Tiger Woods made his first public appearance Tuesday since his March car crash and arrest. He introduced Brian Rolapp ahead of the TOUR’s big announcement today.
And the PGA TOUR is finally doing the thing it has been hinting at for months: blowing up the schedule and starting over.
Beginning in 2028, the TOUR will move to a two-series model. At the top will be the PGA TOUR Championship Series, where the best players will play the biggest events. Under that will be the PGA TOUR Challenger Series, which will basically become the path for players trying to earn their way back into the big boy room.
The Championship Series will run roughly February through August and include 23-24 events, with the majors, The Players, team events, and a reworked postseason all folded in. These events will have 120-player fields, 36-hole cuts, and minimum $20 million purses.
So yes, cuts are back. Praise be.
The Challenger Series will have at least 20 events, 144-player fields, 36-hole cuts, and minimum $4 million purses. The top 20 players from that series will earn promotion each season, while the top 90 in the Championship Series will keep their spots. Win twice on the Challenger Series, and you can earn your way up immediately.
There will also be a “last chance” fall series for players trying to hang onto, or regain, Championship Series status. Think of it as golf’s version of a playoff for your job.
The TOUR Championship is changing too. East Lake will still host this year and again in 2027, but after that, the event is expected to rotate to “prestigious courses.”
And not just regular prestigious. We’re talking Pine Valley, Cypress Point, and Seminole.
For decades, golf fans have heard about these mythical places, but unless you knew a guy who knew a guy whose grandfather invented municipal bonds, you probably weren’t getting anywhere near them. Now, we may actually get to watch the best players in the world compete there with a trophy on the line.
Also, Match Play is expected to become part of the TOUR Championship picture, which is another welcome change. It will add some drama to what has become a lifeless end of season experience for fans.
Sign us all the way up. These changes are overall pretty small, and all of them are pretty fan forward, at least on the surface.
Rory McIlroy also released a statement supporting the new structure, saying:
“Today’s announcement is a positive step for professional golf. As more details emerge, it is encouraging to see the PGA Tour reaffirming the importance of meritocracy and creating a structure that will serve both players and fans well into the future
“I’ve always been proud to compete around the world, and the collaboration between the PGA Tour and DP World Tour is one founded in the betterment of the game globally. The commitment to elevate some of these historic international tournaments and national opens is incredibly important for the game and something I’m very supportive of.
“Over the last few years, golf has faced a period of uncertainty and division, which has not been in the best interests of the players, or the fans of the game. Today, we are putting the fans first, and I am excited about the future of our sport.”
Now, this is the same Rory who made headlines at the U.S. Open for calling the new Track 2 system “glorified Korn Ferry events,” so there is at least a little bit of message-board whiplash here.
But his larger point is probably the right one. Golf has been stuck in a weird, exhausting, political mud fight for the last few years, and fans have been the ones left trying to make sense of it.
In plain English: the PGA TOUR wants fewer meaningless weeks, more best-on-best golf, clearer stakes, and a real promotion/relegation system.
In even plainer English: the rich get richer, the middle class gets nervous, and golf fans may finally get a schedule that is easier to follow.
There are still plenty of details to figure out, but the direction is clear. The PGA TOUR is trying to become more like a real sports league.
Whether that fixes everything?
We’ll see.
But at least “Signature Event with no cut and half the field missing” appears to be headed for the big leaderboard in the sky.
That was a gutsy win for Wyndham Clark.
To overcome the course, make championship-level putts while watching your lead slip away, do it while paired with the World No. 1, fight a two-way miss off the driver, and have the entire crowd against you – that is nothing short of impressive.
People will try to hand-wave away his victory. There are already people saying things like, “He won this tournament in a 45-minute window on Thursday,” as if that matters at all.
He won the U.S. Open because he maintained his composure and flat-out putted better than everyone else in the field.
Look at that stat below. Do you know how insane that is?
When someone putts like that, it’s hard to beat them. Doesn’t matter if it’s in your club match, your buddies match, or the U.S. Open.
Putts from 20 to 25 feet.
• PGA Tour average: 12 percent
• Wyndham this week: 50 percentpic.twitter.com/DV0dgx9FtC— Jamie Kennedy (@jamierkennedy) June 21, 2026
The Fans In NY Stink
Wyndham Clark deserved better treatment from the fans in New York, and they were an odd group of “fans” all week.
Saturday, people were streaming out of the place early, and then on Sunday they all showed back up to cheer against their countrymen?
Now, I understand that people have a low tolerance for multi-millionaire golfers being whiny, and destroying locker rooms. Wyndham Clark has had some bad moments. It’s weak behavior, and should be called out.
