Houston Open 2026: Why This Week’s Field Says Everything About the Modern PGA Tour
Look, I’ve been covering professional golf since Ronald Reagan was president, and I’ve learned that sometimes the most important story isn’t about who’s teeing it up—it’s about who isn’t. So when Scottie Scheffler withdrew from the Texas Children’s Houston Open this week, it told me something worth unpacking about where we are right now on the PGA Tour.
Don’t get me wrong. Scheffler’s absence doesn’t diminish what should be a competitive week at Memorial Park Golf Course. But in my three and a half decades watching this game, I can tell you that the defending champion holding the favorite’s spot at +1300 says volumes about field depth in 2026. Min Woo Lee, who won last year, has every right to be the betting favorite—but the gap between him and the next tier of contenders feels different than it used to.
When Favorites Tell the Real Story
Here’s what I noticed looking at the odds: defending champion Min Woo Lee opened higher than +2000 before settling as the favorite at +1300. Chris Gotterup is at +1800, Jake Knapp at +2000, and then you’ve got a cluster of players—Sam Burns and Brooks Koepka—at +2200. That’s a pretty wide spread for what should be a 156-player field.
"The latest Houston Open 2026 odds have defending champion Min Woo Lee, who opened higher than +2000, as the favorite at +1300 after Scottie Scheffler withdrew on Tuesday."
In my experience, when you see odds that spread out this early in the week, it usually means one of two things: either the field is genuinely wide open, or the books think a handful of guys are significantly better than everyone else. Given that we’re only missing one top player, I’m leaning toward the latter interpretation.
The Koepka Narrative Worth Watching
Now, I want to talk about Brooks Koepka specifically, because his recent form has caught my attention in a way that goes beyond the usual preseason hype. The source article notes:
"After a rough pair of starts in his return to the PGA Tour, the Koepka has looked more like the player who is a five-time major winner. He has top 20 finishes in each of his last three starts and is riding an 11-round streak of shooting par or better."
Having caddied during the ’90s and early 2000s, I remember when consistency like that was table stakes for any player competing at the highest level. These days, with the athleticism and depth of field, that kind of streak is worth noting. What interests me more, though, is that his metrics back it up. He leads the entire PGA Tour in strokes gained on approach shots and ranks second in this field in SG: tee-to-green. That’s not luck. That’s not variance. That’s a player executing his game plan.
Koepka also has history at Memorial Park. He finished fifth here in 2020, and if I’m reading the progression right, he shot 65 in both the third and fourth rounds—only one other player had a better back-nine combination that week. For context, that kind of closing kick matters at a course like this, especially if the tournament stays tight down the stretch.
The Margin Question Nobody’s Asking About
Here’s something that jumped out at me: the article mentions that "the last two editions of this event have been decided by a single stroke but the three preceding those were decided by multiple strokes." I think that’s actually pretty significant.
When you get multiple one-stroke finishes in consecutive years, you’re usually looking at a couple of possibilities. Either the course setup is creating incredibly tight competition, or the field quality is genuinely competitive without being dominated by one or two superstars. Having watched 15 Masters Tournaments, I can tell you that tight finishes typically mean the course is playing fair but demanding. Memorial Park, historically, has that DNA—playable enough to create drama, demanding enough to separate the tourists from the professionals.
The Sportsline Machine and Modern Predictions
I’ll be honest with you: I’m skeptical of algorithms that claim to have nailed "16 majors entering the weekend" or promise $18,000 payouts on $10 bets. I’ve been around the tour long enough to know that golf is wonderfully unpredictable. The models can identify trends and historical patterns, sure. That’s valuable. But they can’t account for the magic—the rounds where a player’s in the zone, or the heartbreak of a bad bounce at the wrong moment.
That said, I respect the methodology behind identifying value propositions like Koepka’s Top 5 finish at +510. That’s not reaching. That’s identifying a player in form at a course where he’s performed well before, with the metrics to back it up.
Looking Ahead
What strikes me about this week is that we’re seeing the natural tension of modern professional golf: the gap between elite and very-good players seems to be widening, even as the overall quality of competition continues to improve. Scheffler’s withdrawal, the odds compression around the favorites, and the fact that only two top-10 World Golf Ranking players are in the field—these details paint a picture of a tour that’s evolving.
The good news? A week like this, without the super-heavyweight favorites sucking all the oxygen out of the room, could produce the kind of unexpected narrative that makes golf beautiful. Sometimes the best tournaments are the ones where nobody sees the winner coming.

