the horrors of pediatric cancer.

You must be registered for see images attach


A fast friendship begins​


Golf was not James’s first choice among sports. He had been a nationally ranked junior tennis player until he underwent surgery to deal with a tumor in his left leg, as well as knee replacement. James had been diagnosed with osteosarcoma, a rare and often fatal form of bone cancer. In June 2006, at age 13, he left seventh grade as one of the best athletes in his class. Ten weeks later, he started eighth grade in a wheelchair.

That was the end of his tennis. Anna Foy, one of James’ nurses at the University of Texas MD Anderson Children’s Hospital in Houston, compared his form of cancer to one of those flowers that you blow and the seeds go everywhere. “These tiny particles of cancer get in your blood and once they spread, it’s like wildfire,” she said in “Until 20,” a documentary chronicling James’ treatment and battle to live with cancer for more than seven years.

Doctors told James if he still wanted to play a sport, he could take up swimming, cycling or golf. The latter sounded more his style. The first time he played, as a sophomore in high school, he shot 95. “I had no idea that was pretty good,” he said later. “The rest of it was kind of a love story.”

James used to laugh that he trained so hard at tennis just to be the top player on his high school team but that in golf he had become scratch in almost no time. “Golf brought him so much joy,” Mecklin said.

Channeling his epic work ethic from tennis into golf, James became skilled enough to compete on the Legends Junior Tour. That’s where he struck up a friendship with Scheffler, who was two years younger than James but already playing up an age bracket. During the occasions their sons were paired together, the fathers walked the course together and became fast friends. Jim Ragan remembers a time at the Jackie Burke Cup, a Ryder Cup-style competition pitting two Texas teams from the North (Scottie’s team) and South (James’ team) against each other. James and Scottie were opponents in a four-ball match, and Scottie’s team trailed 1-down on the final hole. Scottie hit his second shot fat, and it landed at the edge of a water hazard 40-odd yards short of the green. The ball was half-submerged, but with nothing to lose but the match, Scottie peeled off his shoes and waded in to play his third. He splashed out, and the ball bounced a couple of times on the green and jumped into the hole for an improbable birdie that halved the match.

“Scottie has been an exciting guy to watch since the time he was little,” Jim Ragan said.

James Ragan captures the golf world's attention​


Before Scottie Scheffler became three-time PGA Tour Player of the Year, a two-time Masters champion, an Olympic gold medalist and FedEx Cup champion, he dominated the Texas Junior Legends Tour. He won more than 90 Legends Junior Tour and North Texas PGA tournaments. He also became friends with James, the life of the party who was class president at Carroll High School in Corpus Christi and the 2011 salutatorian.

“He knew Scottie was going to become what he is today,” Mecklin said. “James always thought Scottie was destined for great things.”

As was James in his own right. He and Mecklin had co-founded the Triumph Over Kid Cancer Foundation, which began fundraising in 2007 and officially became a 501(c)(3) nonprofit charity in 2010. Their mother, Gloria, treats it as her full-time job. It began simply enough as a fundraiser for James’s 14th birthday. In lieu of gifts, the idea was to donate to charities supporting pediatric cancer research, which historically has been woefully underfunded. They threw a toga party, which raised $40,000, to celebrate the fact that doctors had determined James was cancer-free.

But a year later his cancer had returned and spread to his lungs and elsewhere, and he was scheduled for additional surgery and treatment.

Meanwhile, recalled Mecklin, “People were asking us, are you going to have that toga party again? We were like, gosh, we really should.”

This time they added a golf tournament on a Friday and hosted the toga party on a Saturday.

Nantz and Nicklaus impressed​


Through it all, James soldiered on.

After each tournament, the Schefflers would head home to Dallas and the Ragans to Corpus Christi. They’d meet up at another tournament a few weeks later and do it all over again. When James invited Scottie to play in the member-guest at his club, he didn’t accompany his dad when Jim picked up the Schefflers at the airport. When they got to the Ragans’ home, James was sitting in a lounge chair as a physical therapist massaged his swollen left leg. Scott Scheffler was concerned. He asked James how he could possibly play that day. James laughed and said, “Mr. Scheffler, you think that’s going to stop me from playing golf? That’s not going to stop me.”

