Ian McNeill ranks his top-10 PGA Tour players to watch at the 2026 Genesis Invitational at Riviera CC. His data-backed insights into who is primed for success.
The hits keep coming on the PGA Tour -- as one week after a thrilling finish at windswept Pebble Beach, the 2026 Genesis Invitational marks the return of one of the game's most revered venues, Riviera Country Club.
From its narrow driving corridors and strategic bunkering to its severely undulating greens, this Golden Age masterpiece has tested the world's best since 1926. Now, 100 years after its inception, 18 of the world's current top-20 players will tackle its iconic layout.
But how does this elite field stack up at the top? Who, if anyone, should you be targeting on pre-week betting boards? Without further ado, here are my top-10 players to watch at this week's 2026 Genesis Invitational!
No. 10 - Akshay Bhatia
The last two weekends haven't quite gone the way of the 24-year-old Bhatia -- coming one and three shots short at Scottsdale and Pebble Beach, respectively. But as the Tour heads 30 minutes south of his place of birth in Northridge, CA, my numbers suggest Riviera presents another golden opportunity to build on this early-season momentum.
First and foremost, Riviera features a similarly concentrated distribution of middle-iron approaches as we saw at the WM Open -- where Bhatia recorded his best approach performance (+4.64) since last June. In fact, over the last 12 months, he ranks in the 92nd percentile on Tour in Proximity to the Hole from 150-200 yards -- a range that historically accounts for nearly half of all approach shots around Riviera.
We'll also see familiar poa annua greens this week -- the same surface on which Bhatia delivered his best putting performance as a professional (+6.24) at last fall's Procore Championship. After a positive performance at Pebble Beach last week, Akshay has now gained strokes, putting in eight of his 11 career starts in California -- a meaningful signal given the importance of proven comfort on these notoriously tricky surfaces.
From Bubba Watson to Phil Mickelson and Mike Weir, Riviera has long been a haven for the sport's preeminent southpaws -- with left-handers capturing seven of the last 22 L.A. Opens held in Pacific Palisades. With finishes of third and sixth over his last two starts on the West Coast, Bhatia arrives as one of the game's most in-form commodities -- and the underlying stats suggest Riviera offers a legitimate pathway for those close calls to finally convert into a breakthrough.
No. 9 - Matt Fitzpatrick
In full disclosure, I jumped off the Fitzpatrick bandwagon last week -- citing inefficiencies in his long-term wedge splits -- only to be immediately proven wrong at Pebble Beach. The Englishman delivered the best ball-striking performance of his PGA Tour career, gaining 10.56 strokes combined off the tee and on approach.
Ironically, it was the short game that betrayed him, as he lost more than three strokes on and around the greens -- his worst chipping and putting week since last year’s RBC Heritage. That’s not a performance I expect to linger, as Fitzpatrick is one of just seven players in this field to rank inside the top 20 both on and around the greens over his last 75 rounds.
More importantly, this surge from Phoenix to Monterey adds fuel to the fire that began building over the back half of Fitzpatrick's 2025. From May to November, Matt has recorded nine top-eight finishes over his last 16 worldwide starts -- including a playoff victory over Rory McIlroy at the DP World Tour's year-end Finals.
His recent ball-striking spike -- 18.75 strokes gained off the tee and on approach across his last two starts -- comes just as the calendar turns toward one of his historically strongest stretches (Bay Hill, TPC Sawgrass, Harbour Town). While the Southeast has often been his preferred hunting ground, Riviera is far from foreign territory. He finished fifth here in 2021 and has never entered this part of the schedule in better form.
Riviera’s emphasis on long-iron precision mirrors the conditions behind some of his best approach weeks last season: +5.83 at Quail Hollow, +5.48 at Wentworth, and +3.02 at Harbour Town. And when the irons heat up like this, Fitzpatrick has proven he can contend at any venue in the sport.
