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2026 Charles Schwab Challenge: Henley’s Stunning Finish Steals Colonial Crown

“I was just trying to give myself a chance.”

That was Russell Henley’s simple explanation after one of the most dramatic finishes of the 2026 PGA Tour season.

Standing on the 16th tee Sunday afternoon at Colonial Country Club, Henley trailed 54-hole leader Eric Cole by three shots. With only three holes remaining and a crowded leaderboard surrounding him, the tournament appeared destined to belong to someone else. Or did it?

Three holes later, everything had changed.

Tournaments between majors can sometimes lack energy, especially when fields aren’t as stacked with stars. But the Charles Schwab Challenge once again proved why Colonial remains one of the PGA Tour’s most respected venues.

The historic Fort Worth layout delivered exactly what golf fans want: a packed leaderboard, constant momentum swings and a Sunday finish that wasn’t decided until extra holes.

Journeyman Eric Cole entered the day searching for the first PGA Tour victory of his career after firing a brilliant third-round 63 to grab the lead. Ryan Gerard sat one shot back. Mac Meissner was within striking distance. 2025 U.S. Open champ J.J. Spaun, Alex “Victory’s a ommin’” Smalley, and Henley all began the day lurking just off the pace. It felt less like a golf tournament and more like a six-hour survival test.

Cole handled the pressure admirably for much of the afternoon. Despite difficult scoring conditions, he maintained control of the tournament and carried the lead into the back nine. The biggest turning point came on the par-4 ninth hole. Cole made a costly double bogey that opened the door for the field. To his credit, he responded immediately with a birdie at the par-5 11th and steadied himself with a string of pars.

Around him, contenders came and went.

Defending champion Ben Griffin, in his cheesy handsome Aviators, made the biggest charge of the day. Griffin turned in a blistering 5-under 30 on his opening nine and suddenly found himself in position to become the first player since Ben Hogan to successfully defend a title at Colonial. But a bogey at the par-5 11th halted his momentum just enough. A late birdie on 17 helped him post 11-under in the clubhouse, but he ultimately finished one shot shy of the playoff.

J.J. Spaun also had opportunities to seize control. The reigning U.S. Open champion reached the lead during the front nine but missed several short putts coming home, including multiple opportunities from inside eight feet on the back nine. By day’s end, he found himself a couple of shots short of the winning number.

Even Ludvig Åberg briefly appeared ready to make a run before his short game let him down. After an early birdie moved him into contention, his momentum slowly disappeared throughout the round as Colonial continued to punish anything less than precision golf.

Meanwhile, Henley simply hovered on the leaderboard.

After opening with an eagle and birdie, he looked ready to charge up the board before three consecutive bogeys on Nos. 3, 4 and 5 nearly derailed his chances. Many players would have pressed. Henley remained patient. He understood Colonial rewards discipline as much as aggression.

Then came the finishing stretch.

Henley poured in birdie putts from approximately 16 feet on both the 16th and 17th holes. Suddenly, the deficit was gone. Standing on the 18th green needing one more birdie to have any chance, he rolled in another lengthy putt to reach 12-under and tie Cole for the lead. What looked impossible less than an hour earlier had become reality.

“Run through the finish line,” Henley said afterward, describing his mindset over the closing holes. “You never know what’s going to happen.”

Cole still had an opportunity to win in regulation but couldn’t convert birdie chances on 17 or 18. For him, it was writing on the wall. After saving par on the final hole, he headed back to the tee for a playoff, and had to know that the sporting books did not have favor his chances.

The extra session lasted only one hole.

Henley’s approach shot was a dart and he converted another birdie putt, completing one of the most unlikely closing stretches of the ear. Four consecutive birdies—three to finish regulation and one more in the playoff—delivered his sixth PGA Tour victory and a winner’s check of $1.782 million.

“It’s hard to win out here,” Henley said afterward. “You have to appreciate every one (tourney) because you never know when the next one is coming.”

For Cole, the disappointment was obvious, but so was the opportunity. After another strong performance under pressure, he appears closer than ever to securing his first PGA Tour title. The good news is that with his runner-up finish, he’s almost certainly guaranteed to keep his card for the ’27 season.

And for Colonial, it was another reminder that one of golf’s oldest venues still knows how to produce unforgettable finishes.

