The Valspar’s Real Story Isn’t About the Favorites—It’s About the Next Wave
After 35 years covering this tour, I’ve learned that the most interesting tournaments aren’t always won by the guys everyone expects. The 2026 Valspar Championship, wrapping up the Florida Swing this week at Innisbrook’s Copperhead Course, is shaping up to be one of those weeks where the narrative gets interesting precisely because some big names decided to take a breather.
Sure, Scottie Scheffler and Rory McIlroy sitting out speaks volumes about how tour players now manage their schedules. But here’s what really caught my attention: with Xander Schauffele at +1000 and Matt Fitzpatrick at +1300, we’re looking at a field that feels wide open in ways that don’t show up in the odds boards.
The Cantlay Question Nobody’s Asking
Look, I’ve got nothing but respect for Patrick Cantlay. Eight-time PGA Tour winner, consistently solid, the kind of guy who shows up and competes. But I think there’s something telling in the analytics when a proven winner with that pedigree finds himself as a fade candidate in a field like this.
Patrick Cantlay, an eight-time PGA winner, barely cracks the top 10 despite being one of the favorites. He’s a golfer to fade this week.
In my experience, when a player of Cantlay’s caliber hasn’t recorded a top-10 finish six events into a season and has missed two cuts—well, that’s not noise. That’s a signal. The question isn’t whether the model is right to fade him; it’s what’s actually going on with his game right now. Is it mechanical? Mental? Tour fatigue? These are the conversations I’m having with my sources inside the ropes, and nobody’s got a clean answer yet.
That uncertainty alone makes Cantlay a tough sell at +2500, no matter how talented he is.
Meet the Kid Who Should’ve Already Won Multiple Times
Here’s where things get interesting. Jacob Bridgeman—a 26-year-old American who won the Genesis Invitational back in February—represents exactly the kind of emerging talent that reshapes tour dynamics every few years. I’ve been around long enough to recognize the pattern, and this kid fits it.
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.
Think about that resume: Genesis winner, then a T5 at The Players Championship last week, and not a single finish worse than 18th in six starts. That’s not luck. That’s consistency against tour-level fields. What strikes me most is the trajectory—this isn’t a guy who snuck into one tournament and caught lightning in a bottle. This is someone whose game is maturing in real time, under pressure, against the best players in the world.
I’ve caddied for Tom Lehman in the ’90s, covered fifteen Masters, and I’ve seen enough breakout seasons to know the difference between a hot streak and genuine improvement. Bridgeman’s numbers suggest the latter.
The Field Is Actually Stronger Than It Looks
Don’t let the absences fool you. This Valspar field is legitimately deep. You’ve got Hovland at +1700, Fitzpatrick at +1300, and a supporting cast that includes past major winners Jordan Spieth, J.J. Spaun, and Wyndham Clark. Brooks Koepka is here too, sitting at +2500.
What I find most compelling is how this particular grouping of players actually *suits* Innisbrook. The Copperhead Course isn’t a bombers’ paradise—it’s a thinking man’s golf course. It rewards precision and course management as much as raw power. Viktor Hovland, for instance, thrives in those conditions. So does Fitzpatrick. These aren’t just names; they’re names that fit the setup.
The Longshot Opportunity
Every week, there are +3000 or higher guys who make a run, and the model apparently sees two this week worth tracking. Without spoiling the specifics, I’ll say this: when you’ve got a relatively soft field with Scheffler and McIlroy out, and you’ve got a course that doesn’t require absolute mastery of one particular skill set, that’s when value emerges at the longer odds.
Having spent decades watching tour dynamics play out, I’ve learned that tournaments like this—where the favorite might not be a generational talent, where emerging players have legitimate paths to victory, where the course favors intelligence over raw power—these are the weeks where golf becomes most interesting.
The model is also targeting two golfers of +3000 or higher who make a strong run for the title.
The Valspar doesn’t carry the weight of a major or the prestige of a flagship event. But for understanding where the tour actually stands in 2026—who’s ascending, who’s struggling, what the next generation looks like—it might tell us more than we expect.
That’s what I’ll be watching for this week.

