The Players Championship at the Halfway Point: When Giants Stumble, the Future Looks Bright
I’ve covered fifteen Masters tournaments, walked alongside some of the greatest players ever to grip a club, and I’ve learned one fundamental truth about professional golf: never trust the leaderboard after 36 holes. TPC Sawgrass this week is proving that lesson in vivid color.
On the surface, we have a straightforward narrative. A 28-year-old Swedish phenom, Ludvig Aberg, is running away from the field after a brilliant second-round 63 that left him at 12-under par. Behind him, Xander Schauffele—the guy we keep waiting to finally put it all together—is lurking at 10-under, reminding us all why he was so highly touted coming into his professional career. Standard stuff for a Friday heading into Saturday.
But here’s what actually caught my attention walking the grounds this week: the defending champion barely made the cut.
When Excellence Becomes Fragile
Rory McIlroy, the man who won this tournament last year, scraped through Friday at one-over par. Scottie Scheffler—yes, that Scottie, two-time champion of this event, arguably the most dominant force in golf right now—also made the cut on the number at one-over. That’s not a story about depth on the PGA Tour. That’s a story about how unforgiving TPC Sawgrass is, and more importantly, how narrow the margin between dominance and disaster really is at this level.
“After 36 holes, Ludvig Aberg leads the way following a brilliant second round of 63 to leave him on 12 under. Two back of the lead is Xander Schauffele, whose 65 on Friday reminded everyone of his considerable talent following a spell where we haven’t always seen the best of the American.”
In my 35 years around this game, I’ve seen a lot of young talent wash in and out of the conversation. What’s different about Aberg is the consistency of his excellence. A 63 in the second round isn’t luck—it’s execution at the highest level. But here’s the thing nobody wants to admit: he’s playing in a field where two of the three best players on the planet are scrambling just to be present for the weekend.
This tells me something important about where we are in professional golf right now. The field is tighter than it’s been in years. You can’t just show up anymore. You can’t rely on reputation or past performance.
Schauffele’s Moment Might Actually Be Here
Let me be honest—I’ve been skeptical about Xander Schauffele for a while now. I’ve seen the talent, watched him play some incredible golf, and then watched him fade when it mattered most. But something feels different this week. That 65 on Friday isn’t just a good round; it’s a statement that he’s ready to be in contention when the pressure is highest.
“Two back of the lead is Xander Schauffele, whose 65 on Friday reminded everyone of his considerable talent following a spell where we haven’t always seen the best of the American.”
Having caddied for Tom Lehman back in the day, I understand what separates champions from very good players: it’s the ability to get comfortable being uncomfortable. Schauffele is now just two shots back, paired late on Saturday, playing with all the pressure in the world. This is exactly where you find out if a guy has it or not.
The McIlroy Question
I won’t overanalyze Rory’s Friday struggles—even the best miss fairways and make bogeys. But I will say this: the defending champion starting the weekend eight shots behind the leader is precisely the kind of scoreboard pressure that either brings out his best or exposes cracks in his game. McIlroy has proven he can handle both situations over his career.
What matters now is Saturday afternoon. The third round at TPC Sawgrass is where tournaments get decided, not won.
Round Three Tee Times
| Time (ET/GMT) | Players |
|---|---|
| 9.25am / 1.25pm | Si Woo Kim, Scottie Scheffler |
| 9.55am / 1.55pm | Joe Highsmith, Rory McIlroy |
| 2.35pm / 6.35pm | Ludvig Åberg, Xander Schauffele |
The Bigger Picture
What strikes me most about this week is that we’re seeing the real state of professional golf in 2024. The stars aren’t invincible. Young players with world-class games can legitimately lead major championships. And the middle-of-the-pack player who executes can absolutely contend.
“The defending champion is Rory McIlroy, but he faced a wait to see if he would make the cut on Friday. In the end, his one over was enough to see him over the line.”
This is healthy for the game. It makes tournaments unpredictable. It makes Saturday afternoon matter. And for those of us who’ve covered this sport long enough to see the patterns, it means we’re watching something genuinely competitive unfold.
Saturday at TPC Sawgrass should be spectacular.

