Pebble’s Wide-Open Weekend Sets Stage for Signature Event Statement
There’s something about the halfway point at Pebble Beach that gets under your skin. I’ve been coming here for thirty-five years now—some trips as a caddie, most as a correspondent—and I’ve learned that this place has a way of sorting out who belongs and who doesn’t when the pressure turns up the heat.
Walking the course Friday afternoon, watching Akshay Bhatia and Ryo Hisatsune navigate Spyglass Hill’s treacherous back nine, I was struck by how refreshingly crowded this leaderboard looks heading into Moving Day. In my experience, that’s either a sign of a golf course playing softer than expected or—and I think this is what we’re seeing—a field with genuine depth that’s refusing to separate.
The Wide-Open Picture
“Akshay Bhatia and Ryo Hisatsune are the leaders and, in pursuit of the pair, are Rickie Fowler and Sam Burns at 14-under, as well as Min Woo Lee, Jacob Bridgeman and Sepp Straka at 12-under.”
Let’s be honest: in a typical PGA Tour event, a two-shot lead halfway through feels more substantial. But here we have seven players within three strokes of the lead, and another five right on their heels. That’s not a weakness in the leaderboard—that’s a strength. It tells me this field is playing championship-level golf.
What strikes me most about Bhatia’s position at 15-under is the maturity of his play through two rounds. He’s not attacking recklessly; he’s not being conservative either. He’s playing the kind of patient, institutional golf that wins majors. Hisatsune, meanwhile, is chasing his first PGA Tour victory, and coming off a strong showing at last week’s Phoenix Open. That hunger is real, and it matters on days like Saturday and Sunday at Pebble.
But here’s what I want to highlight: the presence of established names like Fitzpatrick, Bradley, Matsuyama, Schauffele, and Spieth all sitting at 10-under—they’re only five shots back with eighteen holes to play. This is exactly the kind of tournament that bites you if you’re not paying attention.
The Defending Champion Factor
Rory McIlroy is at 9-under, nine shots adrift, defending champion status notwithstanding. In thirty-five years covering this tour, I’ve seen defending champions make miraculous runs, and I’ve seen them pack it in early. McIlroy’s not the packing-it-in type, but being nine back at Pebble Beach against this field? That’s a mountain with teeth.
“Last week’s WM Phoenix Open winner, Chris Gotterup, is nine-under, as are Tommy Fleetwood and Rory McIlroy, who is the defending champion at Pebble Beach.”
What’s interesting is that Gotterup finds himself right there alongside McIlroy at 9-under, having won just seven days ago in Phoenix. I’ve caddied for players in his position before—fresh off a win, expecting momentum to carry—and I can tell you it’s a delicate mental balance. You’re riding confidence, sure, but you’re also exhausted in ways fans don’t appreciate. Playing well on back-to-back weeks at this level requires a special kind of energy management.
Saturday’s Pivotal Afternoon
The fact that Pebble Beach hosts both Saturday and Sunday is significant. The course will firm up considerably from Round 3 to Round 4, assuming decent weather. That means Saturday’s leaders—starting at 1:45pm ET—will be playing a different golf course than those in the early groups. Bhatia and Hisatsune get the benefit of firm, fast greens that reward precision. By Sunday, if someone’s made a charge, the conditions might actually favor aggression.
“The leaders get underway at 1.45pm (ET), with three balls present for the third round in the Monterey Peninsula.”
One last observation before we head into the weekend: this is a Signature Event, which means the field is elite, the purse is substantial, and every player here is acutely aware that finishes matter as we build toward the bigger tournaments ahead. There’s no coasting, no “just getting rounds in.” These guys are playing for positioning, for confidence, for their season narratives.
Having been around this tour long enough to see patterns, I genuinely believe we’re looking at a weekend where any of the top-ten players could realistically contend come Sunday afternoon. Bhatia and Hisatsune have earned their spot at the top, but they haven’t separated themselves. That’s good for golf. That’s good for fans. And for those of us who’ve followed this sport through three and a half decades of coverage, that’s exactly what we hope to see when the stakes get real.
Saturday and Sunday at Pebble Beach promise to be something special.

