When the Best Struggle: What Friday’s Players Championship Tells Us About Golf in 2026
I’ve been walking these fairways for thirty-five years, and I’ll tell you something I’ve learned: the Players Championship has a way of separating the pretenders from the contenders faster than any other event on the calendar. Thursday at TPC Sawgrass wasn’t just brutal—it was illuminating. And what it revealed about where professional golf stands right now is worth your attention.
The headline everyone grabbed was Scottie Scheffler shooting 72, our World No. 1 grinding on the range in pouring rain like some mid-pack journeyman trying to save his card. Look, I caddied for Tom Lehman back in the day, and I watched him battle through plenty of rough days at this place. But there’s something different about seeing Scheffler—a guy who’s been practically untouchable this season—left to chase the cut line instead of leading it. That doesn’t happen often, and when it does, it matters.
The Tale of Two Narrative Arcs
What strikes me most about Friday’s setup isn’t just who’s struggling—it’s the contrast between the camps. On one side, you’ve got your established stars grinding just to make the weekend: Scheffler at 72, Rory McIlroy nursing that nagging back injury and sitting at 74, Jordan Spieth fighting the cut line after a brutal double at 18. These are three of the most accomplished players in the game, and they’re all essentially in survival mode.
“A brutal opening day at TPC Sawgrass saw numerous rollercoaster rounds. It left World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler grinding on the range in the pouring rain after he finished off a 72.”
On the other side? Five players are tied for the lead at five under, with Sahith Theegala among them. Austin Smotherman has a birdie putt to reach 16 under—16 under!—and he’ll finish that in the morning. This isn’t the typical “new blood rises” narrative we see play out at major championships. This is something more interesting: it’s a sign that the talent distribution on tour has genuinely expanded.
In my three decades covering this game, I’ve seen eras where six or seven names controlled the conversation. Right now? The field is deeper, more competitive, and frankly, more unpredictable than I can remember. That should excite us all, even if it makes the defending champ look mortal for a few hours.
Justin Thomas and the Comeback Angle
Here’s where I want to pivot toward something more optimistic, because Friday’s second round has genuine intrigue beyond just “who survives the cut?”
Justin Thomas fired a 68 on Thursday, just one shot back of the lead heading into Friday. That might seem like small potatoes, but context matters: he was ugly in a missed cut last week. In my experience, when a player bounces back that quickly with a solid round in difficult conditions, you’re looking at a competitor who’s found something mechanically or mentally. Thomas is a two-time major champion with serious pedigree, and he’s hunting. That matters for Friday’s viewing experience, especially since:
“Two-time major champion Justin Thomas came back from an ugly missed cut last week to fire a 68 on Thursday. He’ll start Friday’s second round one shot off the lead.”
He’ll be playing alongside—or near—the leaders when the pressure intensifies. That’s appointment television right there.
What to Watch on Friday
If you’re planning your Friday around golf, here’s what you need to know:
Golf Channel carries TV coverage from 1-7 p.m. ET, which gives you the prime afternoon slots when the course tightens up and the drama typically peaks. But here’s my advice: if you can swing it, fire up PGA Tour Live on ESPN+ at 7:30 a.m. ET. That’s when the early starters take on Stadium Course at its freshest—softest greens, gentler winds. You’ll see pure golf, not just the afternoon scramble.
The featured group and featured hole coverage all day long means you can follow exactly where the leaders are and how they’re responding to the pressure. This is the modern fan’s advantage over watching golf in the old cable days—you’re not stuck with ESPN’s production choices. You can curate your own experience.
The Bigger Picture
Here’s what I think matters most as we head into Friday: this tournament is proving that no lead is safe anymore, no player is untouchable, and the margin between “I’m winning this thing” and “I need to make the cut” is thinner than ever. Scheffler, McIlroy, and Spieth aren’t suddenly bad golfers. They got caught in the specific alchemy of TPC Sawgrass on a difficult day—variable wind, rain, demanding rough. But they also got outplayed by hungry competitors who executed under pressure.
That’s the state of professional golf in 2026, and I’d argue it’s a healthier place than when five names essentially owned the conversation.
Friday’s second round will sort things out. The cut line will fall where it falls. But what we’ve already learned is that this is a wide-open event, and that makes it must-watch television.

