The Players Championship 2026: A Wide-Open Field and the Troubling Questions Facing Golf’s Elite
Ponte Vedra Beach is primed for chaos, and that might be exactly what the PGA Tour needs right now.
Having walked these fairways with some of the game’s greats over the past 35 years—and having carried Tom Lehman’s bag through some of our most memorable moments—I’ve learned to recognize when a tournament field is genuinely uncertain versus when it just appears that way on paper. This year at TPC Sawgrass feels genuinely uncertain, and frankly, it’s a refreshing departure from the last couple of seasons.
For the better part of two years, we’ve watched Scottie Scheffler and Rory McIlroy essentially mail in their performances at this event. But this week? Both are walking in wounded, and that’s changed everything about how I’m viewing this field of 123 players.
When the Best Aren’t Playing Their Best
What strikes me most about this moment is how it exposes a larger truth about competitive golf: dominance is fragile. Scheffler remains the world No. 1, yet here he is on the range frantically testing driver heads, searching for answers he should already have. The stat that should concern everyone—and I mean everyone invested in watching compelling golf—is buried in the expert analysis: Scheffler is 88th in strokes gained approaching the green this season.
In my experience, when Scottie loses his iron play, it’s not a minor adjustment. It’s a fundamental recalibration. That’s what happened to him in late 2023 before his world-beating stretch. The difference then was he had time to find it. Now, he’s arriving at a golf course that absolutely demands precision iron play.
"The two-time winner of The Players has looked surprisingly mortal of late, particularly with his iron play. Scheffler is a shocking 88th in strokes gained approaching the green, a stat category he’s dominated over the past five years."
McIlroy’s situation is worse, obviously. A defending champion nursing a back injury that’s already cost him one tournament? I’ve seen this movie before, and the endings aren’t usually happy. The fact that he didn’t arrive until Monday tells you everything you need to know about the gravity of his condition. Players don’t play games with back spasms at The Players Championship.
The Young Guns and the Opportunity
What I find genuinely exciting about this year’s field is the emergence of legitimate alternatives. Collin Morikawa entering this event riding consecutive top-10 finishes after winning at Pebble Beach—that’s a narrative worth tracking. Three different expert analysts picked him outright as their winner, and that’s not coincidence. That’s consensus recognizing a player in rare form.
"Morikawa enters this Players Championship following his win at Pebble Beach and top 10 finishes at Riviera and Bay Hill. The more difficult conditions will accentuate the two-time major champion’s skillset."
But here’s what really interests me: the statistical profiles of players like Si Woo Kim and Ryan Gerard suggest that we’re about to see a Players Championship defined by ball-striking rather than the star power we’re accustomed to. Kim’s 1.2 strokes gained approaching the green is generational stuff. The PGA Tour is starting to look less like a Scheffler exhibition and more like an actual competitive golf tournament, and I’m not sure how I feel about that yet.
The Surprise Prediction That Might Actually Happen
One of the expert picks really caught my attention:
"Four of the top 10 players in the OWGR miss the cut: There are some questions atop the world of golf right now! Scheffler’s iron play has not been sensational. McIlroy arrives while fighting off a back injury. Rose has wilted since his win at Torrey Pines. Gotterup makes just his second championship appearance. Both Robert MacIntyre and Xander Schauffele are far from their best."
I initially thought this was hyperbole. But the more I sit with it, the more it feels plausible. TPC Sawgrass doesn’t forgive confusion, and there’s an awful lot of confusion at the top of the world rankings right now. Scheffler’s searching for drivers. McIlroy’s contorting his body to test irons. Schauffele hasn’t found his rhythm. These aren’t the conditions where top-10 players typically miss cuts—these are exactly the conditions where they do.
The Path Forward
What matters most about this week, beyond who wins the trophy, is what it tells us about the competitive landscape heading into major championship season. If Morikawa wins and strengthens his case as a major factor, if young players like Chris Gotterup or Ludvig Åberg (despite the skepticism about his Sawgrass readiness) make meaningful noise, if someone like Russell Henley finally breaks through at this place after years of knocking on the door—it’s all indicative of a tour that’s finally spreading its wealth again.
The golden trophy will go to someone, and my three-plus decades in this business tells me it won’t be the person we’d most expect it to be. That’s not me being cute—that’s just what happens when the elite are searching instead of executing. TPC Sawgrass has a way of humbling the confident and rewarding the precise.
This week should be compelling. And for golf fans who’ve grown tired of the predictability we’ve had, that’s exactly what we need.

