Steve Bamford

Steve Bamford's The PLAYERS Championship Tips 2026

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I managed so snare a full each-way place on Min Woo Lee at 40/1 last week at the Arnold Palmer Invitational. Winner Akshay Bhatia was available at 66/1 with BetMGM with 6 places each-way available at first show on Monday – congratulations if you were on board the winner.

We move on to The Players Championship at TPC Sawgrass which is always a highlight of the golfing season. Relocated from May to March as part of the shorter PGA Tour season re-structure, this now landscapes as the strongest field of the year, excepting Major Championships. Played at the Pete Dye-designed Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass, this is the ultimate test of consistency, patience, aggression on key holes, and bogey avoidance. Victory at The Players holds a 5-year PGA Tour exemption and 3-year exemptions to The Masters, US Open and Open Championship. Beware though, this is no ordinary PGA Tour tournament and The Players Championship is a title that all of golf’s elite want on their CV.

Before we go into the detail surrounding The Players Championship, we always have new visitors to Golf Betting System. Welcome and let me point you in the direction of our weekly Golf Betting System Podcast (published every Tuesday of the golfing calendar), the Steve Bamford Golf Channel on YouTube and our hugely popular, +6,600 strong, private Group on Facebook – you can Join Here.

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You can read Liam Williams’ Power Rankings for The PLAYERS Championship at bet365 News.

Course Guide: The Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass is one of the most iconic courses in world golf. The Pete Dye design has always been a course where no particular type of player has a true advantage. The tournament’s mantra has always been that the best player on the week wins the tournament. In Scottie Scheffler, Cameron Smith, Justin Thomas and Rory McIlroy, who make up the past champions since the Players moved to March, it’s pretty clear that different types of player can thrive here in Ponte Vedra.

2017 marked the first time that we saw the latest reincarnation of the Stadium Course, after a PGA Tour Design Services managed re-design.  Make no mistake – this is a true Florida golf course test, which often features plenty of wind (and rain!). The tournament organisers now have full control of this new golf course, which we saw return to March (from 1977-2006, The Players was held in the second half of March), for the first time since 2006 in 2019, when Rory McIlroy triumphed. Undoubtedly the course characteristics have changed (read the player notes below), with overseed across the golf course, including the green surfaces, plus softer turf/green conditions – especially in 2022!

Stadium Course, TPC Sawgrass, Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida: Designer: Pete Dye 1980, Steve Wenzloff re-design 2016; Course Type: Florida, Mid-Score, Medium; Par: 72; Length: 7,352 yards; Holes with Water Hazards In-Play: 17; Number of Bunkers: 92; Acres of Fairway: 26; Fairways: Celebration Bermudagrass overseeded with Champion Fine Ryegrass; Rough: Celebration Bermudagrass overseeded with Champion Fine Ryegrass 4″; Greens: 5,500 sq.ft. average TifEagle Bermuda overseeded with Poa Trivialis; Tournament Stimp: 12.5ft.

Fairway Widths (yards): Below are the fairway widths for TPC Sawgrass and how they compare to recent courses that we’ve seen on Tour:

  • TPC Sawgrass: Average 28 yards.
  • Bay Hill: Average 30 yards.
  • PGA National: Average 28 yards.
  • Riviera: Average 27 yards.
  • Pebble Beach: Average 30-33 yards. Spyglass Hill: 25-30 yards.
  • TPC Scottsdale: Average 38 yards.
  • Torrey Pines South: Average 24-27 yards. Torrey Pines North: Average 24-27 yards.
  • Pete Dye Stadium: Average 33 yards.
  • Waialae: 250 yards from the tee: 34 yards wide; 275:32; 300:34; 325:37; 350:34.

Course Scoring Average + PGA Tour Difficulty Rank:

  • 2025: 72.39 (+0.39), Rank 13 of 50 courses
  • 2024: 71.42 (-0.56), Rank 15 of 51 courses
  • 2023: 45 (+0.45), Rank 12 of 49 courses
  • 2022: 62 (+0.62), Rank 12 of 50 courses
  • 2021: 42 (+0.42), Rank 16 of 51 courses
  • 2019: 51 (-0.49), Rank 23 of 49 courses

Course Designer Links: For research purposes, other Pete Dye designs include:

  • Austin Country Club – WGC Dell Matchplay from 2016-2023
  • Crooked Stick – 2012 and 2016 BMW Championship
  • Harbour Town – RBC Heritage
  • Ocean Course – Kiawah Island – 2012 + 2021 PGA Championship
  • TPC River Highlands – The Travelers
  • TPC Louisiana – Zurich Classic of New Orleans
  • TPC Stadium, PGA West – The American Express since 2016
  • Whistling Straits – 2010 and 2015 PGA Championship

Course Overview: 2019 saw the tournament move from May back to mid-March in terms of its timing and that undoubtedly changed some of the detail in terms of course set-up. With TPC Sawgrass located in Ponte Vedra Beach in north-east Florida, March means that course has to feature overseeding. So Ryegrass and Fescue has been added to the fairways and rough. Rory McIlroy commented on this on his way to victory here, “And then when you miss the greens, you’re not having to contend with that Bermuda, you’re not having to guess, how is this going to come out, whatever. So it lends itself to more aggressive play.

The greens are also now overseeded, with the TifEagle Bermudagrass now sitting under Poa Trivialis. This overseeding technique takes the inherent graininess of the Bermudagrass away and leads to smoother putting surfaces, with a Poa Trivialis over-sheen. In all likelihood they also make them more responsive. Undoubtedly this can have a tangible effect for many players who struggle on genuine Bermudagrass, potentially helping them to be more competitive on the greens.

We saw this revised Steve Wenzloff re-design in 2017. Pete Dye was consulted a number of times with all of the changes and the course was shortened to a 7,189 yard Par 72. The loss in yardage came predominantly from the 12th hole which was changed from a standard 358 yard par-4 to a driveable, dog-leg left, 302-yard hole with the same par. The changes weren’t overly popular as the balance between risk over reward was far too great and driving the green was rarely an option for most of the field.

With this in mind, 2022 saw the 12th extended to a 369 yard par-4. 2024 saw course yardage growth as 19 yards was added to the par-5 9th, taking it up from 583 yards to 602 yards. And 2025 sees further course yardage growth across 11 holes. The main changes – in collaboration with Davis Love III – being 51 yards being added via new tee boxes across 3 of the par-5s, namely the 2nd, 11th and 16th holes. The iconic tee has also been re-established on the par-4 6th hole with a further 20 yards added as well. The 14th hole also sees deeper and dramatic moguls with additions of palms, oaks and native grasses in the right rough.

