Pebble Beach’s Quiet Excellence: When the Golf, Not the Celebrity, Actually Matters
Look, I’ve been around professional golf long enough to know that spectacle and substance don’t always occupy the same space on the scoreboard. This week at Pebble Beach has been a masterclass in proving that point.
Yes, the Taylor Swift storyline dominated the chatter heading into Friday’s action. Sixty thousand dollars in ticket sales announced the moment Travis Kelce joined the amateur field. Another twenty-one grand moved in the twelve hours before he teed off. The machinery of celebrity golf tourism hummed right along. And then something remarkable happened: she didn’t show up, and the golf got better.
The Real Story at Spyglass Hill
Akshay Bhatia and Ryo Hisatsune are currently sharing the lead at 15-under 129, and frankly, their scorecards are more impressive than any paparazzi shot would have been. What strikes me about Bhatia’s performance is the clinical precision of it. The kid went 44 holes without a bogey across his last three rounds. That’s not luck. That’s not flash. That’s the kind of grinding excellence that separates tour players from celebrities who play golf.
“Bogey-free around these golf courses is great. Greens can get bumpy, you can get some really tough putts with how much slope’s on the greens. So I’ve been really steady inside 5 to 6 feet. … It’s just fun when you feel like you’re in a groove.”
Having caddied in the late ’80s and early ’90s, I remember watching players hunt for that exact feeling—that sense of being locked in where the course seems to slow down and your decisions feel inevitable rather than desperate. Bhatia’s got it right now. His 64 at Spyglass Hill, with six birdies and a 50-foot chip-in for eagle at the 14th, tells the story of a player who’s not overthinking. He’s executing.
Hisatsune’s 62 on Thursday at Pebble Beach is equally noteworthy. The fact that he followed it with a 67 at Spyglass Hill—despite consecutive bogeys in the middle of his round—shows the kind of resilience you need out here. These are the narratives that belong in a major championship, not a celebrity watch-list.
When the Weather Cooperates, the Scores Tell a Story
The 36-hole scoring record for this tournament under the current two-course rotation speaks volumes about course conditions and player execution. Thursday’s weather at Pebble Beach was optimal, and Bhatia, Hisatsune, Rickie Fowler, and Sam Burns all took advantage. Fowler’s 64 puts him just one shot back at Spyglass Hill, and Burns’ 67 keeps him in striking distance.
“I thought that yesterday was a good day to be out here. Got decently challenging towards the end here today, but the greens are so receptive and they’re not super fast out here right now. Pebble’s going to show more of its teeth the next two days.”
Jordan Spieth’s assessment is exactly right, and it’s the kind of course management insight that gets lost when we’re all talking about whether a pop star is in the gallery. Pebble Beach in February is temperamental. The window for low scoring is narrow, and these guys knew it.
The Defending Champion’s Stumble
What concerns me about Rory McIlroy’s position—six shots back after 36 holes—isn’t the deficit itself. It’s how he’s losing strokes in the controllable areas. Three-putts from four feet don’t happen by accident. A shanked chip on the par-5 14th at Pebble Beach is the kind of error that compounds over a tournament. In my experience, defending champions at signature events face a different kind of pressure. They know the venue, which sometimes means they get too comfortable. McIlroy’s had a pair of three-putt double bogeys already; that’s the kind of leak you can’t afford to spring again on these greens.
“I feel like I’ve been a little bit wasteful the last two days and maybe not capitalized on those great starts.”
That’s honest assessment from McIlroy, and I respect it. But honest or not, he’s got work to do.
Scheffler’s Grinding Begins
Here’s where the real story might be cooking: Scottie Scheffler, the world’s number-one player, is nine shots back in a tie for 33rd. Most people see that and think it’s a disaster. I see it differently. Scheffler birdied five of his last seven holes for a 66 at Spyglass Hill. That’s the kind of momentum that can completely rewrite a tournament script. He’s already got a streak of 17 straight top-10 finishes to protect, and he knows better than anyone that Pebble Beach on the weekend can be won, not just by those who lead after 36 holes.
The weather forecast matters now. The wind Hisatsune’s hoping to avoid will almost certainly arrive. The greens will firm up. The course will demand better iron play and more precise approaches. That’s exactly where Scheffler excels.
What Really Happened This Week
In my thirty-five years covering this tour, I’ve learned that the tournaments that matter most are the ones where the best golf wins. This week, so far, that’s happening. Bhatia and Hisatsune aren’t household names outside serious golf circles, but their scorecards are screaming for attention. The weather cooperated, the courses were set up fairly, and the players who executed best are leading.
The celebrity storyline was noise. Real golf is signal. And right now, Pebble Beach’s signal is clear: we’re watching some exceptional ball-striking and course management unfold.
The final two rounds will sort out who the real players are. And honestly, I can’t wait to see it.

