


Greetings!
Let’s start with a mea culpa. I could (and probably should) lie and say that in my PGA Tour schedule post from Friday, I was presuming the NFL would go to an 18-game schedule and play the Super Bowl in Week 3 of February so we could play the PGA Championship in Week 2.
But that’s not true. The truth is that I forgot to schedule around the Super Bowl. So let me amend the February slate like this.
January
Week 1:
Week 2: Australian Open (Tour 1000 event)
Week 3:
Week 4: Hawaii (Tour 1000 event)
February
Week 1: Phoenix Open (Tour 1000 event)
Week 2: [Super Bowl]
Week 3: Riviera (Tour 1000 event)
Week 4: PGA Championship (Tour 2000 event)
There was a lot of angst about having the PGA in February to begin with, and I understand why. It won’t happen. But from a viewing experience, it would be phenomenal to have a west coast major in February. Plus, there’s precedent.
The championship was played in February rather than August, due to anticipated oppressive summer weather in Florida. The rescheduling changed the PGA Championship from the fourth and final major of the calendar year to the first in 1971, and the 1970 and 1971 editions were consecutive majors. It returned to August in 1972 at Oakland Hills in Michigan.
1971 PGA
I don’t know if it’s good precedent. But again, go back and look at the months here and tell me which one you aren’t giddy about.
Name drops today: Keegan Bradley, Si Woo Kim, Kurt Kitayama and Ronald Acuna Jr.
Today’s newsletter is sponsored by Holderness and Bourne, which has you covered no matter if you’re attending a PGA Championship in August in Tulsa — I would recommend their Airation polos — or attending a PGA at Torrey in February — seems like more of a Sullivan pullover event.

Either venue, and you’re probably going to be helping Jordy look for a lost ball like the good folks of Orlando were last week at Bay Hill (more on that below). You might as well look (and feel) good while you do it.
OK, now onto the news.

Monday publish today because we have a lot of Players content to get to over the next several days. First, let’s look back at the API and everything else that happened this weekend.
1. Three guys age 26 or younger have won big events so far this year — Gotterup, Bridgeman and now Akshay — but I would argue that only one of them has The Juice.
The Juice, of course, is a very subjective thing. But if you’re ripping at that pin on 18 and then immediately going on camera to talk about how “sick” your ball striking was down the stretch of one of the biggest events of the year, it’s fair to assume that you have it.
Some guys are just impossible to take your eyes off of, and Akshay seems like one of them. Having it doesn’t mean you’ll be great (Matthew Wolff). And not all good players have it (Patrick Cantlay). But the marriage of a terrific career with an electric personality is the holy grail in all sports, but especially individual ones like golf.
And with Akshay — as evidenced by his 31 on the back yesterday and his nearly 3-2-4 finish to win in regulation — it is pretty clear that the hint of both a tremendous golf character and a great golf career are very much present.
2. Speaking of that career, I don’t know exactly what will look like. It currently has a bit of a … Daniel Berger shape to it.

And if you squint, it could have a bit of a Justin Thomas shape to it.

JT broke out right at the age that Akshay is now. And with a dearth of electric American golfers under the age of 25, this would be a pretty great time for Akshay to do the same. Ultimately, I think Akshay’s career probably falls somewhere between those two guys. I don’t think he’s the iron player JT is, but I do think he’s better than Berger (who has been pretty good!) and nearly has all the wins to prove it.
3. The duality of golfers.
Akshay said both of these quotes in his post-tournament presser.
I never really thought that I could really do this with that amount of pressure. I feel like I've shied away from that.
Akshay Bhatia
And also this one.
I love the big moments. I think that's what I play for. And you just can't shy away from it when you're trying to win big golf tournaments.
Akshay Bhatia
I think sometimes we are very binary about the way we view The Big Moment.
Either a guy loves and embraces it or hates and shies away from it. We rarely believe that you can actually view it both ways and change how you handle those moments over time. Bhatia clearly loves those moments and also clearly has struggled to play great golf when they have presented themselves in the past.
It’s fun to see (and hear) him shift in real time.
4. One of the great tweets of our time. Literally laughed out loud here given who was at the center of the photo.

One other normal sport moment here … this on No. 6. Has to be the biggest gator in Orlando. Has to be!

Also reminds me of another one of the great tweets of our time after the gold medal game a few weeks ago.

This post will continue below for Normal Club members and includes thoughts on …
Daniel Berger comps.
Why not to panic about Scottie.
The most underrated golfer in the world right now.
Welcome to the members-only portion of today’s newsletter.
Thank you for being here on one of the best weeks of the entire year.

4. OK a word on comps. I sent what I thought was a thoughtfully-researched tweet on Sunday afternoon that got just eviscerated.

