Gotterup’s Breakthrough Masks a Deeper Story: Matsuyama’s Collapse and Golf’s Playoff Roulette
There’s a moment in every caddie’s life when you realize that tournaments aren’t won—they’re often lost. Having stood in the bag for Tom Lehman during his own playoff heartbreaks, I recognized something familiar watching Hideki Matsuyama’s final nine holes at TPC Scottsdale on Sunday. It wasn’t Gotterup’s brilliant closing stretch that’ll stick with me. It was Matsuyama’s unraveling, and what it tells us about the fragility of leads in modern professional golf.
Let’s be clear: Chris Gotterup earned his Phoenix Open victory. A closing 7-under 64 punctuated by five birdies in his final six holes is exactly the kind of aggressive, calculated pressure that wins tournaments. His 27-foot birdie putt in the playoff to seal his fourth career PGA Tour win—second in three starts this season—was the exclamation point on a season that’s quietly positioning him as one of the tour’s most intriguing young talents. When a player can channel that kind of composure while literally sitting on the sidelines, watching his destiny unfold with drivers in hand, there’s something special happening.
“I feel confident in what I’m doing and feel like I have played well enough to feel confident to be able to be in those positions. So far, I’ve been able to capitalize on those.”
That Gotterup quote isn’t just winner’s speak. It’s the voice of someone who understands the mental architecture required to win on tour. He’s won the Sony Open and now the Phoenix Open in three starts. That’s not luck. That’s a player entering flow states when it matters most.
The Matsuyama Puzzle
But here’s what fascinates me more: Matsuyama’s collapse. The man entered Sunday with a one-shot lead and a perfect track record—five previous 54-hole leads converted to five wins. Five for five. That’s elite-level closing. Yet he shot 68 in ideal scoring conditions, missing 11 fairways and making a critical error that any touring pro shouldn’t make at that stage of a major tournament sprint.
“I wanted to avoid the playoff as much as I could, but I just hit a bad tee shot there in regulation at 18.”
In my 35 years covering this tour, I’ve learned that this is the most dangerous statement a player can make. It speaks to a loss of control—not mechanical, but mental. The tee shot is the one thing you completely control. When the best players start missing fairways in bunches late in a tournament, particularly on reachable par-4s like 17 and 18 at Scottsdale, something has shifted in their confidence. It’s not always visible, but it’s real.
What strikes me about Matsuyama’s situation is that it reveals a hard truth about 54-hole leads in 2024 golf: they’re less predictive than they used to be. The depth of talent on tour has compressed dramatically since I started covering this circuit. When Matsuyama held that one-shot lead, he was facing not just Gotterup, but a field where any of fifteen players could reasonably win. Scottie Scheffler, the world’s No. 1 player, nearly forced his way into the conversation despite opening with a 73.
Scheffler’s Reminder and the Importance of Early Rounds
Let’s pause on Scheffler for a moment, because his weekend performance tells its own story. The man was in genuine danger of missing the cut after 36 holes, then shot 65-64 to nearly steal a tournament that appeared decided. His run of three straight birdies on the back nine, capped by an absolutely ridiculous 72-foot putt from the fringe on 14, showed why he’s the best player in the world. But it also highlighted his own early-round vulnerability.
“I played pretty well — only one round where I didn’t have my best stuff. If I get in the house the first day with a couple under par it’s a little different story today.”
Scheffler’s self-assessment is honest, and it’s a reminder that even the elite can’t afford soft opening rounds at Scottsdale. The Phoenix Open’s format and reputation for rowdy spectators creates a unique pressure that separates those mentally prepared for it from those who aren’t.
What This Means for the Tour’s Trajectory
Gotterup’s emergence as a consistent winner—he’s now won twice in three weeks to start the season—suggests the tour is deepening its talent pool in meaningful ways. Young players are entering the circuit with better technical preparation, mental coaching, and institutional support than they did even a decade ago. That’s healthy for the sport’s long-term competitive balance.
Matsuyama’s struggles, conversely, remind us that no lead is truly safe when conditions favor scoring and the field contains this many capable players. His record at Phoenix Open championship events (three wins in the event) is legitimately world-class, but this loss will sting because it involved a playoff—the cruelest possible way to lose a tournament you dominated most of the day.
What matters now is the arc. Gotterup has proven he can capitalize. Matsuyama will prove whether this was a momentary lapse or the beginning of something more concerning. And Scheffler, as always, demonstrated he’s never truly out of a tournament until the last putt drops.
That’s what 35 years of covering golf teaches you: the narrative isn’t the winning shot. It’s what comes next.