Considering his steely determination, it’s no surprise that James was awarded the Legends Junior Tour’s inaugural sportsmanship award in 2010. The following year the tour named the award in James’ honor. Despite five separate tumors in his lungs that felt like pieces of wood scraping and stabbing his chest every time he inhaled, James persevered, winning the Legends Junior Tour’s 2010 Jimmy Demaret Junior Classic. Despite doctors playing Whac-a-Mole with his body and telling him the only thing they could predict was the tumors would keep coming back, he walked on to the Rice University golf team. With a fanny pack strapped to his waist that was dripping chemo into his port, he shot 2 under par on the front nine in one college match.

“Walter Hagen once said you can hit three bad shots and one good shot and still make par,” James said at the time. “I think that is a little bit about how my life goes. It doesn’t have to be perfect; you just have to fight hard and figure out a way to get it done.”

James’ escape after a long day of treatment? He darkened his room and watched Masters highlights and munched on honey butter chicken biscuits from Whataburger or donut holes from Gates Donut Shop, another of his go-to spots.

Thanks to his improbable golf accomplishments, James was the cancer patient asked to be the master of ceremonies when Jack Nicklaus, in 2010, was the headliner for MD Anderson’s “A Conversation with a Living Legend,” its long-running series to raise money in support of cancer research. CBS’s Jim Nantz interviewed Nicklaus in front of a packed room of 800 supporters. But not before James stole the show with his introductory remarks.

“I feel like the luckiest guy in the world right now,” said James, who was also named MD Anderson’s first and only special ambassador.

You must be registered for see images attach


“Here was a kid who faced the worst of odds for survival and he felt sorry for the doctors,” Nantz said. “How can anyone that age stand up in a room like that and be facing a terrible disease and not show any self-pity?”

That day, Nantz recorded an outgoing voicemail message for James’ phone. James joked he’d only swap it out if James Earl Jones did Darth Vader for him. That proved to be just the beginning of their friendship. Nantz visited James at MD Anderson when he was in Houston and called him regularly. The first time Nantz heard the name Scottie Scheffler, it was from James, who had watched Nantz wax rhapsodic about a new rising star in golf, Jordan Spieth, and warned him his buddy was going to be even better.

“This kid was special,” said Nantz, who brought James and Mecklin as his guests to the 2012 NCAA Final Four in New Orleans. “He could’ve been the President of the United States. He was super-smart, incredibly gifted and composed, kind, thoughtful and he had a great life to be lived that was taken away from him.”

The Nicklauses were so impressed with James and his relentless positivity that they struck up a friendship, too. The Living Legends event inspired them to create something similar back home in Columbus, Ohio, “the Legends Luncheon,” in conjunction with the Tour’s Memorial Tournament, which the Nicklaus family hosts in late May at the club they founded. In the 14-year history of the charity event, it has raised almost $15 million for Nationwide Children’s Hospital. “So, you might say that James is still touching lives by what he inspired us to create,” said Barbara Nicklaus. She also texted regularly with James, who sent her one of his last text messages to say goodbye. But a few years before that fateful day, he told Barbara Nicklaus he’d like to go to the Memorial and the Nicklauses made it happen. Nantz took James to a CBS party on Friday evening of the tournament. Several members of the network’s announcing team took turns speaking. When Nantz got hold of the microphone, he said, “I’m here with my friend James, who has bone cancer. When I stop doing this, James is the one who should replace me. Come over here, James.” And Nantz gave the floor to James to speak to the audience.

Barbara Nicklaus recalls the next day James phoned his mother and explained he was having such a good time, he wanted to skip his flight home, though it would mean missing his high school graduation the next day.

“You can imagine how that went over with his mother,” Barbara said.

James came home as planned and delivered a TED Talk-worthy speech to his classmates. Life hadn’t always been fairways and greens he said, instead comparing it to “army golf.”

“Left, right, left, right,” he said. “Balls kind of going everywhere into lots of trouble, but that doesn’t mean you give up or try to play the game any differently. You just try to figure out the best way to deal with it and you go forward and you swing hard and try to get out of the trees. You have to keep moving forward and focusing on the next shot in front of you.”


Scottie Scheffler gives his time, and his car, for the future​


As James’ condition worsened, Scottie kept in touch through phone, text and email. And James was never far from his mind, including at the 2013 U.S. Junior Amateur where his cancer-stricken friend became part of the storyline. Even at 17, Scottie had the perspective to understand he was just playing a game while his friend was waging a losing battle for his life.