To be fair to the detractors and the haters, I didn’t do a good job of clarifying that these are age-specific comps.
So I’m not saying that the 46-year-old Lucas Glover has a slightly worse overall resume than Berger. Only that Berger’s trajectory at age 32 is a bit better than what Glover’s was at the same age.
When I get on Baseball Reference, I don’t care that 27-year-old Ronald Acuna Jr. can easily be compared to the career of Richard Hidalgo (!). I do care that at age 27, he compares favorably to Mookie Betts and Reggie Jackson.

I guess I thought this was obvious, but apparently it’s not (?).
5. Let’s look at the name that raised the most havoc among commenters: Keegan Bradley. Berger’s career DG points line is in green. Bradley’s is in blue. They are having … basically the same career?

And while Berger obviously doesn’t have the major championship that Bradley has, nor the high level wins, he’s also seven years younger and playing tremendous golf right now. They have almost the exact same number of top 10s at majors (Bradley has five, Berger has four), and it’s not difficult to see Berger cruising along for the next seven years (hopefully injury free) and picking off a couple of big wins and maybe even a major.
I don’t think this is a stretch at all, but, uh, a lot of other people did.
6. Also, yeah, I do think Rickie has had a better career than Keegan Bradley. The Players-PGA wins are close enough to a wash for me, and even though Bradley has more overall victories, Rickie’s major record and the number of Ryder Cups he’s played in (5-2 in favor of Rick) tip the scales.
I mean I pretty definitively think Rickie has had a better career than Keegan.

Rickie

Keegan
I think non-sickos value winning majors a lot. And while majors should be valued quite highly, I do think we run this risk of allowing them to block out everything else that has happened. Example that I use a lot: This time last year, Rory very easily had a better career (by a wide margin) than Brooks. But because Brooks led in majors 5-4, you could find folks who argued the other direction.
That’s not necessarily what’s going on here with Rickie and Keegan.
If you’re arguing that Keegan has had a better career, I’m not going to quibble with it. But it’s also not crazy to say that Rickie (again, two years younger) has had a better career than Keegan. Anyone who thinks it’s completely definitive in favor of Keegan might not know as much ball as they think!
7. As I watched Russ Henley rack up another T6 and another $700,000, I started thinking about the most underrated player in the world right now.
The answers are all over the planet, but my top five would probably look like this.
1. Scottie Scheffler
2. Jake Knapp
3. Russ Henley
4. Patrick Reed
5. Si Woo Kim
I gravitate toward guys like Scottie, Rahm and sometimes Rory because however good people think those guys are, they’re just that much better.
Henley is the new Charles Howell III (but better). Total ATM but can go in any grocery store in America unrecognized. The dream.
Also, Knapp’s finishes in five events this year.
Sony: T11
Torrey: T5
Phoenix: 8
Pebble: T8
Riviera: 6
8. Speaking of Scottie. Is there reason for concern? I tentatively say no.
He said on Sunday that he found something with his iron play, which had been middling (for him) over the last few tournaments.
Really today one of the things I was hoping to feel a little bit better about was my iron play and got out there and I hit a lot of really, really nice iron shots. Some worked out, others got some wind shifts, but overall, I felt like I struck it really nicely today, which was an improvement I was hoping to see after yesterday.
Scottie Scheffler
He lost a ton of shots on approach on two holes on Sunday. The 18th, which he doubled after hitting it in the water and the 14th, which he doubled after hitting it into a palm tree and wasn’t able to identify it with a TV camera normal sport. Everything else was flawless.
So yes, the approach number was negative for the first time since the 2024 BMW and just the second time since the 2022 St. Jude, but I’m not overly concerned about it.
Here are his first five starts this year.

Compared to his first four starts last year.

This year is objectively better overall, and last year he went on to win six times (including two majors). I do think the part that’s worth worrying about heading into this week is a new driver that he seems a bit uncomfortable with on a golf course that demands a ton of accuracy off the tee.
Also, some of the decision making last week struck me as odd. I was watching on Saturday when he was still kind of in the mix and tried to take on the right side of the fairway on 18 out of the rough.
Scottie normally hits that ball 25 yards left of the right edge and tries to get up and down for four. I don’t know if it was a mental error, a mis-hit or a bad lie, but it was definitely a shocking result.

9. It’s hard to convey how much this graphic ruled on the broadcast. Exactly what I want to see in the moment as Akshay tried to find the green. Sponsored content done perfectly.

