Every main character needs a good nemesis. Seinfeld has Newman. McBain has Mendoza. And Tiger Woods has Scott Ratchman.
Ratchman? Not Phil Mickelson or Vijay Singh or some other golfer? Well, no. None of those guys played against Woods in his youth, which forms about half of the âLegacy Challengeâ in Tiger Woods PGA Tour 13, in which you recreate significant moments from more than just Woodsâ professional career. The game needed a foe in Woodsâ youth tournaments, and Scott Ratchman represents all the older kids Tiger defeated.
âTiger mentioned in his interview with us that he was always one of the smallest kids competing against older competition on the weekends,â said Christian Brandt, a member of the development team. âTiger would always beat his competitors with his putting and short game skills, but would always get outdrove by the bigger/stronger kids. So we modeled Scott Ratchman after a âbig kidsâ type character.â
A week before the game released, I was playing the game for review and lost to Ratchman in our first duel. I vowed to kill that little bastard. On the off chance he was realâa childhood friend of Tigerâs? who knowsâI Googled âScott Ratchmanâ (in quotes). I swear to you, only one result came up, a census listing from the 1890s, I think.
Now, you Google the name, and you get all sorts of invective thrown the way of Ratchman, a pasty-faced redhead with a perpetually severe expression. He does outdrive Woods, but has difficulty staying on the fairway and will miss a lot of putts.
But in match play, you have to go after him, because heâll still play close to par, and the opportunity to make birdie will be limited by young Tigerâs lack of power. I think I got into a four-hole sudden death playoff with Ratchman on our first encounter. His resilience, I think, is what pisses people off.
And, well, his looks.
âMy arch nemesis this week is Scott Ratchman and his stupid ginger Xbox golf skills,â tweeted âZacoâ on April 3, a week after the game released.
Scott Ratchman! What a rotten name! He had yellow eyes! So help me God! Yellow eyes!
This is deliberate, said Scott Gilbert. âI modeled Scott Ratchman, first thinking of a Bizarro Tiger,â he told me, âthen started to joke that he should be Scut Farkus,â the redheaded, yellow-eyed, coonskin-capped junkyard bully from the cult flick A Christmas Story
âScott Ratchman had a similar sounding name, so it still tied in nicely to the character that inspired him,â Gilbert said. And where did that name come from? Well, the guy who modeled him, and his bride-to-be. Ratchman takes Gilbertâs first name, and Gilbertâs fiancĂ© supplies the second. Brandt said the two became engaged right around the time the character was being developed, so, why not name him for them both?
I dunno, maybe because in addition to giving up her maiden name, sheâs now giving it to a despised video game character? Sheesh. I sure hope Gilbert went to Jared!
Hereâs something I did not know, however: There are two Scott Ratchmans. Thereâs the youth Ratchman everyone knows and hates. But at some pointâand I drove myself crazy trying to get to it over the past three daysâyou unlock an older Ratchman, whom Gilbert says was modeled on Val Kilmerâs âIcemanâ from Top Gun.
âIt seemed to fit the time period he would be used for and I like to imagine a similar cockiness as he tries to out maneuver Tigerâs âmaverickâ up to the pros,â Gilbert said, âultimately ceding the title of Top Young Golfer to Tiger in an inspiring story end moment.â
That works. But Iceman and Scut arenât exactly twins, yâknow.
âI also tried to give the glasses [that older Ratchman wears] a bit of a yellow reflection in keeping with âyellow eyesâ of Farkus,â he added.
I asked the guys to make up a fake future for Ratchman. I offered that Ratchman actually did overcome his childhood humiliations to make the PGA Tour for one short season, with his best finish being 16th at the 1996 Greater Greensboro Open. Then he flamed out in Q school and was never heard from again.
Brandt wouldnât even give him that.
âI would think Ratchman to be one of the really good golfers on a small college team,â Brandt said, âbut when matched up against a Division I school he gets crushed. So, heâs a guy thatâs always bragging that he is so great at golf, but never actually played against tough competition until Tiger came around.â
âI also like to think he would end up as a course pro suffering from a horrible case of the yips brought on by his losses to Tiger,â Brandt said, âHe probably finds anyone he can at the bar, so he can tell them tales of his âepic battlesâ with Tiger.â