He’s played too well for too long to remain without a Stateside victory, but books have been hesitant to price him alongside the true elites in these fields. If we continue to see him alongside less-proven commodities around 40-1, I’ll gladly buy back in.
No. 8 - Chris Gotterup
A T37 finish wasn't exactly what Chris Gotterup would have had in mind after his opening-round 64 at Pebble Beach, but given the run of form we saw from the 26-year-old in the last 8-9 months, it's difficult to have any conviction betting against the four-time Tour winner.
Particularly when you account for how susceptible this design has been to bombers through the years. Just within the last three iterations of this event at Riviera, we've seen the likes of McIlroy, Cameron Young, Jon Rahm, Will Zalatoris, and Sam Burns dominate this course with their length: each gaining over 3.5 strokes off the tee on the back of elite length.
This year, Chris Gotterup arrives for his Tinseltown debut as the best driver of the ball in this field over his last 75 rounds: averaging nearly a full stroke gained per round and a whopping 311-yard average.
Couple this elite weapon with an iron game capable of gaining 4.8 and 4.5 strokes around the demanding confines of TPC Scottsdale and Torrey Pines South, as well as a short game which propelled him to his Sony Open victory last month (+3.57 SG: ARG; +5.09 SG: Putting), and there are very few holes to pick in the World No. 5's current profile.
Of course, prices have caught up to Gotterup since he opened at >50-1 in a Sony Open field that featured just eight of the world's top-20 players, but the Oklahoma product has given us no reason to doubt his ability to rise to the occasion. Gotterup's last nine months have showcased some legitimately scary upside -- even if he hasn't yet built the Riviera track record of some of his peers.
No. 7 - Collin Morikawa
It was a vintage ball-striking masterclass from Collin Morikawa over four days at Pebble Beach: gaining over 9.5 strokes with his iron play alone (the third-best approach week of his career), and missing just six greens across his final 45 holes en route to victory.
Now he returns to his home event at Riviera, where he's already posted finishes of second and sixth in back-to-back years from 2022 to 2023. On paper, the combination of course history and incoming form makes him an obvious contender, but I still have questions about Collin's ability to go back-to-back.
Although his ball-striking lapped the field in most respects in Monterey, Morikawa's short game hovered right around field average on and around the greens. That profile can survive on a course where hitting 80% of your GIRs is attainable, but Riviera is not that place. With a historical greens-in-regulation rate of just 55.5%, it’s almost inevitable that at some point over four rounds in Pacific Palisades, his short game will be put under a microscope.
It's worth noting that in those aforementioned top six finishes, the short game was a genuine asset. He gained 8.9 strokes on and around the greens in 2022 and another 7.1 in 2023. His long-term baselines would tell us these are merely one-week outliers, but perhaps there is some inherent comfort for the La Cañada-native just 30 miles from his hometown.
Only time will tell, but one thing is certain for the newly crowned seven-time PGA Tour winner: if he can reliably lean on his chipping and putting over four days, the ball-striking is in a place capable of returning him to the game’s upper echelon.
No. 6 - Cameron Young
I hate to use the word "blind-faith" this high in the rankings, but for supporters of Young heading into 2026, our guy hasn't given us much in the way of tangible proof of an impending breakout.
Finishes of 22nd, 41st, and 55th likely aren't exactly what we envisioned for the New Year after Young dominated the back-half of 2025, but if there were ever a spot on Tour for our expectations to be realized, Riviera has to rank near the top of the list.
Across 12 career rounds in Pacific Palisades, Young has gained a staggering 24.6 strokes to the field when combining his driving and iron play. That's over a half stroke per round better than the next closest player over that span, Viktor Hovland, and nearly double the ball-striking output of Scottie Scheffler: widely considered the best we've seen since Tiger himself.
That places Young in elite territory when it comes to course fit: think McIlroy's ball-striking projection at Quail Hollow, or Scheffler at Muirfield Village. However, the historic deficiencies in Young's short game have kept him from converting these historic splits into a win.