So the Stadium Course this week plays as a 7,352 yard Par 72, which is quite a significant jump from the 7,189 yards it played as recently as 2021.

Effectively now the Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass is amongst the most controllable golf courses on the planet. Just a quick look at the winners’ scores since 2018 highlights how organisers and Director of Golf Course Operations Jeff Plotts can effectively manage the tournament to the target score they want in varying conditions. But the real point here is that Pete Dye’s design is brilliant in the fact that either controlled ball-strikers or short game specialists can win at the Stadium Course.

Michael Kim in 2024 highlighted the ingenuity of the Stadium Course with a post on X which highlighted the following in-terms of favourable shot shape. Fade Holes: 4,5,6,8,11,15,16. – Draw Holes: 2,3,9,10,13,14,18.

the players championship tips

The Players Championship Winners: 2025: Rory McIlroy (-12); 2024: Scottie Scheffler (-20); 2023: Scottie Scheffler (-17); 2022: Cameron Smith (-13); 2021: Justin Thomas (-14); 2019: Rory McIlroy (-16); 2018: Webb Simpson (-18); 2017: Si Woo Kim (-10); 2016: Jason Day (-15); 2015: Rickie Fowler (-12); 2014: Martin Kaymer (-15); 2013: Tiger Woods (-13); 2012: Matt Kuchar (-13); 2011: K.J. Choi (-13); 2010: Tim Clark (-16).

  • 2025: Rory McIlroy 67-68-73-68 -12/274
  • 2024: Scottie Scheffler 67-69-68-64 -20/268
  • 2023: Scottie Scheffler 68-69-65-69 -17/271
  • 2022: Cameron Smith 69-71-69-66 -13/275
  • 2021: Justin Thomas 77-71-64-68 -14/274
  • 2019: Rory McIlroy 67-65-70-70 -16/272

OWGR of The Players Championship Winners (since move to March): 2025: McIlroy 2; 2024: Scheffler 1; 2023: Scheffler 2; 2022: Smith 10; 2021: Thomas 3; 2019: McIlroy 6.

Datagolf Ranking of The Players Championship Winners: 2025: McIlroy 2; 2024: Scheffler 1; 2023: Scheffler 3; 2022: Smith 8; 2021: Thomas 6; 2019: McIlroy 3.

Cut Line (since move to March): 2025: -1; 2024: -1; 2023: +2; 2022: +2; 2021: E; 2019: -1.

Lead Score Progression:

  • 2025: Round 1 -6; Round 2 -11; Round 3 -12; Round 4 -12.
  • 2024: Round 1 -7; Round 2 -14; Round 3 -17; Round 4 -20.
  • 2023: Round 1 -8; Round 2 -9; Round 3 -14; Round 4 -17.
  • 2022: Round 1 -6; Round 2 -7; Round 3 -9; Round 4 -13.
  • 2021: Round 1 -7; Round 2 -9; Round 3 -13; Round 4 -14.
  • 2019: Round 1 -7; Round 2 -12; Round 3 -15; Round 4 -16

Path to Victory: Below are end of round positions for Players Championship winners since the tournament moved to March:

  • 2025 – Rory McIlroy: Round 1: 4th, Round 2: 4th, Round 3: 5th.
  • 2024 – Scottie Scheffler: Round 1: 6th, Round 2: 6th, Round 3: 6th.
  • 2023 – Scottie Scheffler: Round 1: 5th, Round 2: 2nd, Round 3: 1st.
  • 2022 – Cameron Smith: Round 1: 15th, Round 2: 11th, Round 3: 6th.
  • 2021 – Justin Thomas: Round 1: 26th, Round 2: 22nd, Round 3: 3rd.
  • 2019 – Rory McIlroy: Round 1: 5th, Round 2: 1st, Round 3: 2nd.

Shots From the Lead: Below are the Players Championship winners since the tournament moved to March and where they were positioned in terms of shots from the lead during the tournament:

  • 2025 – Rory McIlroy: Round 1: 1 back, Round 2: 2 back, Round 3: 4 back.
  • 2024 – Scottie Scheffler: Round 1: 2 back, Round 2: 6 back, Round 3: 5 back.
  • 2023 – Scottie Scheffler: Round 1: 4 back, Round 2: 2 back, Round 3: 2 ahead.
  • 2022 – Cameron Smith: Round 1: 3 back, Round 2: 3 back, Round 3: 2 back.
  • 2021 – Justin Thomas: Round 1: 6 back, Round 2: 7 back, Round 3: 3 back.
  • 2019 – Rory McIlroy: Round 1: 2 back, Round 2: level, Round 3: 1 back.

Incoming Form of Players Championship winners since move to March:

  • Rory McIlroy: 15th Bay Hill/17th Riviera/1st Pebble Beach/4th Dubai.
  • Scottie Scheffler: 1st Bay Hill/10th Riviera/3rd TPC Scottsdale/6th Pebble Beach.
  • Scottie Scheffler: 4th Bay Hill/12th Riviera/1st TPC Scottsdale/11th PGA West.
  • Cameron Smith: 33rd Riviera/4th Saudi/MC Waialae/1st Kapalua.
  • Justin Thomas: 15th WGC Concession/MC Riviera/13th TPC Scottsdale/MC Abu Dhabi/3rd Kapalua.
  • Rory McIlroy: 6th Bay Hill/2nd Mexico/4th Riviera/5th Torrey/4th Kapalua.

Tournament Stats: We’ve published some key player statistics for this week’s event that are well worth a look. Naturally they’ll help to shape a view on players who could go well this week: Current Form | Tournament Form | First Round Leader | Combined Stats.

My published predictor is available here. Top 10 of my published predictor are:-1) Scottie Scheffler; 2) Collin Morikawa; 3) Rory McIlroy; 4) Akshay Bhatia; 5) Si Woo Kim; 6) Sepp Straka; 7) Hideki Matsuyama; 8) Chris Gotterup; 9) Matt Fitzpatrick; 10) Jacob Bridgeman.

Our brand new predictor model is running alongside, where you can build your own rankings in live time, using the variables listed on the left hand side.

The Players Championship Winners & Prices: 2025: McIlroy 9/1; 2024: Scheffler 11/2F; 2023: Scheffler 11/1; 2022: Smith 33/1; 2021: Thomas 20/1; 2019: McIlroy 14/1; 2018: Simpson 100/1; 2017: Kim 500/1; 2016: Day 12/1; 2015: Fowler 66/1; 2014: Kaymer 90/1; 2013: Woods 9/1; 2012: Kuchar 55/1; 2011: Choi 45/1; 2010: Clark 100/1. Past 5 Renewals Average: 16/1; Overall Average: 71/1.

