The Valspar’s Curious Cast: Why This "Diluted" Field Might Surprise Us All
By James "Jimmy" Caldwell, Senior Tour Correspondent
The Florida Swing wraps up this week at Innisbrook Resort, and I’ll be honest—when I first glanced at the field for the 2026 Valspar Championship, my initial thought was the same one I’m hearing around the press tent: without Scottie Scheffler and Rory McIlroy, this feels like a secondary event. But here’s what three and a half decades on tour has taught me: never underestimate what happens when the favorites take a breather.
The Favorites We Think We Know
On paper, this looks straightforward. Xander Schauffele sits atop the odds at +1000, with Matt Fitzpatrick and Viktor Hovland close behind at +1300 and +1600 respectively. These are proven commodities—major winners, consistent performers, the kind of names that show up on leaderboards at courses they’ve never seen before because they’re simply excellent at golf. Brooks Koepka at +2200 adds another layer of star power.
What strikes me most, though, is how predictable that script feels. In my experience, when the tour’s elite step away for a week, it’s rarely because they’re tired. It’s calculated rest. Strategic scheduling. Which means the field that does show up often has something to prove.
The Cantlay Conundrum and Why It Matters
Here’s where things get interesting. According to the predictive model working this event, Patrick Cantlay—an eight-time PGA Tour winner and a familiar favorite—is being recommended as a fade. The reasoning is blunt:
"He’s yet to record a top-10 finish in 2026 and he’s missed two cuts in six events."
Now, Cantlay has been around long enough that I know better than to write him off entirely. I’ve watched him recover from worse stretches. But what this tells me—and what I think matters for understanding where the tour is right now—is that consistent excellence doesn’t guarantee it on any given week. Cantlay’s struggle isn’t a mystery; it’s a data point. And data points matter more than pedigree at Innisbrook.
In my three decades watching this sport, I’ve learned that when a proven winner starts missing cuts, it’s often not talent disappearing. It’s rhythm. It’s confidence. And that takes time to rebuild.
The Bridgeman Wildcard
But here’s where I get genuinely interested in this week. Jacob Bridgeman, a 26-year-old American, is being positioned as a top-three contender by the model. Now, before you dismiss this as some algorithm getting cute with a breakout story, consider what we’re actually seeing:
"The 26-year-old American is having a breakout year thus far, highlighted by a win at the Genesis Invitational in February. He hasn’t finished worse than T18 in his six events. He’s also coming off a T5 at The Players Championship, his third top-five finish of the season."
This isn’t luck. This isn’t variance. This is a young player who’s figured something out. A Genesis Invitational win is significant—that’s a field that usually includes the world’s best. And the consistency (T18 as his worst finish in six starts) suggests he’s not riding a hot putter for a week; he’s playing fundamentally sound golf.
I’ve covered enough tours to know the difference between a flash and a trend. Bridgeman looks like a trend. What’s more—and this is important for anyone thinking about this week—he’s at +1800. That’s still respectable value in a field where the favorite is just 10-to-1.
The Depth Chart Everyone’s Missing
Beyond Schauffele and the other headliners, this field is actually deeper than people realize. Jordan Spieth at +2700, J.J. Spaun at +3000, and Wyndham Clark at +6000 represent major winners who understand pressure and course management. These aren’t names that should make headlines, but they’re names that quietly show up on Sunday leaderboards.
The model is reportedly targeting two outright bets in the +2000 range—that’s where real value lives. Not in fading Cantlay, but in finding the guys who have something to prove this week.
Why This Week Actually Matters
Here’s what I think gets lost when we talk about a "diluted field": every tournament matters to someone. For Bridgeman, this is a chance to announce himself at a course with genuine prestige. For Cantlay, it’s a chance to find his footing before the season’s bigger moments arrive. For Schauffele and Fitzpatrick, it’s another opportunity to strengthen their already-strong cases for relevance.
The Florida Swing might look less glamorous without its marquee names, but golf doesn’t stop being golf because the favorites took the week off. If anything, it becomes more interesting—more open, more unpredictable, more reflective of what the tour actually is: a meritocracy where any given Thursday can belong to anyone prepared to play their best.
That’s what brings me back to Innisbrook year after year. Not the names I expect to win, but the names who could.