Across those same 12 rounds, Cam never gained strokes around the greens of Riviera and only gained strokes putting on one occasion -- predictably in his runner-up finish on debut in 2022.
This is where the projection gets interesting, as Young has quietly turned a corner with his chipping: rating out above field average in seven of his last nine starts. Over his last 75 rounds, he ranks sixth in this field in Strokes Gained: Putting.
It's been two years since we've seen the iconic links of Riviera, so the question must be asked: Is Young's recent short-game progression enough to get him over the hump? Just how predictive are his historic ball-striking baselines here? There is admittedly a lot of smoke to his case for a breakout week -- arguably as much as anywhere else on Tour -- but until it materializes, it's hard not to wonder if we're buying into blind faith once again.
No. 5 - Patrick Cantlay
The projection gets considerably safer as we enter the top five, and few players embody reliability at Riviera more than Patrick Cantlay. In seven appearances in Pacific Palisades since 2018, the Long Beach native has finished outside the top 15 just twice -- including a T4 and a solo third in the last two Genesis editions.
Cantlay’s comfort at Riviera extends well beyond the ball-striking fireworks of Young. He ranks inside the top five here in all three tee-to-green categories (Off the Tee, Approach, Around the Green) and finished second in putting two years ago (+6.2).
He arrives with momentum, too, closing his week at Pebble Beach with a bogey-free 65 -- leading the field in approach play for the day (+4.67), while grading in the 94th percentile over his last 12 months from our key approach range of 150–200 yards.
As has been the case throughout the West Coast Swing, Cantlay’s baseline remains among the highest outside the top two or three names on the odds board -- but my hesitation stems from elsewhere. His winless streak now stretches beyond three and a half years, raising questions about just how far you're willing to chase Cantlay down an odds board.
The projection is sturdy. The course fit is undeniable. But until he clears that final hurdle, sub-30/1 outright prices will always feel just a touch short.
No. 4 - Tommy Fleetwood
With no finish better than 22nd in four career starts at Pebble Beach, there were legitimate questions surrounding Tommy Fleetwood entering his 2026 debut. The defending FedEx Cup Champion answered them emphatically -- ranking second in tee-to-green for the week en route to a comfortable T4.
Fleetwood’s statistical profile remains as spotless as anyone in the sport. He ranked no worse than 24th in any strokes gained category last week and sits inside the top 10 in approach, around the green, and putting over his last 75 rounds.
That balanced profile should translate seamlessly to Riviera. Even before his ascent into the game’s top tier last season, Fleetwood posted finishes of 10th and 20th in his last two starts in Pacific Palisades -- gaining over 7.5 strokes putting across those eight rounds.
It was fitting that Fleetwood and Scheffler shared fourth at the year’s first Signature event, albeit in drastically different fashion. Neither had their full A-games, yet both leaned on elite baselines that very few in the sport can match.
Given Fleetwood’s all-around tee-to-green acumen -- and his quietly impressive recent success on Riviera’s poa annua greens -- it’s difficult to construct any outright card this week without placing him firmly in the top 3–4 of the conversation.
No. 3 - Hideki Matsuyama
Nobody would have blamed Hideki for allowing a crushing defeat in Phoenix to derail at least one week of his season -- especially considering the rather muted success he'd experienced at Pebble Beach through the years.
However, as he's done for much of his career, the Japanese No. 1 used the adversity as fuel: arriving early Monday to work on the notoriously wayward driver that cost him his third WM title the day before.
While Matsuyama didn't completely reverse his off-the-tee fortunes overnight, it was encouraging to see him hit two-thirds of his fairways for the week (compared to just 44% in Scottsdale), and carry over his astonishing early-season baselines in the game's other facets.
