ARDMORE, Pa. â Adam Scott can understand why so many people thought he would have a hard time getting over his epic collapse in the British Open.
They didn't understand his master plan of trying to get better instead of just trying to get better results.
Ernie Els walked away from Royal Lytham & St. Annes with a silver claret jug. Scott walked away believing he finally was capable of winning a major, and it wasn't just a pep talk to soothe the shock over losing a four-shot lead with four holes to play.
"I think if I sat there and watched someone else do what I did, it would have been devastating," Scott said Monday. "It's maybe more apparent to me now that you were all surprised that I wasn't just shattered. But honestly, that's not how I felt."
In a decision that reshaped his career, Scott decided two years ago to play a limited schedule and practice smarter so that he would be ready for the biggest events. That Sunday afternoon at the British Open, despite the ugly finish, showed him he was on the right track. He promised that day the next time â and he was certain there would be a next time â he would finish the job.
Scott's story had a happy ending.
At his hideaway in the Bahamas, the Australian starts each day by slipping on the green jacket he won at Augusta National two months ago, when he made a 20-foot birdie putt on the 18th hole and then another birdie in the rain on the second playoff hole to win the Masters.
Except that Scott doesn't see this as the end.