But the man apologized, he paid restitution, and the members at Oakmont have repeatedly said that they are good with Wyndham, and that they have moved on.
So, why can’t everyone else move on? It’s fine to dislike a player for poor behavior, it’s also fine to cheer for Scottie Scheffler, but this trend of actively cheering against players, like what happened to Matt Fitzpatrick earlier this season, is lame.
Wyndham handled every bit of the heckling with class, and held on despite it.
By the way, he now has as many majors as Bryson DeChambeau, Dustin Johnson, Bernard Langer, Greg Norman, and Johnny Miller. Source
What else?
Sam Burns played incredibly well on Sunday, he had a birdie putt on the 72nd hole to tie Clark, which missed by about 1/16th of an inch. This is the 2nd year in a row he’s had a heartbreaking 2nd place finish at the U.S. Open.
Sam Burns was asked about the first thing his dad said to him when he got off the course.
His answer was wonderful. pic.twitter.com/dVjtUk2Ymu
— Kyle Porter (@KylePorterNS) June 21, 2026
What’s Next?
The Travelers Championship.
Odds: Travelers Championship
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Scheffler +400
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Fleetwood +1600
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Schauffele +1600
-
Young +2000
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Aberg +2000
-
M.Fitzpatrick +2000
-
Burns +2000
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Clark +2200
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Morikawa +2500
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Cantlay +2500
-
Thomas +2800
In terms of “best golf weekends of the year,” the U.S. Open has got to take the cake.
To have a perfect golf day, you need three ingredients:
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To be able to wake up in the morning & play golf
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To then go home and stuff your face
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To be able to watch a major championship
That leaves us with only four weekends a year as candidates.
The Masters is in April, so the weather for golf can be really hit or miss for most of the country.
The Open starts at like 4 a.m. for Americans, so no early tee times to be had there.
The PGA Championship is the red-headed stepchild of majors. Never in contention for most loved.
So, that leaves us with the U.S. Open as our only true candidate for Best Golf Weekend of the Year.
Coupled with it being Father’s Day? You simply can’t beat it.
This year, we get to watch the best in the world play at Shinnecock Hills, which has consistently ranked inside the top 5 courses in the country for like 100 years or something – a perfect venue for the summer of America’s 250th.
Who’s in the Field?
Because the U.S. Open is a real golf tournament, and not one of those “Signature Events,” that means we’ve got a full field – 156 golfers – and a cut line.
There’s also a record number of amateurs in the field this year: 20.
Full Field & Power Rankings Here
Weather Report:
Any wave advantage is vanishing https://t.co/yQlhjioiLy pic.twitter.com/BNgCaehM2W
— Eric Patterson (@EPatGolf) June 17, 2026
Yes, that says that wind gusts could reach upwards of 50mph on Thursday.
Here are the key stats for The U.S. Open (Shinnecock 2018)
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Prioritize elite approach play, especially mid/long irons. SG: Approach had the strongest correlation with SG: Total at 0.695, and the approach mix was heavy from 150–200 yards: 22.8% from 150–175 and 18.4% from 175–200. Bettors should upgrade players who consistently gain on approach and hit quality long-iron shots.
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Do not blindly chase bombers. Shinnecock played long at 7,380 yards, but driving distance correlated only 0.170 with total performance, while driving accuracy was 0.386. Fairways were wider than average, but the missed-fairway penalty was elevated at 0.50 strokes, so controlled drivers and accurate ball-strikers deserve more weight than pure distance.
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Short game and putting were major survival factors. The field averaged +4.65 to par, and GIR was only 54.6%, meaning players were missing a lot of greens. SG: Putting correlated 0.591 and SG: Around-the-Green 0.458, so in outright, placement, and matchup bets, lean toward players who can scramble, save pars, and avoid compounding mistakes rather than volatile birdie-or-bust profiles.
The Details

Previous Winners

How To Watch

Featured Groups:
All Tee Times & Featured Groups Here
Weekly Bets: U.S Open

We’ve partnered with Keith Stewart at Read The Line to share his weekly golf betting picks with the Caddyshanks crew. If you’re the type who enjoys breaking down matchups, spotting trends, and hunting for value, you’ll feel right at home in the RTL community.
Use code CADDYSHANKS2026 for 20% OFF.
