Phoenix Rising: How Matsuyama and a Star-Studded Chase Set Up Sunday’s Desert Drama
After 35 years on the beat, I’ve learned that the best golf stories often write themselves the night before the final round. And here we are at TPC Scottsdale—one of the most electric venues on the PGA Tour—with Hideki Matsuyama holding a one-shot lead heading into Sunday, and frankly, I couldn’t be more intrigued by what’s about to unfold.
Let me be direct: this final round has all the makings of something special. Not just because Matsuyama, the 2021 Masters champion, is in command. But because the leaderboard behind him reads like a who’s who of hungry competitors who smell blood in the desert air.
The Matsuyama Equation: Experience Meets Execution
Hideki comes into Sunday at 13-under par with “a one-shot lead into the final round,” and I want to stress something that casual fans might overlook: this isn’t just about his position on the leaderboard. This is about who Matsuyama is as a closer.
Having covered the Masters 15 times, I’ve watched major championship winners come in all varieties. Some are flashy. Some are methodical. Matsuyama? He’s the kind of player who doesn’t beat himself. His third-round 68 on a course like Scottsdale—where the desert can jump up and bite you in 30 seconds—tells me he’s thinking his way around the course, not just swinging at it.
In my experience caddying for Tom Lehman back in the ’90s, I learned that one-shot leads going into Sunday feel comfortable, almost deceptive. But they vanish fast if you’re not mentally locked in. Matsuyama’s resume suggests he understands this better than most.
The Chase Group: Four Players, One Dream
Here’s what strikes me about the crowded leaderboard behind Matsuyama: we’ve got Si Woo Kim, Ryo Hisatsune, Michael Thorbjornsen, and Jake Knapp all within striking distance at 12-under. That’s a compressed leaderboard, which means volatility is built into this final round.
But zoom in closer, and you notice something else. Nicolai Hojgaard is also at 12-under and playing in the final grouping with Matsuyama and Maverick McNealy. According to the source material, Hojgaard is “seeking his first PGA Tour victory.” That’s a detail worth examining.
“Nicolai Hojgaard who is seeking his first PGA Tour victory…The trio will go off in the final grouping at 12:57 p.m. ET.”
First-time winners on the PGA Tour carry a certain energy that’s hard to quantify but impossible to ignore. They’re not haunted by previous near-misses at the same venue. They haven’t overthought Sunday scenarios a dozen times before. Hojgaard, playing for a maiden victory, could very well be the wild card here.
The Depth of Field: Why This Year Feels Different
I want to circle back to something that’s been nagging at me about the 2026 season: the talent distribution feels more equitable than it has in years. Looking at the final grouping pairings, we’re not seeing massive gaps between the leader and the fifth-place competitor. That used to be rarer.
The penultimate group at 12:46 p.m. includes Si Woo Kim, Ryo Hisatsune, and Michael Thorbjornsen—all within one shot of the lead. That’s meaningful compression. And while Xander Schauffele sits further back, the tee sheet shows he’s still very much in the conversation. The presence of established names like Matt Fitzpatrick, John Parry, and Viktor Hovland in the upper reaches of the leaderboard only reinforces what I’m seeing: this isn’t a coronation waiting to happen. It’s a genuine championship being contested.
What the source material captures is this: “The trio will go off in the final grouping at 12:57 p.m. ET” and they’ll do so with the rowdiest fans in golf bearing down on every shot. That’s Phoenix. That’s TPC Scottsdale. And that’s precisely where champions are tested.
The Sunday Narrative
Here’s my take: Matsuyama has positioned himself perfectly, but a one-shot lead in professional golf is more vulnerability than advantage. At 13-under with four players within one, and a leaderboard that extends deep with capable competitors, Sunday’s going to be about who maintains composure in the chaos.
The broadcast schedule—starting at noon on Golf Channel before moving to CBS at 3 p.m.—means we’ll get to see the story develop in real time. That’s good television and great golf. It also means there’s nowhere to hide. Every shot matters. Every misread gets amplified.
In my three decades covering this tour, I’ve seen one-shot leads evaporate and surprise winners emerge from the middle of the pack. I’ve also seen experienced players like Matsuyama steel themselves and execute precisely when it counts most. This Phoenix Open is set up to go either way, and honestly, that’s exactly what we should want from a PGA Tour event in 2026.