Historical Weather:

  • 2025: Thursday: Mostly sunny. High of 75. Wind S 8-15 mph. Friday: Mostly sunny. High of 73. Wind E at 8-15 mph. Saturday: Partly cloudy. High of 78. Wind SE at 12-25 mph with gusts to 32 mph in the afternoon. Sunday: Cloudy and windy. High of 78. Wind S at 15-25 mph with gusts to 26 mph in the afternoon. Play was suspended for four hours due to inclement weather from 1:15 p.m. to 5:15 p.m. ET.
  • 2024: Thursday: Mostly sunny. High of 75. Wind ENE 6-12 mph. The first round was suspended at 7:32 p.m. ET due to darkness with nine players left to complete the round. Friday: Partly cloudy. High of 81. Wind SSE 10-18 mph. Saturday:  Mostly cloudy. High of 84. Wind W 6-12 mph. Sunday: Partly cloudy. High of 81. Wind S 6-12 mph.
  • 2023: Thursday: Partly cloudy. High of 72. Wind E 10-15 mph. Friday:  Mostly cloudy. High of 81. Wind SSW 12-22 mph. The second round was suspended for the day due to inclement weather at 4:27 p.m. ET Friday with 71 players remaining on the golf course. The second round resumed Saturday at 7:01 a.m. ET. Saturday: Sunny. High of 70. Wind NE 5-10 mph. Sunday: Partly cloudy. High of 82. Wind SSW 10-20 mph.
  • 2022: Thursday: Cloudy with scattered showers and thunderstorms. High of 72. Wind SW 8-16 mph. The first round was suspended at 11 a.m. ET due to dangerous weather in the area and resumed at 3:14 p.m. ET (4 hours, 14 minutes). Friday: Cloudy with scattered showers and thunderstorms. High of 71. Wind SSE 6-12 mph. Play did not resume Friday after the suspension of play at 11:15 a.m. Saturday: Partly cloudy and windy. High of 61. Wind NNW 20-30 mph, with gusts to 43 mph. Due to dangerous weather in the morning Saturday, the second round did not start until noon ET. Sunday: Mostly sunny. High of 52. Wind NE 6-12 mph. Monday: Mostly cloudy with scattered showers. High of 67 Wind E 10-20 mph.
  • 2021: Thursday: Partly cloudy. High of 72. Wind E 8-12 mph. The first round was suspended due to darkness at 6:32 p.m. ET with 21 players left on the course. Friday: The first round resumed at 7:30 a.m. and was completed at 8:31 a.m. Mostly sunny. High of 73. Wind E 4-8 mph. Saturday: Mostly Sunny. High of 75. Wind E 6-12 mph. Sunday: Mostly sunny. High of 78. Wind ESE 6-12 mph.
  • 2019: Thursday: Partly Cloudy. High of 76. Wind SE 12-22 mph. Friday: Partly Cloudy. High of 80. Wind S 10-18 mph. Saturday: Mostly cloudy. High of 66. Wind N 10-20 mph. Sunday: Cloudy with intermittent showers. High of 59. Wind N 8-22 mph.

Weather Forecast: The latest weather forecast for Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida is here.

Many of you will remember the chaos here 4 years ago with a flooded course, high winds and a wholly unsatisfactory wave bias. Well fingers crossed looking at the forecast we shouldn’t get that in 2026.

Wind looks far less of a factor with significant gusts forecast for Thursday and Friday only from the north and north-east respectively. Temperatures are set to start at 26 degrees Celsius (79 Fahrenheit), falling to 19-23 Celsius (66-73 Fahrenheit) across the final 3 days. Only 56 mm or 2.2 inches (down from 220 mm – 8.7 inches 12 months ago) of rain has fallen in the Orlando are since the turn of the year. None of that has been in March. However there is a 90% chance of rain of thunderstorms on Thursday afternoon – so expect delays and a downpour.

Strokes Gained Rankings: These top 25 in the field rankings are based on an 8-tournament window that stretches back to the Sony Open / Dubai Invitational which includes both PGA Tour and DP World Tour events, where recorded. Player rankings are based on performance relative to the rest of the field:

  • Top 25 SG Off The Tee: 1) Marco Penge; 2) Scottie Scheffler; 3) Rory McIlroy; 4) Michael Brennan; 5) Adam Scott; 6) Joel Dahmen / Harris English / Chris Gotterup / Keith Mitchell; 10) Collin Morikawa; 11) Ryo Hisatsune / Jake Knapp; 13) Tommy Fleetwood / Si Woo Kim / Robert MacIntyre / Cameron Young; 17) Ludvig Aberg / Min Woo Lee; 19)  Nicolai Hojgaard / Maverick McNealy; 21) Haotong Li / Sam Stevens; 23) Patrick Cantlay / Taylor Moore / Aldrich Potgieter.
  • Top 25 SG Approach: 1) Si Woo Kim; 2) Viktor Hovland; 3) Shane Lowry; 4) Collin Morikawa; 5) Austin Smotherman; 6) Jacob Bridgeman / Sepp Straka; 8) Hideki Matsuyama / Rory McIlroy; 10) Marty Dou; 11) Ryan Gerard / Nicolai Hojgaard / Adam Scott; 14) Matt Fitzpatrick / Rickie Fowler / Kurt Kitayama; 17) Chris Gotterup; 18) Daniel Berger / Justin Rose; 20) Russell Henley / Thorbjorn Olesen; 22) Tommy Fleetwood / Brooks Koepka; 24) Aaron Rai; 25) Jake Knapp / Patrick Rodgers.
  • Top 25 SG Around The Green: 1) Justin Thomas; 2) Scottie Scheffler; 3) Ben Griffin; 4) Hideki Matsuyama; 5) Harry Hall; 6) Tommy Fleetwood; 7) Taylor Moore; 8) Rory McIlroy / J.J. Spaun / Nick Taylor; 11) Keegan Bradley / Ryan Fox; 13) Akshay Bhatia; 14) Chris Gotterup / Ryo Hisatsune; 16) Patrick Cantlay / Shane Lowry / Maverick McNealy; 19) Jason Day / Mackenzie Hughes / Sahith Theegala; 22) Viktor Hovland; 23) Christiaan Bezuidenhout / Sepp Straka; 25) Andrew Putnam / Sam Stevens.
  • Top 25 SG Tee to Green: 1) Rory McIlroy; 2) Si Woo Kim; 3) Scottie Scheffler; 4) Collin Morikawa; 5) Shane Lowry; 6) Adam Scott; 7) Tommy Fleetwood / Chris Gotterup; 9) Sepp Straka; 10) Ryo Hisatsune / Maverick McNealy; 12) Hideki Matsuyama; 13) Patrick Cantlay / Min Woo Lee; 15) Nicolai Hojgaard / Jake Knapp; 17) Jacob Bridgeman / Thorbjorn Olesen / Cameron Young; 20) Viktor Hovland / Brooks Koepka; 22) Russell Henley / Sam Stevens; 24) Daniel Berger / Ryan Fox.
  • Top 25 SG Putting: 1) Jacob Bridgeman ; 2) Jake Knapp; 3) Sungjae Im / Robert MacIntyre; 5) Scottie Scheffler; 6) Rickie Fowler; 7) Jordan Spieth / Sahith Theegala; 9) Harry Hall / Rasmus Hojgaard / Matthieu Pavon; 12) Matt McCarthy; 13) Ryan Fox; 14) Tom Hoge / Rory McIlroy; 16) Russell Henley; 17) Vincent Whaley; 18) Harris English; 19) Nicolai Hojgaard / Michael Kim; 21) Jason Day / Ryan Gerard / Shane Lowry /Kevin Roy / Nick Taylor.
  • Top 25 SG Total: 1) Jake Knapp; 2) Scottie Scheffler; 3) Jacob Bridgeman; 4) Si Woo Kim; 5) Hideki Matsuyama / Min Woo Lee; 7) Rickie Fowler / Shane Lowry; 9) Nicolai Hojgaard; 10) Russell Henley; 11) Adam Scott / Sahith Theegala; 13) Ryan Gerard / Chris Gotterup / Maverick McNealy; 16) Pierceson Coody; 17) Ricky Castillo / Harris English / Ryan Fox / Robert MacIntyre / Rory McIlroy; 22) Nick Taylor / Cameron Young; 24) Tommy Fleetwood / Viktor Hovland / Collin Morikawa.