Keith Stewart’s Picks
Xander Schauffele (+1900 DraftKings)
In nine US Open starts, Xander Schauffele has seven top 10s and has not had a finish worse than T14. A two-time major champion, Schauffele’s best career record comes at our national championship. It started in 2017 with a T5 finish in his first US Open start. Xander had to qualify to get in that year. Third place at THE PLAYERS, ninth at The Masters, and seventh at the PGA Championship, Schauffele has the best record of any favorite in the field at the season’s biggest events.
Patrick Reed (+4700 DraftKings)
Patrick Reed has come out and stated that Shinnecock Hills Golf Club is his favorite course on the continent. Fourth place in the 2018 US Open, Reed has two wins and five top 10s in eight starts this year (!). Patrick has proven he will be prepared when he plays. A much improved ball striker, Reed is a better player than he was in 2018. Take that new full swing precision and complement it with a top 5 short game in the field, and Reed will really catch your attention.
Caddyshanks Picks
Scottie Scheffler (+550 Fanduel)
Scottie ‘only’ has one win this year, which means we are running out of time on the “bet Scottie every week no matter what” strategy, since he needs to win like 5+ times per year to be profitable on it. Maybe he gets #2 this weekend, and completes the grand slam in the process.
Matt Fitzpatrick (+2500 Draftkings)
He finished 12th at Shinnecock in 2018, and he’s a much better player, in much better form now. He drives it accurately, he can scramble, and he’s proven he can win in U.S. Open conditions.
Russel Henley (+4000 Draftkings)
Henley checks every box for Shinnecock; he’s an accurate driver of the golf ball and he’s the best scrambler on TOUR this season. Plus, he’s not overpriced like Tommy Fleetwood and some other good course-fits.
U.S. Women’s Open
The women’s golf was awesome yesterday.
The leaderboard was tight from the start of play on Sunday, with seven players just two strokes off the lead, and Charley Hull, one of the LPGA’s biggest stars, just three strokes back.
Charley got off to a blistering start and charged into the lead in the middle of the round before making a bogey on the 14th.
Her miss dropped her to -6 and left Gabby Lopez, In Gee Chun, S.Y. Kim, and Nelly Korda all tied for the lead at 7-under.
Hull was able to bounce back with a birdie on the 17th and grab a share of the lead. Gabby Lopez birdied the 18th, and they both went into the clubhouse to watch Nelly Korda finish.
They watched on TV while Nelly Korda made birdie on the 17th hole to take a one-stroke lead. On the final hole, Korda hit a perfect tee shot, followed by a safe approach shot into the middle of the 18th green.
She two-putted for par and won the U.S. Women’s Open by a stroke, but we were this close to a three-way playoff:
The putt that won it all (and stopped our hearts 🫠) pic.twitter.com/VQynQ3nbUZ
— Golf Channel (@GolfChannel) June 8, 2026
The Memorial Tournament
We didn’t get a playoff at Riviera, but we did get one at Jack’s place.
The Memorial Tournament also featured a jam-packed leaderboard on Sunday.
At one point, there was a five-way tie on the back nine at 11-under.
That group was Wyndham Clark, Tommy Fleetwood, Sam Burns, Ryan Gerard, and JT Poston.
By the time the dust settled, it was Poston and Gerard who were the last two men standing. Gerard almost won it in regulation, but JT Poston made a clutch birdie on the 72nd hole to send it to a playoff.
They played the 18th, both made par, so they played it again.
This time, Gerard would bogey, leaving JT Poston an easy par putt to seal it.
With his victory, JT collected a $4 million check, along with spots in the U.S. Open and The Open this year.
He also gets to avoid playing in Golf’s Longest Day today.
What’s Next?
The RBC Canadian Open.
Odds: RBC Canadian Open
| Player | Odds |
|---|---|
| Tommy Fleetwood | +1150 |
| Matt Fitzpatrick | +1175 |
| Sam Burns | +1300 |
| Collin Morikawa | +2250 |
| Robert MacIntyre | +2400 |
| Wyndham Clark | +2500 |
| Justin Rose | +2700 |
| Brooks Koepka | +2800 |
| Nicolai Hojgaard | +2900 |
| Viktor Hovland | +2900 |
It’s a great week to be a golf fan.
The LPGA is at Riviera for the Women’s U.S. Open, and the TOUR is headed to Jack’s place, Muirfield Village, where Scottie Scheffler will look to three-peat.
He would be the first golfer since Tiger to do so at Muirfield, and the first since Steve Stricker at the John Deere Classic to win 3 TOUR events in a row.
The reason why he’s won at Muirfield twice in a row is because the course places a ton of emphasis on approach play, and there is no better player in the world over the last few years in that category than Scottie Scheffler.
Muirfield also penalizes missed fairways more than any other course on TOUR.
