NEWS
Brooks Koepka will make his PGA Tour return at the Farmers Insurance Open. Here’s who else is in the field at Torrey Pines.
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Russell Henley will win 2026’s first tournament, the oddsmakers predict. And if Henley falls short in Honolulu this week, then bettors should look to back a pair of major winners in Hideki Matsuyama and J.J. Spaun.
DeChambeau said during Tuesday’s LIV Golf preview day that he was contracted through 2026 with the Saudi-backed tour and that while he can’t predict the future beyond that, he would not be joining the PGA Tour this year.
Billy Horschel is no stranger to sitting outside the top 50 rankings when the calendar flips. Two years ago, he went from No. 63 in the world in January to Open Championship runner-up that summer.
Jordan Spieth’s last trip through Waialae Country Club saw the Texas native tie for a first-round lead before posting six bogeys and missing the cut. The former world No. 1 sits outside the top 50 after missing fall events.
Brooks Koepka is expecting a nervous energy when he returns to a regular PGA Tour event for the first time in four years at the Farmers Insurance Open. Only some of that pertains to his golf.
Hudson Swafford was among the first Tour players to defy the circuit’s regulations and play a LIV event. His path back to the Tour was not nearly as tidy as Brooks Koepka’s is now.
PGA Tour announces Returning Member Program based on “elite-performance based criteria.” This paves the way back for specific LIV Golf players, including Brooks Koepka.
In just the second weather-shortened event in Jones Cup history, the SMU senior, who once battled the putting yips before going lefty, birdied the penultimate hole Sunday at Ocean Forest en route to a two-shot win.
Zalsman, a 17-year-old Wake Forest commit from St. Petersburg, Florida, held off two-time defending champion Kary Hollenbaugh to win the South Atlantic Women’s Amateur by two shots at 15 under.
Brooks Koepka has applied for reinstatement to the PGA Tour following a 3 ½-year stint with LIV Golf.
Here’s a look at the full field for the first event of the 2026 PGA Tour season, the Sony Open in Hawaii.
The Tour finalized its eight-event schedule for this fall, with two previously announced new events in Asheville, North Carolina, and Austin, Texas.