Trends & Key Factors: Analysing the Strokes Gained Stats of the Players Championship winners since 2019 (since tournament moved to March from May gives us a little more insight into the requirements for this test:

  • 2025, Rory McIlroy (-12). SG Off the Tee: 17th, SG Approach: 5th, SG Around the Green: 51st, SG Tee to Green: 8th, SG Putting: 10th.
  • 2024, Scottie Scheffler (-20). SG Off the Tee: 1st, SG Approach: 7th, SG Around the Green: 6th, SG Tee to Green: 1st, SG Putting: 37th.
  • 2023, Scottie Scheffler (-17). SG Off the Tee: 5th, SG Approach: 4th, SG Around the Green: 4th, SG Tee to Green: 1st, SG Putting: 48th.
  • 2022, Cameron Smith (-13). SG Off the Tee: 68th, SG Approach: 5th, SG Around the Green: 19th, SG Tee to Green: 35th, SG Putting: 1st.
  • 2021, Justin Thomas (-14). SG Off the Tee: 10th, SG Approach: 5th, SG Around the Green: 12th, SG Tee to Green: 1st, SG Putting: 42nd.
  • 2019, Rory McIlroy (-16). SG Off the Tee: 2nd, SG Approach: 6th, SG Around the Green: 25th, SG Tee to Green: 1st, SG Putting: 45th.

Strokes Gained Tournament Skill Averages:

  • SG Off the Tee: 17th, SG Approach: 5th, SG Around the Green: 20th, SG Tee to Green: 8th, SG Putting: 31st.

Tournament Trends & Key Factors: Analysing the final stats of Players Championship winners since 2019 (since tournament moved to March from May gives us a little more insight into the requirements for this tough Florida golf test:

  • 2025, Rory McIlroy (-12). 300 yards (23rd), 48.2% fairways (67th), 62.5% greens in regulation (39th), 70.4 % scrambling (7th), 1.64 putts per GIR (11th).
  • 2024, Scottie Scheffler (-20). 299 yards (14th), 80.4% fairways (1st), 76.4% greens in regulation (3rd), 76.5 % scrambling (8th), 1.67 putts per GIR (18th).
  • 2023, Scottie Scheffler (-17). 306 yards (1st), 67.9% fairways (18th), 75.0% greens in regulation (1st), 72.2 % scrambling (4th), 1.70 putts per GIR (34th).
  • 2022, Cameron Smith (-13). 290 yards (20th), 42.9% fairways (70th), 62.5% greens in regulation (52nd), 63.0 % scrambling (22nd), 1.56 putts per GIR (1st).
  • 2021, Justin Thomas (-14). 295 yards (18th), 60.7% fairways (32nd), 72.2% greens in regulation (17th), 65.0 % scrambling (14th), 1.71 putts per GIR (14th).
  • 2019, Rory McIlroy (-16). 305 yards (5th), 58.9% fairways (49th), 80.6% greens in regulation (3rd), 57.1 % scrambling (40th), 1.67 putts per GIR (9th).

Tournament Skill Averages:

  • Driving Distance: 14th, Driving Accuracy: 40th, Greens in Regulation: 19th, Scrambling: 16th, Putting Average 15th.

So let’s take a view from players as to how the Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass sets-up plus what skill sets they favour:

Rory McIlroy (2025): “Yeah, I think with the greens being so receptive, you can get away with it a little bit. I’m not going to be able to get away with it for the rest of the week. Sort of rode my luck out there a little bit. But I’m trying to hit this cut shot into play. Missing right off the tee here on any hole is way better than missing left. Just sort of hitting this cut sort of up into the wind, and obviously you don’t need to hit it too far here, so yeah, just going to go hit some balls here and figure it out and try to hit a few more fairways tomorrow.

Again, this is such a different test than Bay Hill and what it demands. The tee shots that I did stand up there with a driver and release, like 2, 16, like 15 even, they missed left. So just whatever way the pattern is in my swing at the minute, I’m trying to hold everything off. That’s fine; that’s what I did here in 2019 and it worked well. Hitting that cut shot into play here is never really going to get you into trouble.

Yeah, pretty much. But again, the crosswinds are okay. Especially I thought J.J. did a really good job of controlling his ball flight today, as well. I think keeping your ball below the top of the trees, it still gets hit, but certainly not as much as if you’re hitting it really high.

It was just a tough day. It was a tough day to get it close. Sort of one of those days, I feel like it was a tough day to make birdies, but if you managed yourself well, you could just make a ton of pars.”

