Gotterup’s Phoenix Rise Signals a New Era of Tour Maturity
I’ve covered 15 Masters Tournaments, spent three decades around professional golf, and caddied long enough to know when a player has genuinely turned a corner. What I’m seeing from Chris Gotterup this week at TPC Scottsdale isn’t just a hot putter or favorable conditions—it’s the kind of measured improvement that separates flash-in-the-pan success from sustainable excellence.
Thursday’s 8-under 63 was spectacular, sure. But what struck me more was the maturity in how Gotterup described his approach. This is a 26-year-old who could’ve coasted on a great 2025, rested on the assumption that the hard work was done. Instead, he went back to the drawing board.
“We went through some stats from last year, and obviously, I had a great year last year. There were like two or three things that were kind of glaring in terms of losing shots in spots where if I didn’t look at stats I probably would’ve said I did decent at. We worked on that, and that was really the only things—other than just normal practice.”
That’s not the sound of a kid getting lucky. That’s professional due diligence. After 35 years in this business, I can tell you: the players who stick around are the ones willing to nitpick their own success.
Nine Rounds, Zero Bogeys Below Par
Here’s the number that’s actually keeping me up: Gotterup has now played nine consecutive rounds in 2026, and every single one has been under par. Every. Single. One. Even at the brutally difficult Torrey Pines South Course, where the rough is brutal and the greens have more personality than most Tour players.
In my experience, that kind of consistency is rarer than an eagle-eagle-birdie to finish a tournament. I’ve seen plenty of hot streaks, but they usually involve a missed cut or a round in the 71-72 range that breaks the spell. The fact that Gotterup hasn’t had one off day suggests something deeper is happening—his game isn’t just peaking; it’s sustainable.
The iron play and course management improvements he mentioned aren’t flashy. They won’t make highlight reels. But they’re the foundation of a player who can win multiple times on Tour rather than flaming out after a brief run of success.
What Scottsdale’s Wind Did (and Didn’t Do)
Let’s talk conditions for a moment, because this matters more than casual fans realize. Thursday morning was relatively calm. By afternoon, the wind picked up significantly—the course became tougher by more than half a stroke, according to the scoring data. Yet Hideki Matsuyama still managed a 3-under 68.
That context actually *enhances* Gotterup’s 63, rather than diminishing it. He wasn’t taking advantage of easy conditions; he was playing excellent golf when opportunity presented itself. The afternoon wave saw Scottie Scheffler post his first round over par since June 2025, Viktor Hovland struggle to 69, and Xander Schauffele sign for 71. These aren’t chokers—they’re elite players getting tested by wind and trouble.
For Gotterup to go bogey-free under those early conditions, and with the knowledge that more weather was coming, speaks to a player managing expectations while maximizing advantages. That’s maturity.
The Rest of the Field: Potential Everywhere
Matt Fitzpatrick’s 6-under 66 deserves more than a footnote, and I appreciated his perspective on the finish:
“It’s disappointing. I guess the way you got to look at it is if I started bogey, bogey, and you finish 6-under, you come off feeling like the greatest player in the world. You got to try and reframe it there.”
That’s healthy. Fitzpatrick finished strong enough to sit two shots back, and his back-nine struggles (bogeys on 8 and 9) are easily correctable. The 29 on the front nine proved he’s got the game to compete here.
The real story beyond Gotterup, though, is the youth movement. Pierceson Coody—a player who missed six cuts in his rookie season—is now leading the Aon Swing 5 rankings and sitting at 5-under at Phoenix. Michael Thorbjornsen, Nicolai Hojgaard, and Sam Stevens are all bunched at that same mark. This isn’t some one-man show; this is a wave of young talent playing with confidence and conviction.
Coody’s trajectory particularly interests me. He told us this is “a different spot than I was in my rookie year,” and you can feel the evolution in his words. Last year he wasn’t even playing the West Coast swing. Now he’s positioned to secure multiple signature event invitations with a win. That’s not luck; that’s a player growing into the Tour.
The Scottsdale Precedent
Having been around golf long enough to see patterns repeat, I’d note that TPC Scottsdale has a way of establishing early-season momentum. The course suits aggressive players, rewards good iron play, and doesn’t penalize poor shots as brutally as some venues. If Gotterup can navigate the weekend—and those tougher conditions—with anything resembling Thursday’s poise, we’re looking at a legitimate threat to win.
What strikes me most is that this isn’t shocking. This is the logical endpoint of the work Gotterup put in during the offseason. His comment about TGL helping him with “the adrenaline rush you get inside there and being able to hit shots under pressure” is worth noting—the Tour’s new alternative events are actually serving their intended purpose for some players, providing competitive pressure in a controlled environment. That’s a positive development, even if not everyone’s sold on the format itself.
Through three starts this season, Gotterup has tasted victory already and is playing the kind of patient, intelligent golf that wins tournaments. The field chasing him is young and talented but not yet battle-tested at this level. Scottie will adjust. Fitzpatrick is two shots back. But right now, the 3-to-1 favorite has earned it.