Sunday Winners & Losers from Colonial:

Winner: Russell Henley

Trailing by three shots with three holes to play, Henley authored the heater run of the tournament. Birdies on 16, 17 and 18 forced a playoff, and he added a fourth consecutive birdie on the first extra hole to complete one of the most remarkable closing stretches on Tour this season. Four straight birdies when the tournament was on the line is as clutch as it gets.

Winner: Ben Griffin

The defending champion looked dead in the water at the start of the day, sitting six shots off the lead. Instead, Griffin fired a Sunday charge that briefly put him in position to become the first successful title defender at Colonial since Ben Hogan. He ultimately finished just short, but his front-nine 30 and late clubhouse lead created much of Sunday’s drama.

Winner: Eric Cole

Yes, he lost in a playoff, but Cole proved he belongs in contention. After a costly double bogey on the ninth threatened to derail his round, he regrouped and battled all the way to extra holes. Many players would have folded under that pressure. Cole nearly won anyway and likely earned a few more believers for future Sundays.

Loser: Ryan Gerard

Starting the day one shot behind the lead, Gerard never generated the momentum he needed. While others made birdie runs on the back nine, he spent most of Sunday trying to keep pace and gradually slid down the leaderboard. It wasn’t a disaster, but it was a missed opportunity to capture a signature PGA Tour victory.

Loser: J.J. Spaun’s once hot putter

The reigning U.S. Open champion entered Sunday just two shots off the lead and appeared poised to make a serious run. Instead, a closing 70 left him outside the playoff. Spaun had opportunities throughout the afternoon but couldn’t convert enough birdie chances when the tournament was there for the taking.

Loser: LIV Golf.

We don’t even know who won their event let alone played in it.

2026 Charles Schwab Challenge prize money payouts

PositionPlayerScorePrize ($)
1Russell Henley-121,782,000
2Eric Cole-121,079,100
T3Ben Griffin-11524,700
T3Alex Smalley-11524,700
T3Mac Meissner-11524,700
T6Gary Woodland-10322,988
T6Nico Echavarria-10322,988
T6Michael Brennan-10322,988
T6J.J. Spaun-10322,988
T10Steven Fisk-9249,975
T10Mackenzie Hughes-9249,975
T10Ryan Gerard-9249,975
T13Jordan Smith-8193,875
T13Justin Thomas-8193,875
T13Hideki Matsuyama-8193,875
16Michael Thorbjornsen-7170,775
T17Rico Hoey-6141,075
T17Michael Kim-6141,075
T17Andrew Putnam-6141,075
T17A.J. Ewart-6141,075
T17Ludvig Åberg-6141,075
T22Max Homa-592,400
T22Pierceson Coody-592,400
T22Zach Bauchou-592,400
T22Brice Garnett-592,400
T22Matt Kuchar-592,400
T22Brian Harman-592,400
T28Brandt Snedeker-469,550
T28Keita Nakajima-469,550
T28Doug Ghim-469,550
T28Akshay Bhatia-469,550
T32Lanto Griffin-359,070
T32Garrick Higgo-359,070
T32Christiaan Bezuidenhout-359,070
T35J.T. Poston-247,237
T35Max McGreevy-247,237
T35Kevin Yu-247,237
T35Keegan Bradley-247,237
T35Davis Thompson-247,237
T35Johnny Keefer-247,237
T35Lee Hodges-247,237
T42Kevin Streelman-129,766
T42Joel Dahmen-129,766
T42Emiliano Grillo-129,766
T42Jeffrey Kang-129,766
T42Adrien Saddier-129,766
T42Ricky Castillo-129,766
T42Sam Stevens-129,766
T42Austin Smotherman-129,766
T42Rasmus Neergaard-Petersen-129,766
T42Robert MacIntyre-129,766
T42Billy Horschel-129,766
T42Chandler Blanchet-129,766
T54Séamus PowerE22,968
T54Luke ClantonE22,968
T54Takumi KanayaE22,968
T54Patrick FishburnE22,968
T54Andrew NovakE22,968
T54Tom KimE22,968
T60Patrick Rodgers+121,780
T60Mark Hubbard+121,780
T60Nick Dunlap+121,780
T60Matt McCarty+121,780
T60Taylor Moore+121,780
T60Sahith Theegala+121,780
66Ryo Hisatsune+221,087
T67Thorbjørn Olesen+320,691
T67Jackson Suber+320,691
T67Austin Eckroat+320,691
70Erik van Rooyen+420,295
T71Tom Hoge+519,899
T71Lucas Glover+519,899
T71Davis Riley+519,899
T74Kevin Roy+619,503

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