Pebble Beach 2026: When Early-Season Dominance Meets the Ultimate Test
After 35 years of watching this tour operate, I’ve learned that January tells you a lot about what’s coming down the pike. And what I’m seeing this week at Pebble Beach isn’t just another signature event—it’s a referendum on whether the early narrative of 2026 actually holds water, or if it’s built on something more fragile.
Let me be direct: we’re watching three different stories play out simultaneously, and that’s what makes this week genuinely fascinating.
The Scheffler Question
Scottie Scheffler opens as a heavy 3-1 favorite, and frankly, that feels right. A win and a T3 to start the season? The man is playing a different sport right now. I’ve caddied alongside some great talents—worked Tom’s bag back in ’94 when he was figuring out how to compete at the highest level—and I can tell you what separates guys like that from mere mortals is consistency at the start of years. Scheffler has it in spades.
But here’s what strikes me about his positioning this week: Pebble Beach has historically been a venue that rewards creativity and shot-making versatility more than pure dominance. The ocean air, the unpredictable greens, the way the course can shift personality from morning to afternoon—these are the kinds of variables that occasionally humble even the best. Scheffler will likely win this tournament at some point in his career. Whether it happens this week feels less certain than his odds suggest.
McIlroy’s Homecoming and the Weight of Defense
Rory making his stateside debut as defending champion adds a layer of intrigue I genuinely relish. “Reigning champion Rory McIlroy is making his season debut stateside, and if he’s going to repeat as a winner at Pebble Beach Golf Links, he’ll have to do so by outlasting the strongest field of the young campaign.”
That sentence contains multitudes. McIlroy won here last year. The man knows the nuances, the speed of the greens, which angles work on the par 5s. But defending a title at an event this stacked? I’ve watched this dynamic play out dozens of times over my tenure at the Duffer. The defending champ often faces an invisible pressure that nobody else does. He’s trying to prove it wasn’t a fluke. Everyone else is just trying to win.
In my experience, that psychological edge matters more than most statistical models account for. McIlroy’s got the game to repeat—he always does—but he’ll need something extra this week. Fortunately, he’s been in position to win majors and signature events enough times that he knows how to compartmentalize that pressure.
The Gotterup Factor and Late-Season Carryover
Now Chris Gotterup—here’s where I think the real story lives. “Last week’s winner, Chris Gotterup, who has a pair of victories already in 2026 and has made it clear that his surge late last season was far from a fluke.”
Two wins already. Two wins! This isn’t some flash-in-the-pan performance. This is genuine momentum, and I think what Gotterup represents this season—and what some people in the media are sleeping on—is the fallacy of the “breakthrough year” narrative. We love to package a player’s rise into a neat story: “Finally arrived,” “Took him time to figure it out,” etc. But what Gotterup is demonstrating is that sometimes late-season success isn’t a preview—it’s the beginning of a new normal.
Having covered 15 Masters and more signature events than I can count, I’ve seen this pattern before. A guy gets hot in the fall, carries it into winter, and suddenly he’s a legitimate threat in January. The question isn’t whether Gotterup is for real—he’s already proven that. The question is whether he can maintain it against a field this strong. That’s a different animal.
Fleetwood’s Quiet Entry
Tommy Fleetwood’s Tour Championship win at East Lake last August was significant, and I don’t think it got nearly enough attention. “Like McIlroy, Pebble Beach will be our first look at Tour Championship winner Tommy Fleetwood on the PGA Tour this season, as he enters 2026 with lofty expectations after finally breaking through at East Lake last August.”
There’s something about a player who breaks through after years of close calls. Fleetwood’s been knocking on the door for years—solid, reliable, occasionally brilliant. But that East Lake win? That changes a player’s internal calculus. He knows he can do it now. That kind of validation is worth more than any ranking.
What This Week Actually Means
Pebble Beach this week represents everything the modern PGA Tour is trying to accomplish: the world’s best players, a legendary venue, a field so strong that the 25th-ranked player might not even crack the top 20 contenders. The TV coverage is comprehensive, the competition is genuine, and the golf should be exceptional.
But what I’m really interested in is whether any of these early-season narratives hold. Does Scheffler’s dominance continue, or does a tough draw and some cold putting knock him back a notch? Does McIlroy prove defending a title is still in the repertoire? Can Gotterup quiet the skeptics, or does regression rear its inevitable head? Can Fleetwood build on East Lake, or was that breakthrough more singular than prologue?
That’s why we watch. That’s why I’m still doing this after all these years. Pebble Beach will provide answers this week.