Scottie Scheffler (2024): “I just think it’s a golf course where you don’t see a lot of repeat winners in general. There’s not a guy that you have seen win on this golf course a bunch. I think it’s just the nature of the course, it doesn’t really suit one type of player. It really is a Pete Dye, just kind of genius design, where you have to hit all different kinds of shots, and it tests you in a lot of different ways. That’s why I think it’s one of the best places we play on Tour, just because it really doesn’t suit one type of player. Bomb and gouge doesn’t really work out here, you kind of got to plot your way around. But then you even have the shorter hitters that plot it around that can struggle here, because you got to hit it exactly where you’re looking or you’re going to be punished pretty severely out here.

That would be pretty much a perfect round of golf to get anything below 63. It’s birdieing half the holes out here. It’s no easy task. Seems like anytime you miss a fairway the rough is still really healthy. It’s one of those places it really does open up a lot when you’re in play, but the minute you hit one off line, it’s — I think today is a good example; you see I hit 12 out of 14 fairways and I missed the fairway on 18, and it’s like, I’ve got to really, really do a lot just to make par from here, and I think that’s something you see a lot around this place.

Scottie Scheffler (2023): “I would say most challenging for me would probably be 18. I’m a guy that usually likes to fade it off the tee and there’s a big lake on the left side there. So I usually will try and hit 3-wood so I can actually draw it around. That way if you do make a mistake and it goes in the water I can actually drop up there versus if I’m trying to fade a driver and I pull it I basically have to reload.

Then the second shot, it almost kind of teases you because it looks like you can hit it right at the pin and then if you land it just barely left of it just trickles over there into the water. So I would say most challenging is 18. I mean, really, when you go back to the whole golf course, if you hit good shots you’re going to get rewarded for it. That is so great for us to be able to come out here and play and it’s such a treat to be able to go challenge ourselves on this golf course. You don’t see the same guys on the leaderboard every year, you see whichever guy’s playing the best that week.

I mean, I just think it’s a good test tee to green. I think what makes me a little nervous is the stuff kind of around. You don’t really know if you’re going to get a good or bad break. Anytime you’re hitting fairways and greens out here it’s pretty scorable, but the minute you miss a fairway, depending on where you end up in one of these little hollows or pot bunkers or something like that you can get in weird spots pretty quick.

I thought I was hanging in there at the start, kind of getting used to how the golf course is playing. There was a lot more wind today, and I knew it was going to pick up as the day went on. It was it felt like it was one of those days where somebody was kind of going to post a score and then they were going to be on the leaderboard, and I was just going to have to beat whoever it was. Fortunately, that chip on 8 went in.

That was just a good example of me playing smart there. If you miss it pin high on that hole to either of those pins you’re more than likely going to make a bogey. So all we were doing there was just trying to aim for the front edge, and I hit a really good shot and the wind hit it and pushed it a little left. If I wasn’t playing that smart, I would have been in a really tough position. I was in a position where there wasn’t an easy chip, but it was a very gettable up-and-down and just fortunate to see it go in.”

Cameron Smith (2022): “Being a Jacksonville Beach resident, I’ve found it hard in recent years, I guess, to really treat it like a tournament. I feel like I’m just coming out here just to practice. That’s normally what I do. It’s usually pretty cruisey around here, have a chat to the boys out the back on the greens keeping team and have a laugh at the boys back there, as well. However there are some pins around here that you can be quite aggressive with that looks like you have to play away, and just little stuff like that. I mean, everyone here is the best in the world. We all prepare the same. To say I have an advantage is a really big call.”

“I made a couple of good bogey putts today, dodged a couple of bullets. I think this golf course just does that to you. There’s always those five-, six-footers for bogey, and I just holed a lot of them today. I think the course looks great when it’s overseeded. I’m a big lawn snob, grass snob. I think it looks great. I think it plays a little bit better. I think the greens roll better in March when they’re good. It’s definitely a tougher test. “

“18, is just a hole for me that doesn’t really suit my eye. I like to work the ball left to right off the tee. That’s where I feel comfortable, and I feel as though I can’t hit that shot down there. Just haven’t quite figured that hole out. Driver, just because I just wanted to get it down there as far as I could basically. If it did turn over, I was going to have a short shot in, and it just didn’t quite turn over.”

Like I was saying before, I felt really comfortable on the range with my irons, and I knew if I could somehow get it in the fairway, I felt it was mine to win from the start. I feel really comfortable on the greens around here, so I just needed to get it on the fairway, and if I could do that, then I knew I had a red hot chance. Was able to do that a little bit on the front nine at least, and then kind of got a bit wavy there at the end. My driver got a little bit skewy the last kind of 12 holes, but was able to kind of scramble around and hit really good iron shots when I needed to. I felt really comfortable with my iron shots. I felt as though I had it under control. I just needed to hit the fairway. That was the big thing.”

Justin Thomas (2021): “Well, I think as well as I was starting to learn it, it got switched to March, so I kind of had to re-learn it. I really, really love this place in May and how firm and fast it would play, and I felt like it was not very many drivers. I used a 2-iron at this event and I just would get it on the ground a lot and just really focus on hitting the ball in the fairway. I’m still clearly focused on hitting the ball in the fairway because this is a course that, if you drive it well, being in March, it’s always going to be softer, the fairways and the greens, and you can make so many birdies out here. You have four par-5s, a lot of short scoring clubs into holes. But if you get it out of play, you’re missing the fairways, you get it out of play on the par-5s, it’s tough to shoot under par out here. I think that’s what makes this golf course so good and also why a lot of people have had a wide array, including myself, have had a wide array of finishes. It truly is just how you’re playing.

I feel like it’s not like a lot of courses where you can, even if you’re playing bad you can just kind of skank it around and hit it on one side. I know if I’m going to miss this fairway I can at least hit it over here and get it on this part of the green. It doesn’t play like that. You really have to step up on each tee, on each par-3, par-4, par-5 and just hit the golf shot that it requires, and then just keep going.

I would say it was easier yesterday than it was today, but I mean, this course is like that. As long as you hit the ball in the fairway, it’s not very long, you got four par-5s, you can realistically eagle– besides No. 9 you can, but it’s not likely. You can eagle every par-5, you got a short hole and you can make eagle on this weekend at No. 12. So you can have crazy stuff happen out here and you can really, really shoot a low number. I know that going in or I knew that going into the weekend and I know that every time I tee it up out here. So I think that’s the reason why maybe I played well is I just know to stay patient because you never know when a run is coming.”