“I used to think golf was a really big deal,” Scottie told the Golf Channel on his way to victory. “But it’s not that big of a deal, not at all.”

During his winner’s interview, Scottie said he thought of James often that day, especially when his ball stayed out of a hazard at the 14th hole. He said of James’ charitable efforts, “most likely it’s not going to save his life; it might prolong it, but his charity, he’s doing that for other people, not himself.”

After James’ death, Scottie took over James’ role as honorary starter of the charity toga party scramble in Corpus Christi. The fundraiser was held in May, during the heart of the college golf season, and yet Scottie, who played at the University of Texas, never missed it.

During his one season on the Korn Ferry Tour, Scottie checked in from a tournament via Zoom with toga tournament participants, and in 2023 when Scottie had a conflict, his father and two younger sisters filled in as the honorary starters. In 2019, Scottie won $300,000 for charity through the RSM Birdies Fore Love program and earmarked $50,000 to Triumph Over Kid Cancer. Mecklin, who is a surgery resident and is applying for her fellowship in pediatric oncological surgery, was delighted and had just one question for Scottie: What do you want us to do with it? “Something that brings the kids joy,” he said.

So Mecklin conceived and launched Scottie’s Heroes, a program that brings kids battling cancer into golf by giving them clubs, bags and installing putting greens in hospitals. Coming off arguably the most dominant season on Tour in two decades, Scottie committed to participate in a charity event during the 2024 offseason in Houston. Scottie said he and his wife, Meredith, focus their charitable efforts in their local Dallas community, but Triumph Over Kid Cancer is the exception. “It’s something we’re passionate about,” he said. “We love the work they do, so we’re happy to support them.”

You must be registered for see images attach


The Ragans had never hosted an event of this magnitude and flashed back to the MD Anderson event with Nicklaus for inspiration. They recruited Nantz, who squeezed it in around broadcasting NFL games, to participate. On Oct. 25, Scheffler and Nantz shared the stage for a fireside chat at The Post Oak Hotel in Houston as part of the Teeing Off on Childhood Cancer gala to raise money for Triumph Over Kid Cancer and fund research and patient initiatives at MD Anderson Children’s Cancer Hospital and Texas Children’s Hospital. A family friend who is a master craftsman built multiple indoor putting greens so Scottie could putt as attendees placed wagers whether he’d sink putts using only one hand or while standing on one leg, which he made on his first try, and finally blindfolded. James’ Wingmen, Triumph Over Kid Cancer’s nickname for a handful of kids diagnosed with cancer who give a face to the disease, helped Scottie with his aim as Nantz provided commentary as only he can. Scottie sank the 10-foot putt on his third attempt.

“It shows the compassionate and human side of Scheffler,” Nantz said. “He’s a special kid.”

The news went viral when Scottie auctioned off an SUV with special connections to the 2012 Masters. Scottie’s high school team attended the Masters that year and his dad drove there in with Scottie’s sisters in the family GMC. But the vehicle broke down and Scott Scheffler purchased a new, white GMC Yukon on the Monday after the Masters to drive home from Augusta.

“Most people get a T-shirt, I got a $50,000 car payment,” Scott Scheffler joked.

He eventually gifted it to Scottie, and “GMC Airlines,” as the family dubbed it, racked up 184,000 miles. The birth of Scottie’s son Bennett in May 2024 prompted an upgrade, and the GMC was put on the auction block at the October fundraiser. The top bidder? None other than Nantz, who took possession of the vehicle shortly before the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am in February for $50,000, or roughly what the Schefflers paid for it.

You must be registered for see images attach


“I figure just driving this SUV to the golf course should lower my handicap by at least five shots,” Nantz said.

All told, the dinner with Scottie raised $1.1 million, lifting the amount the Ragans have raised to fund innovative pediatric cancer and sarcoma research and the non-profit’s programming to $10.1 million (including grant funding).

“It felt like the next big step for our foundation, that James is still having an impact in pediatric cancer,” Mecklin said.

Indeed, more than a decade after James’ death, Scottie’s bond with his member-guest partner remains as strong as ever. Moreover, his actions both on and off the golf course have people asking of Scottie, who the heck does he think he is, Jack Nicklaus?

This article originally appeared on Golfweek: Scottie Scheffler's friendship with James Ragan has changed lives

Continue reading...
 

Latest posts

Forum statistics

Threads
634,686
Posts
5,588,519
Members
6,356
Latest member
azgreg
Top