Not because it’s narrow, but because the rough is thick, which makes approach shots into the small, firm greens particularly difficult.
This course was designed by the ultimate ball-striker, Jack Nicklaus, so we will be looking to target elite iron players this week.
Who’s In The Field?
Scottie Scheffler leads a loaded field this week. It’s a signature event, and pretty much all of the top players on TOUR will be there, including 9 of the top 10.
Collin Morikawa and Viktor Hovland are the two biggest names who are OUT this week.
Here are the key stats for The Memorial Tournament:
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Build cards around elite approach players first. SG: Approach has the strongest correlation with SG: Total here at 0.612, well ahead of off-the-tee. Bettors should prioritize players gaining heavily with irons, especially those strong from 150–225+ yards, because Muirfield Village produces a lot of mid/long-iron approaches.
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Don’t overpay for pure bombers. Driving distance shows only a 0.061 correlation with total performance, while driving accuracy is more meaningful at 0.306. The course is long at 7,449 yards, but it also narrows fairways, suppresses driving distance, and penalizes missed fairways more than average. Favor “long enough and accurate” over reckless distance.
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Difficulty increases the value of bogey avoidance, short game, and putting floors. Scoring is tough at +1.38, GIR is only 55.5%, and penalty strokes are elevated. With SG: Putting at 0.506 and Around-the-Green at 0.455, this is not just a ball-striking event; players who can survive missed greens and avoid doubles should be upgraded for matchup, top-20, and cut-line markets.
The Details

Previous Winners

How To Watch

Featured Groups:

Weekly Bets: 50th Memorial Tournament
We’ve partnered with Keith Stewart at Read The Line to share his weekly golf betting picks with the Caddyshanks crew. If you’re the type who enjoys breaking down matchups, spotting trends, and hunting for value, you’ll feel right at home in the RTL community. Use code CADDYSHANKS2026 for 20% OFF.
Keith Stewart’s Picks
Si Woo Kim (+2200 BetMGM)
In his last eight starts at The Memorial, Si Woo Kim has GAINED with the putter six times! Probably Kim’s best career putting course, he is on an incredible heater T2G in 2026. Ranked third on the PGA TOUR, Si Woo is gaining an average of 1. 5 strokes per round over 53 measured rounds this year. Only Scottie Scheffler and Matt Fitzpatrick have been better. Fresh off gaining eight strokes with his flatstick at the CJ Cup, Kim can more than contend on a course that has been very good to him throughout his career.
Ben Griffin (+3900 DraftKings)
We all saw Ben Griffin come close to defending his title at the Charles Schwab. Walking the practice tee at Muirfield Village, Griffin looks really good. Ben is a player perfectly suited for Jack’s place. Well-rounded T2G and an excellent putter on super smooth surfaces, Griffin finished runner-up to Scottie Scheffler last year. Gaining more than 11 strokes on the field at The Memorial in 2025, this is a perfect example of form colliding with a confidence-producing venue.
Caddyshanks Picks
Scottie Scheffler (+310 Draftkings)
The “bet Scottie every week no matter what” strategy hasn’t worked out well so far this year, but he could turn that around easily this week.
Justin Thomas (+40000 Draftkings)
We tried our hand with betting JT last week and it didn’t work out for us, but he’s finding his form again and the win is going to come. Muirfield Village tends to let the cream rise to the top, we like JT to be hanging around come Sunday.
Sepp Straka (+6000 Draftkings)
Sepp has back-to-back Top 5’s at The Memorial, and the number on him this week is too good to resist, considering he’s in good form and has proven he can contend here.
Attention shoppers!
For the third time in five years, RTL predicts the winner of the ShopRite LPGA.
Although it is only a three -day event, 19-1 still pays! Celine Boutier played well early on a very windy Saturday, putting herself in position for a Sunday charge. A final round 66 with six birdies and a closing 32 on the back nine gave France another big win this weekend. I’m not sure if Boutier is a big PSG fan, but both can certainly celebrate along with our readers.
From the Atlantic Ocean, the LPGA travels to the West Coast and Pacific Palisades,to be exact, for the 81st United States Women’s Open. A field of 156 players will compete for a $12+ million purse and a $2+ million first-place prize. Worth more than that medal the USGA gives you, a win also includes a 10–year exemption into the women’s national championship. Riviera Country Club is the seventeenth venue to host the US Women’s Open since the first championship in 1946. Maja Stark is our defending champion. Curious about her chances to successfully defend, the last repeat winner was Karrie Webb in 2001. Prior to Webb, Annika Sorenstam did it in 1995 and 1996. Betsy King, Hollis Stacy, Susie Berning, Donna Caponi, and Mickey Wright have all successfully defended their national titles. Seven in total, that’s a bunch for 80 years! The last debutant to win was A Lim Kim in 2020.
