After 35 years covering professional golf, I’ve learned that the first Signature Event of the season tells you more about the Tour’s direction than any offseason memo ever could. This week at Pebble Beach, we’re getting a fascinating early portrait of 2026—and it’s more complicated than the odds sheet suggests.
Let me be direct: Scottie Scheffler at +300 is the most boring favorite I’ve seen in years, and I mean that as a compliment to his dominance. The guy has essentially lapped the field in terms of consistency and peak performance. But what really intrigues me is the conversation happening three tiers down the betting board, where some genuine intrigue is brewing.
The McIlroy Question Mark
Rory coming back at +1400 after sitting out the first four events raises an eyebrow for me. I’ve caddied for Tom Lehman, covered fifteen Masters, and I’ve seen enough Tour cycles to know that strategic scheduling isn’t always what it appears to be on the surface. Is Rory truly fresh and focused, or is he fighting something we’re not seeing?
What we know: he won here last year, he’s the defending champion, and he’s apparently ready to go. But here’s what strikes me about his absence from the early schedule—it suggests confidence, sure, but it also suggests he didn’t feel the need to build momentum the traditional way. That’s either brilliant or concerning, depending on how the next 72 hours unfold.
Si Woo Kim: The Sleeper Nobody’s Talking About
Now this is where I’ll stick my neck out. The model is “extremely high on Kim,” and frankly, after watching him play the first month, I understand why.
“Kim has been one of the hottest golfers on Tour so far this year, finishing no worse than T11 in his four events. He’s been T6 or better in his last three events, and is coming off a T3 at the WM Phoenix Open and a T2 the prior week at the Farmers Insurance Open.”
Look, in my experience, when a player gets into that kind of rhythm—when he’s literally incapable of playing poorly—something clicks. It’s usually technical, sometimes mental, but it’s real. And here’s the kicker: Kim has finished in the top 15 at Pebble Beach in back-to-back seasons. That’s not luck. That’s course knowledge meeting form. At +2500, he’s considerably undervalued.
I’ve seen this movie before. You get a guy who’s playing within himself, trusting his swing, and suddenly he shows up at a place that suits his eye and his game. Kim’s short-iron play has been crisp—I watched him at Phoenix—and this course doesn’t punish that. It rewards it.
The Gotterup Puzzle
Here’s where the predictive models earn their keep. Chris Gotterup just won the WM Phoenix Open after a playoff, and he’s played exactly three events this season, winning two of them. He’s red-hot, right? And yet:
“Gotterup, who has won two of the three events he’s played in this year, including the WM Phoenix Open last week, doesn’t even finish in the top 10 this week. He’s a golfer to avoid in Pebble Beach bets.”
The reasoning is sound—he’s never played Pebble before, and there’s no historical data to suggest he’ll suddenly become a top-10 threat at a course he doesn’t know. But I’ll offer a counterpoint from three decades of observation: sometimes a player in full flight can overcome course inexperience through sheer confidence and momentum. That said, the models are typically right about these things, and the gap between winning at Phoenix and competing at Pebble is wider than most casual fans realize.
What This Week Really Means
The field at Pebble is loaded—Schauffele, Fleetwood, Hovland, Rose, all sitting between +2500 and +2700. That clustering tells me something important: the talent level on the Tour has genuinely evened out compared to even five years ago. There’s no five-shot talent gap anymore. There’s execution, course fit, and momentum.
What I find most compelling about this event is what it signals about the 2026 season structure. Signature Events are supposed to feature the game’s elite and rising stars in a truly accessible format. Pebble Beach, with its dual celebrity and amateur component, has always been about accessibility meeting prestige. That balance matters.
“The model is also targeting four longshots of +3000 or longer as top-10 contenders, including one huge +5000 sleeper.”
Those sleepers—we’re probably talking about names like Daniel Berger or Harris English, both at +5000—represent the philosophical heart of professional golf in 2026. The Tour has depth. Real depth. A player at 50-to-1 odds can absolutely contend at a major venue.
The Season Ahead
Scheffler remains the gravitational center of the golf universe, but this week should clarify whether we’re looking at a one-man show or a genuinely competitive season. If Scheffler wins—which the odds heavily suggest—then we reset expectations around whether anyone can actually challenge him. If someone else does, well, then we’re in for something genuinely interesting.
Having spent the better part of four decades around this game, I’ve learned that early-season tournaments are as much about narrative as results. Pebble Beach this week will tell us whether 2026 belongs entirely to one player or whether the field has actually closed the gap.
One way or another, we’ll know a lot more by Sunday evening.

