The Valspar’s Wide-Open Weekend: Why This Chaotic Leaderboard is Actually a Good Sign for Professional Golf
There’s a particular kind of electricity you feel on the grounds when a golf tournament reaches what we call “Moving Day” with absolutely no clear narrative. Twenty-seven players within six shots? That’s not a leaderboard—that’s a lottery ticket dispenser. And after 35 years covering this tour, I can tell you: this is exactly what we should be seeing more of.
Sungjae Im sits atop the Valspar Championship at nine-under-par, holding what looks like a comfortable one-shot lead over David Lipsky. But here’s what the casual viewer scrolling their phone might miss: this isn’t a lead. It’s a suggestion. With that many players bunched together, we’re not looking at a coronation in the making—we’re looking at a genuine melee, and frankly, that’s terrific for the sport.
The Return Story Nobody’s Talking About
Let me start with Im, because his presence here matters more than the headline suggests. The South Korean is “returning to competitive action at the start of March, following five months out with injury, while searching for a first victory since the Shriners Children’s Open in October 2021.” Now, that’s a long time between wins—nearly a year and a half—and he’s doing it coming off an extended absence.
In my experience, when a player emerges from that kind of layoff and immediately grabs a 36-hole lead, it tells you something important: the skill doesn’t disappear. But the mental side? That’s what gets tested on Saturday and Sunday. I’ve watched enough comebacks on the tour to know that Im’s biggest competitor this weekend might be the doubt that creeps in around the 14th hole on Sunday afternoon.
The Cavalry is Coming
What strikes me most about this leaderboard is the sheer quality of the names charging up the board. You’ve got “major winners Brooks Koepka and Gary Woodland…part of a large contingent at four-under-par,” and Brandt Snedeker—a guy who’ll turn 46 next month—sitting just one shot back at five-under.
Snedeker at 45 years old hunting a win? That’s the kind of story that doesn’t fit neatly into the “young versus old” narrative that dominates sports coverage these days. But it absolutely belongs in ours. I caddied for Tom Lehman when he was in his prime, and I’ve seen firsthand how a veteran with experience and feel can still find ways to win when everything aligns. Snedeker’s not there by accident—he’s there because he plays smart golf.
Then you’ve got your rising names like Xander Schauffele lurking in the field, Jordan Spieth and Patrick Cantlay in the mix, and Tony Finau still very much alive. This isn’t just a wide-open tournament; it’s genuinely competitive across generational lines.
The Undercard Players Breaking Through
What I find genuinely encouraging is how many names in this field aren’t household names yet. Guys like Karl Vilips, Pierceson Coody, and Chandler Phillips represent the next wave of talent, and they’re not hanging around the back nine at Innisbrook. They’re right there competing with the stars.
Having covered 15 Masters and countless other tournaments over three decades, I can tell you that depth is the sign of a healthy tour. When you’ve got 27 players within six shots, you’re not seeing a talent drought—you’re seeing parity. Some folks will argue that means there’s no dominant force in the game right now, but I’d counter that it means the competitive level is genuinely high across the board.
What Happens Next
The conventional wisdom heading into Saturday says Im’s composure will be tested. David Lipsky at one back is a solid ball-striker who won’t go away quietly. The chasing pack includes enough firepower that one hot round could vault someone into contention overnight.
Here’s what I’ll be watching for: not just who shoots the lowest score on Saturday, but who plays the most intelligent golf. That’s often the difference between a PGA Tour winner and a guy who had a good tournament. The player who understands when to attack and when to play steady—that’s your champion more often than not.
The Valspar Championship setup for this weekend is absolutely what professional golf should look like. It’s unpredictable. It’s full of legitimate contenders. It’s got veterans proving they can still compete, rising talent showing they belong, and a leader who’s trying to shake off the rust of injury.
That’s not a mess of a leaderboard. That’s an invitation to watch something genuinely competitive unfold.