All top 10 in the Rolex World Rankings are competing. In fact, the first 46 on the Rolex board are in the field. What most would consider the most prestigious women’s major championship, many players have their sights set on playing out their own Hollywood ending…
“Riv“
For the fourth time in its history, and the first time for the women’s national championship, Riviera Country Club plays host to the USGA. Best known for the PGA TOUR’s Genesis Invitational in February, in the coming years, Riviera will also host the 2028 Olympics and the Men’s US Open in 2031. A wonderful George Thomas track (1927), “The Riv,” will test all aspects of a player’s game. The par 71 scorecard stretches 6,699 yards for the US Women’s Open. Fifty-eight perfectly placed bunkers provide the only penalty areas, as there are no water holes on this Pacific Palisades paradise. A wonderful set of winding fairways gives way to severalincredible green complexes. I know the venue moves annually, but the USGA has a scoring goal in mind for each championship. The average winning score of this open event is 7.6 under par over the last decade. We have seen three playoffs to decide the winner in that time frame, and three other US Women’s Opens played in the state of California during those 10 years as well.
Course Conditions, Weather, Wind
The weather forecast is amazing for the world’s best women. The temperature should climb to low 70s each afternoon around the same time that wind kicks up off the Pacific Ocean. The breeze should blow around 10-12 mph each day around 3:00 pm PT from the SSW. No rain is in the forecast for the tournament week. The rain gauge has been empty the last few months in Los Angeles. The region is five inches behind for total rain YTD. If you remember the Genesis in February, then you know how wet the course was for the men. This version will make the USGA happy as they can firm up Thomas’ track as much as they want!
What will firm conditions mean for the field of LPGA, LET, and amateur stars? It is not often that the LPGA competes on a regular PGA TOUR course. We have plenty of player data from each TOUR event, but how does that apply to the women’s game? That’s the ultimate RTL benefit of covering both tours. The average green size at Riviera is 7,500 sq/ft, and those putting surfaces are covered in a typical California Poa Annua. Surrounding those intricate greens are Kikuyu rough and collars. The approaches and fairways are Kikuyu as well. Will the introduction of Kikuyu grass to the LPGA tour make a big difference? It might, more native to Australia, pay attention to those ladies coming from down under, as they are far more familiar with this type of grass. The fairways all seem to bend at Riviera. Thomas was an expert at keeping players off kilter. As much as most fans think of the Riviera CC clubhouse sitting high above the eighteenth green, the course is quite flat. The first tee shot and final hole have some significant terrain changes, but overall, Riviera is more about left to right than up and down.
Will Riviera give us a Hollywood ending? The LPGA has played 10 events in the Los Angeles region since RTL started covering the tour in 2022. There have been some very interesting trends in that time. One player in particular loves LA, and we have won with her already this year! As always, when it comes to handicapping the world’s best women, we will dive deeper than the analytics. I have some historic notes from each of those events and the ability to compare how LPGA skills will apply to an annual PGA TOUR venue.
How to win?
The US Women’s Open is truly a unique event on the LPGA schedule. Unlike any other tournament the world’s best women play, this one rewards THE best ball strikers. The last eight Opens were captured by queens of off-the-tee power and around the green grace. Their approach ability was consistently sharp, and the putter kept them out of trouble. Saso (twice), Stark, Ariya Jutanugarn, Corpuz, and Minjee Lee were all at the height of their impact ability when they took this title home. To handicap this field, we must pay attention to the best ball strikers. Too many times we have gotten caught up in the putter or wedge, and what this event always comes down to is the elite OTT and APP players. Take that trend and multiply it by five as we head to one of the most difficult tests on the West Coast for professional golf.
Keep it out of the Kikuyu grass. That mandate starts off the tee. Many LPGA Official Scorecards list one yardage, and then it plays shorter each day. The USGA does not subscribe to that policy. They make it tough for these women, and that’s the first reason why you need the best ball strikers. It is going to play long even with the firm conditions. Longer than a weekly LPGA event. Does this favor Jeeno and Nelly? Of course it does, and it will make it even harder to beat them. Then again, they are the two best female players on the planet by a wide margin. Is it tough to beat Scottie Scheffler? Yes! I like Total Driving for this situation. Who are the longest and most accurate players OTT. We know from our on-site Genesis coverage that Riviera favors a slight left-to-right ball flight. A power fade for righties is the ideal trajectory.