Rory McIlroy (2019): “Yeah, the course was softer, including the fairways, also. I think the course over the last 10 years or whatever it’s been in May, it hasn’t lent itself to aggressive play. It’s sort of position and irons off tees and really trying to plot your way around the golf course, where I hit drivers on holes today that I would never have hit driver the last few years. So just to be a little more aggressive, get a shorter club in your hand, and even when you are aggressive and you miss, it’s a touch easier to get yourself back into position. The rough isn’t as long or as gnarly. You’re running into that pine straw and you still have some sort of a shot and some control of your ball. And then when you miss the greens, you’re not having to contend with that Bermuda, you’re not having to guess, how is this going to come out, whatever. So it lends itself to more aggressive play. I don’t know if the course is easier or not. We’ll see what the stroke average is at the end of the day. But because I think it’s playing longer, it’ll play longer for most of the guys, and I think it should all even out. But I definitely like the golf course the way it is in March.

I hit driver on the 4th hole – I mean, it was back into the wind, but still, the ball hits on the fairway and it’s not going that- it’s staying within sort of 10 yards of its pitch mark. You know, and then obviously it’s a Pete Dye course. You’ve got all these funky lines around, and in May it gets firm. You get a bad bounce here. With the Rye and how lush the grass is, even if you hit it into these banks, it’s not going too far, so you can be a little more aggressive. Like even, I hit my second shot on 2 today, I knew I was going into the left rough or into those left moguls, but I was much more comfortable doing that this year than I would have been in previous years.”

Webb Simpson (2018): “I’ve always loved it at TPC Sawgrass. You know, I feel like it doesn’t give one particular golfer an advantage, and I’m always a fan of those golf courses. You know, you take a hole like 18, Rickie, the year he won hit driver every time, and you can do that. I hit 5-wood every time, and I have a much longer club than if I hit driver. But there’s so many holes like that that give you an opportunity to hit different clubs off the tee, and you really think your way around the golf course, and any given day even if it’s really windy you’re going to have plenty of birdie opportunities, and that’s fun. It’s fun to know if I play well I can shoot 6-under like I did today, or if you’re a little off you might shoot a few over.

The challenge here is, if you’re hitting all your shots exactly where you’re looking, and so the temptation is to start aiming more at the flag. But I didn’t do that. I mean, you’ve got to isolate every shot and every putt and just ask yourself, what’s the objective here. Although I’m hitting it great, on 13, I aimed 30 feet right of the hole. 14, I have 9-iron in my hand, I’m aiming 15 feet right of the hole.

Si Woo Kim: “Conditions? I think that this year it’s better than last year. I played last year and Saturday was really crazy bumpy and then this year we had a chance to stop balls on the green. It plays easier this year. I think I’m a little bit more nervous at the Stadium Course. I know that Q-school, that course and this course was composed by the same architect, and we have more – I think here they have more hazards, and the course is a little bit more difficult than the Q-school course, so I think I was a little nervous for this tournament.

Jason Day: “It’s a difficult golf course in regards that, for me, not so much trying to hit the driver off the tee, but there’s a few 3-woods out there for me that I have to hit, and if there’s one club in the bag that’s uncomfortable for me at times, it’s the 3-wood. That’s why I might be hitting a few more 2-irons off the tee this week, just to try and get it in play, so that I can hit the fairways and try and get it on the green and give myself an opportunity at birdie.

Thursday: “The conditions are very hot, so the ball is going forever. Guys can dial it back a little bit and not hit certain clubs or drivers or 3-woods. They can hit irons off the tees, give yourself a lot more opportunities coming in from the fairway. And you can attack these pin locations, especially this morning. You can attack them coming in from the fairway or even the rough or the fairway bunker. But the greens are pure. They’re so nice and they’re rolling so perfect. It’s kind of sad that they’re going to rip the bloody greens up. I’m expecting it’s going to be even better next year.

Saturday: “But it was just, the green speeds kind of took me by surprise. It was just such a drastic change from Thursday to Friday to now, this afternoon. I mean, the front nine was a bit borderline in my honest opinion, but I think a lot of the players probably think that, as well. I think it was, what, I think they said it was 71, the scoring average yesterday, and 76 today or something like that, which is just unbelievable. we were out there for nearly six hours today trying to play 18 holes. That was just, it was – talk about slow play, they made the course pretty much nearly unplayable. If they do make it like that, then I’m just going to have to grind my hardest to win the tournament, and I’m okay with that.

Sergio Garcia: “I think winning here is always challenging. It’s the kind of golf course that’s asking you for a lot of different shots. So it’s the kind of golf course that you want to play. It’s really pushing you to the limits. Greens are fairly small, so you have to be accurate, not only off the tee but into the greens. You’re not going to have a lot of 50 footers on these greens. It’s very rare that you have a long putt like that because it kind of reminds me a little bit of Valderrama. Obviously Valderrama maybe has a little bit more movement, but it’s small greens; if you hit a good shot you’re always going to have a birdie putt. It always feels like you’re in range to make a birdie. And if you miss the greens, then chipping is very challenging, so it’s a great golf course overall.

Jordan Spieth: “Yeah, I think this course is interesting because the way the holes shape, you normally need one shape off the tee and then the next shot calls for the other shape. And sometimes off of the slope that wants you to hit it the opposite way. So it certainly there is some imagination involved. I love this grass, too. I love this Bermuda, grainy Bermuda. It’s what I grew up on. I think it’s also an advantage for me. I think that the course plays well for me if I’m on my game, but if I go out there and I’m struggling with a certain ball flight, then it’s going to eat you up out here. You really do have to have control of both of them.

Martin Kaymer: “Well it’s a golf course where you can shoot very low scores. If you hit the fairways, you can go very low. If you make a few putts here and there, it’s possible. Last year when I shot 9-under par the first round, I didn’t do anything special. Yes, I mean you made a few putts here and there more, but I was playing well, I hit fairways, and I used my chances. So, I didn’t do any extraordinary. If you miss the fairways, it’s tough. You can easily shoot 2- or 3-over par without doing much wrong. I think that’s the beauty about that golf course. Anything can happen until Sunday afternoon, and therefore it’s a good score to have, you know, if the winning score is somewhere around 10-under par, I think it’s always a good score to have to win a tournament.

Jim Furyk: “This Pete Dye course is visually intimidating, but the more you get to play it, you’re able to realize that there’s more room out there on certain shots. I think that’s a typical trait of Dye golf courses. The Crooked Sticks, Kiawah, here, New Orleans, you stare out from the tee box, you look at the fairway, you look at the first fairway and it looks like it’s about 10 yards wide. You get out there and you look around and you go, you know, there’s actually plenty of room out here. And then you look at the green and it now looks like it’s eight yards wide and you go, wow, you hit a shot up there and you look around and you go, well, actually there was plenty of room up here. Visually, though, it’s deceiving. I’m not going to drive it into the little necks and areas I shouldn’t. So there’s ample room to hit the ball. I’ve grown to get used to it and I’ve grown to like it over the years. I’ll be honest with you, I did not like this golf course.