At Pebble Beach, Hideki gained 3.1 strokes around the greens and 3.92 strokes putting en route to a T8 finish -- his best short game performance on Poa Annua since winning the Genesis Invitational here two years ago. In fact, over his last six starts in California, Matsuyama has gained 0.44 strokes per round on the greens alone. Couple that with his elite touch around the greens -- second in SG: ARG over his last 75 rounds -- and his unmatched prowess with a mid/long-iron in hand:
- 95th percentile Strokes Gained per Shot 150-200 yards
- 94th percentile Strokes Gained per Shot >200 yards
- 97th percentile Proximity to the Hole 150-200 yards
- 96th percentile Proximity to the Hole >200 yards
Hideki represents one of the most complete statistical packages in this field. Notably, Matsuyama has gained strokes off the tee in nine of his 10 appearances at Riviera. If that historical comfort translates once again, the rest of his game is primed for another run at this marquee title.
No. 2 - Rory McIlroy
Rory's opening start of 2026 certainly came with its fair share of hiccups, but despite two three-putt doubles in Round 1 and two wayward tee shots in Round 3 -- leading to a pair of 7s on his Saturday card -- McIlroy still showcased some elite shotmaking en route to a T14.
He closed the week with a spotless 8-under 64 and gained 6.76 strokes on approach -- his best iron performance since the 2025 Masters. After a few shaky moments on the greens to start the week, his +4.86 strokes chipping and putting in the final round were reminiscent of the short-game brilliance that helped him conquer Pebble Beach 12 months prior.
Now, Rory heads to a course tailor-made for his strengths. We've already talked about Riviera's proclivity to reward bomb-and-gouge tactics, which McIlroy already proved with a field-best +5.4 Off-the-Tee rating two years ago. Its above-average share of middle- and long-iron approaches should further amplify his ball-striking projection. Three years ago, he posted the second-best approach week of his season (+6.3) at Riviera, and he has consistently excelled on layouts that demand precision with mid- and long-irons (Augusta, TPC Sawgrass, Quail Hollow, etc.).
With Sunday's momentum still fresh in his memory and Riviera tailor-made for his strengths, McIlroy arrives in Pacific Palisades poised for an early-season statement. Layouts that reward distance, shotmaking, and elite iron play are his bread and butter -- and if the back-half form from Pebble carries over, the field should be bracing for Rory's return at the top of the leaderboard.
No. 1 - Scottie Scheffler
Over the last two weeks, Scheffler has proven he doesn't need his full arsenal to make his way into contention with the PGA Tour's best: overcoming opening rounds of 73 and 72 at Scottsdale and Pebble Beach with a weekend scoring average of 65.3 to vault into back-to-back top-five finishes.
It feels like only a matter of time before he overcomes these slow starts, and perhaps that moment will come this week at Riviera. While Scheffler has yet to capture this prestigious title, he's spent the last three years showcasing an elite tee-to-green profile in finishes of seventh, 12th, and 10th.
In 2022, Scottie opened with a round of 5-under 66 and fired a field-best 65 in round three. While he couldn't keep up with the record-setting pace of Joaquin Niemann, his 5.7 strokes gained on approach ranked fifth in the field. The following year, Scheffler gained a whopping 7.5 strokes between his driving and iron play over four days, and in 2024, he finished second to champion Hideki Matsuyama from tee-through-green, gaining 8.6 strokes for the week and setting the stage for a run of four wins over his next five starts: including his second career Masters title, his second consecutive PLAYERS title, and two additional Signature wins at Bay Hill and Harbour Town.
On paper, Scheffler once again tops my model across a number of key metrics, including Total Driving, Weighted Proximity, SG: Approach, and SG: Tee-to-Green. Unlike in 2024's rendition, where a balky putter cost him a chance at contention, Scheffler no longer carries the drastically low floor on the greens that held him back for nearly two years. In fact, over the last 75 rounds, he ranks fourth in this field in putting and 11th when you isolate specifically for California Poa Annua.
A couple of ordinary opening rounds have kept Scheffler from the winner's circle, but these are clear outliers in the elite baseline he's built over the last few seasons. It feels like only a matter of time before he strings 72 holes together, and when he does, there is still no one in the sport capable of keeping pace.
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