Riv has above-average-sized greens at 7,500 sq/ft. Covered in that Pacific Poa Annua, they will putt much smoother than what we always see in February. Much like one of Riviera’s great comp courses, Augusta National, it is tough to gain a ton of strokes on the greens. I believe an average putter can win this week. I would (of course) rather run with a great putter, but the priority is going to be ball striking over the flatstick. These larger-than-average targets will require expert proximity to have a chance to score. Approach play from the fairway is key. Kikuyu fairways area different surface to play from. The better iron players will adjust quicker to the new turf. Pickers over diggers, with firm conditions, we will be taking the best women with a shallow angle of attack. No pelts, please; adjustments from the Kikuyu rough are also going to be needed. Riviera winners always have a great week with their irons, and this National Championship will be no different.
PGA TOUR pros hit the greens less than 60% of the time at Riviera. The TOUR average is 66%. Compound the challenge with firm conditions, and here is where the secret sauce to win the US Open is hidden: short game. Riviera has some of the most difficult bunkers on the PGA TOUR. They are deep and flat at the bottom. It takes a ton of speed and confidence to hit par–saving shots from them. Then, the closely mown or long Kikuyu is another problem. These women are going to miss GIRs, and very few of the elite players are great around the green. Some of the best ball strikers are extremely poor at pitching and chipping. The ability to play from tee TO green is imperative. The best ARG competitors in this field of 156 players have a measurable edge on their opponents. The average par 4 is over 400 yards; scrambling is going to be a factor.
The firm conditions and the USGA’s fascination with even par scores do scare me. If the navy jackets make this track too firm, luck may play a part in deciding this major championship. If that’s the case, our best chance to win falls with the women on our outright list. Besides the four basic strokes gained categories, par 4 scoring,and birdie to bogey ratio are key. Straight bogey avoidance also helps us determine the best par savers. Riviera is a well-rounded test, and one where a majority of the women will not break par. That’s good news, because it eliminates several weekly contenders because they lack the complete list of skills needed to win.
LPGA – Free Picks
Hannah Green (+1800 DraftKings)
If you have followed the LPGA the last four years, then you know there is only one LA Woman, and that is Hannah Green. Green has won three of the last four LA Opens. Two of which were played at Wilshire Country Club in Los Angeles proper. A classic design and wonderful comp course for Riviera, Hannah also has two wins in 2026. Need another reason besides Green’s great ball striking and short game? How about kikuyu grass? Green is one of the few players who is from Australia and has experience on Riviera’s unique turf.
Charley Hull (+4500 Bet Rivers)
If any player on the LPGA tour was destined to become a Hollywood star, it would be Charley Hull. Hull also has two top 10s at nearby Wilshire Country Club in the LA Open and three straight top 20s in the US Open. Three years ago, Charley finished runner-up at Pebble Beach in the national championship. Fifteenth at Aramco and tenth at the Chevron Championship, Hull knows how to prepare for the big stage. A win earlier this year on the LET, when the bright lights of Hollywood shine, Charley can capture this championship.
Russell Henley looked like he was running out of holes.
He saved par on the 15th, but found himself three back with three to play.
Henley proceeded to finish regulation at Colonial with three straight birdies – then rolled in a 5-footer on the first playoff hole to beat Eric Cole and claim his sixth PGA Tour win.
That’s four consecutive birdies to finish the day, for the mathematicians out there.
He made two fifteen footers, one from seventeen feet, and the final from about five.
Sometimes the putter really can be like a magic wand.
Now he gets to drive this awesome car around.
What about everybody else?
Henley’s late heater was brutal news for Eric Cole, who was chasing his first PGA Tour victory. Cole had it right there, but he parred his final seven holes of regulation – eight if you count the playoff – and watched Henley come take it from him.
Meanwhile, Ben Griffin gave it a proper run with a final-round 65, but came up one shot short of a chance to do something only Ben Hogan has done: win back-to-back tournaments at Colonial.
Griffin, Alex Smalley, and Mac Meissner all finished at 11 under, one behind the Henley-Cole playoff.
What’s Next?
The Memorial Tournament at Jack’s place.
Odds: Memorial Tournament
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Scottie Scheffler: +285
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Rory McIlroy: +920
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Cameron Young: +1300
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Xander Schauffele: +1750
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Ludvig Aberg: +1950
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Matt Fitzpatrick: +2050
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Si Woo Kim: +2250
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Russell Henley: +2600
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Patrick Cantlay: +2600
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Tommy Fleetwood: +2700
Last week, we had a birdie-fest.