First Round Leader Analysis: First round leader(s), their group and winning score since 2010. Full First Round Leader stats are here.

  • 2025 – Glover / Spaun / Villegas – 1AM/2PM Split – 6/66 – 110/1, 80/1 & 350/1
  • 2024 – Clark / McIlroy / Schauffele – AM/PM Split -7/65 – 55/1, 33/1 & 35/1
  • 2023 – Ramey – AM – 8/64 – 350/1
  • 2022 – Fleetwood / Hoge – Both AM – 6/66 – 80/1 & 100/1
  • 2021 – Garcia – AM – 7/65 – 80/1
  • 2020 – Matsuyama – AM – 9/63 – 40/1
  • 2019 – Bradley / Fleetwood – AM/PM Split -7/65 – 75/1 & 45/1
  • 2018 – Cantlay / Hadley / D Johnson / Kuchar / Noren / Simpson – 3AM/3PM Split -6/66 – 60/1, 90/1, 33/1, 66/1, 66/1 & 70/1
  • 2017 – Hughes / McGirt – AM/PM Split -5/67 – 250/1 & 100/1
  • 2016 – Day – AM -9/63.
  • 2015 – Hearn / Hoffman / Matsuyama / Na – 1AM/3PM -5/67
  • 2014 – Kaymer – PM -9/63.
  • 2013 – Castro – AM -9/63.
  • 2012 – Laird / Poulter – AM/PM Split -7/65.
  • 2011 – Watney – AM -8/64.
  • 2010 – Allenby / Holmes – AM/PM Split -6/66.

For the record, here’s the breakdown of Bermudagrass PGA Tour victors in the field since 2008:

  • 11 – Rory McIlroy, Scottie Scheffler.
  • 7 – Justin Thomas.
  • 5 – Hideki Matsuyama, Jordan Spieth.
  • 4 – Sam Burns, Jason Day, Billy Horschel, Si Woo Kim, Chris Kirk.
  • 3 – Rickie Fowler, Chris Gotterup, Russell Henley, Brooks Koepka, Justin Rose, Xander Schauffele, Nick Taylor.
  • 2 – Daniel Berger, Akshay Bhatia, Patrick Cantlay, Harris English, Lucas Glover, Viktor Hovland, Mackenzie Hughes, Peter Malnati, Sepp Straka, Gary Woodland.
  • 1 – Ludvig Aberg, Keegan Bradley, Wyndham Clark, Corey Conners, Nico Echavarria, Tony Finau, Steven Fisk, Matt Fitzpatrick, Tommy Fleetwood, Ryan Fox, Ben Griffin, Brian Harman, Garrick Higgo, Joe Highsmith, Max Homa, Sungjae Im, Stephan Jaeger, Kurt Kitayama, Min Woo Lee, Shane Lowry, Keith Mitchell, Maverick McNealy, Collin Morikawa, William Mouw, Andrew Novak, J.T. Poston, Aaron Rai, Davis Riley, Adam Schenk, J.J. Spaun, Sami Valimaki, Jhonattan Vegas, Cameron Young, Kevin Yu.

Trends in terms of recent winners are interesting and mixed. Rickie Fowler had finished 2nd here in 2012 prior to winning in 2015. His form during that season had been mediocre to say the least, but a 12th at Augusta and a last-16 place at the World Match Play the week prior to TPC Sawgrass were the precursor to his come-from-behind victory here. Fowler’s last win had been at Quail Hollow in 2012 and despite his run of top Major Championship finishes in between, the American had been winless for 3 years worldwide.

However, strong course form doesn’t always translate to the winner here. Martin Kaymer had finished 19th (2011) and 15th (2012) in 5 appearances prior to capturing the title here in 2014. The German had been through a tough spell prior to his win as he had to wait 18 months since his last worldwide victory. Matt Kuchar had finished 13th (2010) and 14th (2009) prior to capturing his first tournament victory for 21 months here in 2012. K.J. Choi had a TPC Sawgrass best of 16th set 5 years previous when he captured his first worldwide title in 18 months with his 2011 victory; Tim Clark incredibly broke his Tour maiden here in 2010 with inbound form of 63-MC-30. And in 2018 Webb Simpson arrived here winless in 4 and a half years, without a PGA Tour Bermudagrass win to his name and had never finished in the top 10 at TPC Sawgrass in 8 appearances.

Si Woo Kim (2017), Rory McIlroy (2019) and Justin Thomas (2021) all won here off a fairly significant winless period. Kim’s 500/1 shock win came 8 months after his first PGA Tour win which had arrived at the 2016 Wyndham Championship at Sedgefield Country Club. Rory’s victory here came at 14/1. His last win had been almost a full year to the day at the 2018 Arnold Palmer Invitational played at Bay Hill in Orlando, Florida. And Justin Thomas, who won at 20/1 in 2021, had waited 6 months for his 14th PGA Tour victory. His previous victory had been the previous August at the WGC-St Jude Invitational.

Naturally though a small number of ‘elites’ break this winless trend since 2010. Jason Day had won the Bay Hill Invitational and WGC Dell Match Play titles prior to Augusta where he’d finished 10th. Day had also finished 6th at TPC Sawgrass 5 years earlier and his win here in 2017 was at 12/1. Tiger Woods was playing brilliantly prior to arriving at TPC Sawgrass in 2013. His strong play overcame his relatively poor Stadium Course/Pete Dye design form to win one of his sweetest victories at 9/1. World Number 10 Cameron Smith had already gained 11 OWGR spots in a 2022 which had seen him win the year-opening Sentry Tournament of Champions, prior to winning this in 2022 at 33/1.

Then we get to Scottie Scheffler. In 2023 he had won the Waste Management Phoenix Open and finished 4th the week before at the Arnold Palmer Invitational prior to winning this at 11/1. 2024 saw the World Number 1 arrive off a win the week before at the Arnold Palmer Invitational – he was the 11/2 favourite. And that brings us to defending champion Rory McIlroy who had won at Pebble Beach and finished 15th at Bay Hill in the week prior to his second TPC Sawgrass victory as 9/1 second favourite.

Where immediate course form is not a must to win The Players, course experience is still a key advantage. Yes Eddie Pepperell, Xander Schauffele, Kevin Kisner, Jordan Spieth, David Lingmerth (a Sawgrass member) and Danny Walker have contended and gone close across recent renewals, and Henrik Stenson finished 3rd on course debut back in 2006. However these are the real exceptions. Hal Sutton (1983) and Craig Perks (2002) were the last players to win here on course debut.

Ultimately though this Pete Dye design has always been a course where no particular type of player has a true advantage. The best player on the week wins, period.