10. An update here …

Eight players have done it so far, and one of them — Collin Morikawa — has actually done it three times.
Morikawa — 3
Gotterup — 2
Scott — 2
Young — 2
Bridgeman — 2
Kitayama — 2
Min Woo — 2
Sepp — 2
Thank you for reading our ridiculous golf newsletter that is sometimes (but often barely) about golf. Every edition is handcrafted by me (Kyle) and Jason. No AI, no algorithm, no machines (other than the ones we’re typing and drawing on).
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Greetings!
Let’s start with a mea culpa. I could (and probably should) lie and say that in my PGA Tour schedule post from Friday, I was presuming the NFL would go to an 18-game schedule and play the Super Bowl in Week 3 of February so we could play the PGA Championship in Week 2.
But that’s not true. The truth is that I forgot to schedule around the Super Bowl. So let me amend the February slate like this.
January
Week 1:
Week 2: Australian Open (Tour 1000 event)
Week 3:
Week 4: Hawaii (Tour 1000 event)
February
Week 1: Phoenix Open (Tour 1000 event)
Week 2: [Super Bowl]
Week 3: Riviera (Tour 1000 event)
Week 4: PGA Championship (Tour 2000 event)
There was a lot of angst about having the PGA in February to begin with, and I understand why. It won’t happen. But from a viewing experience, it would be phenomenal to have a west coast major in February. Plus, there’s precedent.
The championship was played in February rather than August, due to anticipated oppressive summer weather in Florida. The rescheduling changed the PGA Championship from the fourth and final major of the calendar year to the first in 1971, and the 1970 and 1971 editions were consecutive majors. It returned to August in 1972 at Oakland Hills in Michigan.
1971 PGA
I don’t know if it’s good precedent. But again, go back and look at the months here and tell me which one you aren’t giddy about.
Name drops today: Keegan Bradley, Si Woo Kim, Kurt Kitayama and Ronald Acuna Jr.
Today’s newsletter is sponsored by Holderness and Bourne, which has you covered no matter if you’re attending a PGA Championship in August in Tulsa — I would recommend their Airation polos — or attending a PGA at Torrey in February — seems like more of a Sullivan pullover event.

Either venue, and you’re probably going to be helping Jordy look for a lost ball like the good folks of Orlando were last week at Bay Hill (more on that below). You might as well look (and feel) good while you do it.
OK, now onto the news.

Monday publish today because we have a lot of Players content to get to over the next several days. First, let’s look back at the API and everything else that happened this weekend.
1. Three guys age 26 or younger have won big events so far this year — Gotterup, Bridgeman and now Akshay — but I would argue that only one of them has The Juice.
The Juice, of course, is a very subjective thing. But if you’re ripping at that pin on 18 and then immediately going on camera to talk about how “sick” your ball striking was down the stretch of one of the biggest events of the year, it’s fair to assume that you have it.
Some guys are just impossible to take your eyes off of, and Akshay seems like one of them. Having it doesn’t mean you’ll be great (Matthew Wolff). And not all good players have it (Patrick Cantlay). But the marriage of a terrific career with an electric personality is the holy grail in all sports, but especially individual ones like golf.
And with Akshay — as evidenced by his 31 on the back yesterday and his nearly 3-2-4 finish to win in regulation — it is pretty clear that the hint of both a tremendous golf character and a great golf career are very much present.
2. Speaking of that career, I don’t know exactly what will look like. It currently has a bit of a … Daniel Berger shape to it.

And if you squint, it could have a bit of a Justin Thomas shape to it.

JT broke out right at the age that Akshay is now. And with a dearth of electric American golfers under the age of 25, this would be a pretty great time for Akshay to do the same. Ultimately, I think Akshay’s career probably falls somewhere between those two guys. I don’t think he’s the iron player JT is, but I do think he’s better than Berger (who has been pretty good!) and nearly has all the wins to prove it.
3. The duality of golfers.
Akshay said both of these quotes in his post-tournament presser.
I never really thought that I could really do this with that amount of pressure. I feel like I've shied away from that.
Akshay Bhatia
And also this one.
I love the big moments. I think that's what I play for. And you just can't shy away from it when you're trying to win big golf tournaments.
Akshay Bhatia
I think sometimes we are very binary about the way we view The Big Moment.
Either a guy loves and embraces it or hates and shies away from it. We rarely believe that you can actually view it both ways and change how you handle those moments over time. Bhatia clearly loves those moments and also clearly has struggled to play great golf when they have presented themselves in the past.
It’s fun to see (and hear) him shift in real time.
4. One of the great tweets of our time. Literally laughed out loud here given who was at the center of the photo.

One other normal sport moment here … this on No. 6. Has to be the biggest gator in Orlando. Has to be!

Also reminds me of another one of the great tweets of our time after the gold medal game a few weeks ago.

This post will continue below for Normal Club members and includes thoughts on …
Daniel Berger comps.
Why not to panic about Scottie.
The most underrated golfer in the world right now.
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