This week, we should have something more challenging (depending on the weather).
The host venue this week, Colonial, has a rich history. Ben Hogan won five times here, and it’s the longest running tournament held at the same venue on TOUR.
They’ve been playing here for 80 years, yet since Hogan’s time, no one has ever won back-to-back. He did it twice, by the way.
Secondly, Colonial is narrow, with small greens – it’s not a bombers course.
Now, I am no golf course architecture expert, but I’ve noticed a theme.
At courses like Riviera, Harbour Town, and Colonial, all of the sudden how far the pros hit the ball doesn’t matter as much, and the golf seems to be way more enjoyable to watch.
What do those courses have in common?
They were all built before 1950, they are all old-school, strategic “shot-maker” courses that reward precision over power. They emphasize placing tee shots in the right spots, controlling approach angles, and hitting accurate irons into smaller or well-protected greens.
Here are the key stats for Colonial:
- Prioritize elite iron players and putters. The two strongest within-event correlations with SG Total are SG Putting at 0.648 and SG Approach at 0.610, well ahead of off-the-tee and around-the-green. For betting, that points toward players gaining consistently on approach who also have a credible putting spike in their profile.
- Build around the 125–175 yard approach window. The biggest approach buckets are 125–150 yards: 20.1% and 150–175 yards: 20.9%, so roughly 41% of approaches come from those two ranges alone. Proximity and scoring from short-to-mid irons should matter more here than generic long-iron or wedge-only splits.
- Don’t overrate driving accuracy by itself. Colonial is narrow, with 29.9-yard fairways and only 54.7% driving accuracy, but the correlation of accuracy to SG Total is just 0.169, while distance is 0.289 and total SG Off the Tee is 0.444. The betting takeaway: look for controlled drivers who can gain off the tee without being reckless, but don’t automatically downgrade longer players just because they miss fairways.
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Weekly Bets: 2026 CJ Cup Byron Nelson
We’ve partnered with Keith Stewart at Read The Line to share his weekly golf betting picks with the Caddyshanks crew. If you’re the type who enjoys breaking down matchups, spotting trends, and hunting for value, you’ll feel right at home in the RTL community.
Use code CADDYSHANKS2026 for 20% OFF.
Keith Stewart’s Picks
Rickie Fowler (+2400 DraftKings)
Rickie Fowler has three top 10s in his last four starts. Rickie finished T60 at Aronimink because of his putter. Those greens are the toughest these guys will see all year on TOUR. All other aspects of Fowler’s game have been firing for the better part of 2026. He tied sixth and T16 in two of his last three starts at Colonial. It’s time for Fowler to finish one off. Gaining almost six strokes on average against the field at Hogan’s home over his last three trips to Fort Worth, Rickie won’t be the only Oklahoma guy winning in Texas this week.
Taylor Moore (+9400 DraftKings)
Innisbrook’s Copperhead course is a great comp venue for Colonial Country Club. Taylor Moore won the Valspar Championship (2023) and is coming off four straight top-40 finishes. Each result has improved by the week: T39-T20-T17-T14. Moore is a great close-range scorer who can drive the golf ball. When his iron game gets going, that’s when Taylor can win. Gaining seven strokes on the field in his last two starts and trending up for two months, I expect a little more from Taylor this week.
Caddyshanks Picks
Justin Thomas (+1800 Fanduel)
The last time we saw JT he was playing lights out on Sunday at Aronimink. Week by week, he’s been returning to major championship form. We like him to not only compete this week, but also at the two remaining majors this year.
Sungjae Im (+3500 Fanduel)
I am going with Sungjae in back-to-back weeks. He’s got 3 top 10’s this season, he’s finished Top 15 at Colonial three different times. It’s also worth noting that he was one of a handful of guys to go super-low last week, with a 61 in the 2nd round.
Based on the news at the top of the email, I think it’s safe to say that tournaments like the CJ Cup Byron Nelson will be going the way of the Dodo Bird.
There’s a handful of them that come to mind, who currently occupy unwanted space in the TOUR’s schedule, pull weak fields, and are typically birdie-fests.
These events lack juice and draw weak viewership numbers.
So, it seems that the TOUR, whos CEO Brian Rolapp came from the NFL, are intent on embracing a scarcity model, which, in theory, should allow them to sell partnerships at a premium.
Their bet is that quality is better than volume.
And with that intro, we bring you to McKinney, Texas, just outside of Dallas, where Scottie Scheffler leads a field that includes only about three other people in the Top 50 of OWGR.
Scottie shot 31-under last year. His odds to win this year are +175, which is… gross.