My Final The PLAYERS Championship tips are as follows:

Collin Morikawa 2.5pts EW 20/1 (8EW, 1/5) with bet365

Collin Morikawa has been excellent over the past 4 weeks on the PGA Tour. 1st at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, 7th at the Genesis Invitational, and 5th at the Arnold Palmer Invitational last week – the World Number 4 has truly hit his stride. Now Bay Hill suits players who can gain over a stroke per round with the putter, whilst the importance of putting here at TPC Sawgrass – unless you are Cam Smith in 2022 – is far less, so I prefer the chances of Collin this week at PGA Tour HQ.

I’ve always had The Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass down as a track where Collin should go well and I think the extended Sawgrass format fits into Morikawa’s wheelhouse. Course form is middle-of-the-road: 41-MC-13-45-10, but he was 3rd here after 36 holes in 2023 – finishing 13th – and he cracked the top 10 for the first time here 12 months ago, when he was 4th after 36 holes. So form is undoubtedly bubbling along nicely.

A winner of the 2021 WGC Workday Championship at The Concession Golf Club in Florida, he has a victory in the Sunshine State to his name and his game seems in the right spot for a serious tilt this week at his first Players Championship title.

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Ludvig Aberg 2pts EW 28/1 (8EW, 1/5) with Betfred

You have to also love Ludvig Aberg and his chances this week. The big Swede has struggled to find form in 2026 with illness blighting early outings, but he undoubtedly hit his straps last week at the Arnold Palmer Invitational. T3 behind the battling Bhatia and Berger, Aberg was 5th for Strokes Gained Off the Tee, 2nd for Strokes Gained on Approach, and 2nd for Strokes Gained Tee to Green. In old money he was 1st for Driving Distance, 2nd for Driving Accuracy, 1st for Total Driving (undoubtedly), 5th for Greens in Regulation, and 2nd for Ball Striking.

A Ponte Vedra Beach resident, Aberg uses TPC Sawgrass 50/50 as his practice facility and plays both the Dye Valley and Stadium Course regularly. 10th here on course debut in 2024 – he shot 3 -5/67s across Thursday, Saturday and Sunday – Ludvig looks primed for the biggest win of his young career.

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Chris Gotterup 1.5pts EW 40/1 (8EW, 1/5) with Betfred

Chris Gotterup looks likes a small spot of value at The Players Championship. Ranking 7th in the Official World Golf Ranking, he’s won 3 PGA Tour victories in his last 13 starts and there are some big wins in there. It started at the high-profile 2025 Scottish Open at Renaissance from where he went on to finish 3rd at the Royal Portrush-hosted Open Championship – his first Major Championship top 10 finish. 10th at the Tour Championship is also notable – on his East Lake debut.

Forward to 2026 where he won the Sony Open in Hawaii on his seasonal debut and then went on to win the WM Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale, defeating Hideki Matsuyama in a play-off. Breaking it down, 3 of Chris’ 4 PGA Tour wins have been on Bermudagrass greens, with that Phoenix win coming on Bermudagrass overseed with Poa Trivialis putting surfaces – similar to those this week.

A solid 18th place finish on his debut at Bay Hill last week – he was 7th heading into Sunday – Gotterup across my 8-week Strokes Gained analysis in this field ranks top 20 for Approach and Current Form, top 10 for Tee to Green, and top 5 for Off the Tee.

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Sepp Straka 1.5pts EW 45/1 (8EW, 1/5) with Betfred

Regular readers and listeners to the Golf Betting System Podcast will know our liking for Sepp Straka, especially on Bermudagrass greens. A winner at PGA National in 2022 in the Sunshine State and at PGA West last year on similar Bermudagrass Poa Trivialis greens, 2 of his 4 Tour wins have been on Bermuda.

9th (2022), 16th (2024) and 14th (2025) here on the Stadium Course across his 5 appearances, Straka is now an established top 12 player in the World Ranking and he’s playing some lovely stuff right now. 2nd at the Signature-event Pebble Beach Pro-Am in mid-February, colleague Paul Williams was on him last week when he finished 13th at the Arnold Palmer Invitational. He was 5th there 12 months ago.

Straka is also a bit of a Pete Dye design performer, ranking T9 in this field on Dye courses across the last 6 years including 4th (2020) and 1st (2025) at PGA West, 3rd (2022) and 4th (2024) at Harbour Town, 10th (2021) at TPC River Highlands, and naturally his 9th here in 2022. The strength of his play so far in 2026 sees him ranking in this field in the top 5 for Approach and the top 10 for Tee to Green across my 8-week Strokes Gained Analysis.

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Jacob Bridgeman 1pt EW 55/1 (8EW, 1/5) with Betfred

Jacob Bridgeman is another I like the look of this week in what appears an open Players Championship. Yet another top-20 finish last week at the Arnold Palmer Invitational continued a 2026 which has seen the 26 year-old from South Carolina break into the top 25 in the Official World Golf Ranking, plus place himself in the race for a Team USA Presidents Cup spot – he sits 8th presently. 4 top-20 finishes in his opening 4 tournaments in 2026, which included 4th at the Sony Open in Hawaii plus 8th at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, preceded his first PGA Tour victory at the Signature-level Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club.

3rd for Birdie Average and 4th for Scoring Average so far on the PGA Tour this season, Bridgeman across my 8-week Strokes Gained Rankings in this field ranks Number 3 for Current Form – yet we find him way down the betting board.

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Sahith Theegala 1pt EW 75/1 (8EW, 1/5) with bet365

I’ll finish with Sahith Theegala who doesn’t mind a Pete Dye design. 8th (2026) at PGA West, 5th (2023) and 2nd (2024) at Harbour Town, 2nd (2022) at TPC River Highlands, plus 9th here at TPC Sawgrass in 2024, Sahith can get his way around short- to medium-length courses expertly when in-form.

And you have to say that Sahith is upwardly mobile. Up over 40 spots in the Official Golf World Rankings to 76th, he sits in the top 12 of my 8-week Strokes Gained Current Form in this field. That’s powered by 3 top-8 finishes across The American Express, Farmers Insurance Open plus 6th last week at the Arnold Palmer Invitational.

Split that performance down and it was Theegala in his heyday ranking Strokes Gained-wise 20th for Off the Tee, 10th for Approach, 2nd for Around the Green and 4th for Tee to Green. From a stats perspective, his 9.47 Strokes Gained Tee to Green was his best performance since the 2023 Genesis Invitational and was the 6th best of his PGA Tour career.

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Odds and bookmaker offers correct at 11:05GMT 9.3.26 but are naturally subject to fluctuation.