The Valspar Shuffle: Why This Week’s “Weak” Field Might Tell Us Everything About Tour Dynamics in 2026
Look, I’ve been covering professional golf for 35 years, and I’ve learned that the best stories aren’t always about who shows up—they’re about who doesn’t. This week at Innisbrook, we’re seeing exactly that dynamic play out in real time.
Scottie Scheffler and Rory McIlory taking the week off isn’t shocking. What strikes me is what their absence reveals about how the modern PGA Tour operates. This used to be heresy—two of the game’s best players skipping a strong field? But in 2026, with the calendar sprawling across so many competing events and the physical demands of professional golf at an elite level, strategic rest has become not just acceptable but necessary. I covered Tom Lehman as a caddie in the ’90s, and we played everything. You didn’t skip tournaments unless you were injured or your exemption was about to expire. Times have genuinely changed.
That said, “diluted field” might be the wrong phrase here. Let’s look at who actually showed up:
“Xander Schauffele as the favorite at +1000, followed by Fitzpatrick at +1300. Hovland is +1600, while Koepka is +2200”
Those aren’t B-list players. That’s a legitimate collection of major winners and consistent performers. Schauffele continues his ascent as perhaps the most complete player on tour right now. Fitzpatrick brings that ice-in-his-veins European sensibility that plays well at Innisbrook’s demanding Copperhead Course. Hovland, despite some recent inconsistency, remains one of the most talented ball-strikers alive.
But here’s where the SportsLine model gets interesting—and where I think it’s actually onto something worth discussing.
The Cantlay Question Nobody Wants to Ask
Patrick Cantlay sitting at +2200 odds despite being a two-time Tour Championship winner should make us pause. In my experience, when a player of Cantlay’s caliber—eight PGA Tour wins, a major finalist multiple times—suddenly looks pedestrian, it’s worth asking tough questions. The model’s assessment that
“Cantlay hasn’t shown enough this season to be among the favorites. He’s yet to record a top-10 finish in 2026 and he’s missed two cuts in six events”
isn’t controversial—it’s just stating facts. What intrigues me is whether this is a form blip or something deeper. Cantlay’s a meticulous player who doesn’t have many bad stretches. When he does, they usually signal something—equipment changes, swing adjustments, or mental fatigue. I’d be watching his practice rounds this week like a hawk.
The Bridgeman Breakout Nobody Saw Coming
Now, the flip side of this conversation is Jacob Bridgeman, and this is where I think the computer model might actually be onto a genuine story. At 26 years old, having just won the Genesis Invitational in February, Bridgeman represents something I don’t see nearly often enough anymore: the genuine breakout year from a young player who came through the developmental tours and suddenly arrives.
“Jacob Bridgeman is a top-three contender this week. 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”
That consistency—T18 being his worst finish, three top-fives already in just six events—that’s not luck. That’s a player who’s figured something out. Maybe it’s confidence from that Genesis win. Maybe his swing coach cracked a code. Maybe he’s just matured mentally. But having covered hundreds of young players come onto tour, I can tell you this: when you see someone with five top-10s in basically six events and a major win already at 26, you’re looking at a player who’s going to be around for a long time.
The question isn’t whether he can win—he probably will at some point this season. The question is whether he can sustain it.
What This Week Actually Means
The Valspar Championship has always been interesting to me because it’s not a signature event, but it’s not a throwaway either. It’s that middle space where real players prove something about themselves. When Scheffler and McIlory opt out, it actually elevates the tournament’s meaning. The winner won’t have the gloss of beating the best fields, but they will have beaten a genuinely strong assemblage of professionals.
If Bridgeman wins, it’s a major statement. If Schauffele rolls through—as the favorites often do—we get confirmation that he’s as good as we think. If someone like Brooks Koepka finds magic again, or if a value play like Aaron Rai or Wyndham Clark breaks through, we’re seeing the real depth of this tour.
That’s what I’m really watching this week. Not who wins, necessarily, but what it tells us about where professional golf stands in 2026. The tour is deeper than it’s ever been, more strategic about scheduling, and producing younger talent faster than we know what to do with.
That’s not a weak field wrapping up the Florida Swing. That’s the actual future of professional golf playing out in real time.