In an effort to make the CJ Cup less of a birdie-fest, they have made all of the greens smaller over the last year.
We will see how that holds up.
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Weekly Bets: 2026 CJ Cup Byron Nelson

We’ve partnered with Keith Stewart at Read The Line to share his weekly golf betting picks with the Caddyshanks crew. If you’re the type who enjoys breaking down matchups, spotting trends, and hunting for value, you’ll feel right at home in the RTL community.
Use code CADDYSHANKS2026 to redeem.
Keith Stewart’s Picks
Jordan Spieth (+2000 DraftKings)
In four starts at TPC Craig Ranch, Jordan Spieth has finished T9, 2, MC, and 4. I guess Spieth likes sleeping in his own bed! A top 20 at the PGA Championship and a brief lead in Miami. Spieth has seven top 25s in 13 starts this season. Those results still seem to be missing a piece of Spieth’s game. In 2026, the irons have been great at times. The driver has been excellent recently, and nobody is better with a wedge. If Jordan wins again, the most likely spot is a course where he is extremely comfortable, and in a region he knows infinitely well.
Eric Cole (+8000 DraftKings)
In his last three events, Eric Cole has finished T14, T6, and T6 at Myrtle Beach. Cole’s an incredible iron player and putter. In two starts at TPC Craig Ranch, Eric has finished T23 and T5. Eric can score, and on a course with little pressure off the tee, he can just get it in play. The approach, proximity, and putter take over. Eighth in the field for BoB%, Cole has gained an average of 8.4 strokes combined with his flatstick and irons over his last two starts.
Caddyshanks Picks
Scottie Scheffler (+175 DraftKings)
Scottie Scheffler’s odds are so low that I actually don’t recommend betting him this week, unless he gets off to a slow start and you can find a live number you like. Also, look into the “without Scheffler” markets.
The only reason I have him on the card this week is because I committed to “bet Scottie every week” at the beginning of the year. It hasn’t been working out.
Brooks Koepka (+2500 Draftkings)
Everything about Brooks game is working right now except for one very important thing – his putter. If, and it’s a big if, he gets it going? He’s gonna win some tournaments.
Sungjae Im (+5600 Draftkings)
It was only a few weekends ago in Florida that Sungjae was in contention, his odds are quite long this week, and I wouldn’t be surprised if he was hanging around this weekend near the top of the board.
All weekend, we waited for someone to separate from the pack.
And at the start of play on Sunday, there were 11 major winners within 6 shots of the lead. Surely, one of them would step up, post a low score, and bring this thing home.
Well, none of the major winners in the field stepped up, but Aaron Rai, wearing two gloves, rocking iron covers, and using giant tees that he bought off an infomercial, certainly did.
And what’s truly incredible about his victory, is that in a world of ball rollback debates, set-up arguments, and distance, distance, distance – Aaron Rai just won a major as the 160th ranked driver on TOUR.
Aronimink was set up to reward driving accuracy over distance, and great putting.
Aaron Rai did both better than anyone in the field, and it allowed him the separate.
By the way, he was a 150-1 longshot.
What about everybody else?
Alex Smalley, who went into Sunday as the clubhouse leader, shot even par, and finished T2.
Jon Rahm, Rory McIlroy, Xander Schauffele, Justin Thomas, Cam Smith, and Ludvig Aberg all tried to make a push, but no one could gain ground on Rai’s back nine performance.
However, this week, I think we need to focus on what “everybody else” had to say about Aaron Rai. As it turns out, Rai has earned a ton of respect among his peers.
Xander on Aaron Rai: “Rarely do you feel like people work way harder than you …
“I feel like I’ve played a pretty good amount of time, and Aaron is always there. He’s always in the gym. He’s always on the range.
“At the Scottish, I’m staying right on site there. I thought it…
— Kyle Porter (@KylePorterNS) May 17, 2026
Massive congrats to Aaron Rai. Such a nice guy and hard worker. Makes me want to work harder, and makes me believe that I can win majors as well. – Michael Kim
You won’t find one person on property who’s not happy for him. – Rory McIlroy.
What’s Next?
Scottie Scheffler headlines the field at the CJ Cup Byron Nelson at TPC Craig Ranch.
Odds For TPC Craig Ranch
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Scottie Scheffler: +150
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Si Woo Kim: +1250
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Jordan Spieth: +2000
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Brooks Koepka: +2700
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Keith Mitchell: +3300
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Pierceson Coody: +4000
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Michael Thorbjornsen: +4100
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Aaron Rai: +4200
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Wyndham Clark: +4700