Some tournaments are won with fireworks. This one was won with patience.
After thunderstorms washed away any chance of a traditional Sunday finish, the Travelers Championship spilled into Monday morning with two of the best players in the world still standing. One sudden-death playoff hole later, Viktor Hovland walked away with the trophy, a $3.6 million payday, and another signature victory after outlasting Scottie Scheffler.
It was a fitting ending to four five days of elite golf at TPC River Highlands. Hovland never looked rattled despite spending the weekend trading punches with the World No. 1. Scheffler kept answering every challenge, including a clutch par save on the 72nd hole to extend the tournament, but Hovland delivered when it mattered most and reminded everyone why he’s still one of the most dangerous closers on Tour.
For a player who had spent much of the past year searching for consistency, beating Scottie Scheffler head-to-head in a playoff is about as convincing a statement as you can make.
Scheffler probably won’t lose much sleep over the runner-up finish, even if it stings. He erased Hovland’s lead with a weather-be-damned Sunday performance, carding a 68 before forcing extra holes with a gritty finish after weather delays turned the final round into a marathon. His reward? Nearly $2.2 million. Not a bad consolation prize, though second place has to feel disappointing when you were one stroke away in regulation from another signature title. And missing that shorty in the playoff may lead to a behind-the-scenes putter chew-out.
If anyone left Connecticut wondering “what if,” it was Collin Morikawa.
While the leaders were dodging storms, Morikawa lit up TPC River Highlands with a blistering 61 on Sunday that briefly looked good enough to steal the tournament. Nine birdies. Almost no mistakes. Then he could only wait. And wait. And wait some more.
The leaders never came back to him.
Instead of a playoff, Morikawa settled for a share of third and another seven-figure paycheck of roughly $1.4 million. Encouraging? Absolutely. Disappointing? Sure. You don’t shoot 61 on Sunday very often, and when you do, you’d like to have something more than third place to show for it.
U.S. Open champion and now anti-hero Wyndham Clark quietly put together another strong week and found himself near the top of the leaderboard deep into Sunday before fading just enough to miss the playoff. His play was steady, if not spectacular. However, this week he needed a little more luck on the greens to keep pace and contend down the stretch.
Then there were the players who couldn’t quite capitalize.
Patrick Cantlay entered Sunday within striking distance but never mounted the charge many expected. Akshay Bhatia started the day believing he had a realistic chance to win his first signature event, only to watch the leaders separate themselves as the afternoon wore on. Matt Fitzpatrick (and his brother too) hung around for much of the week but couldn’t produce the low number needed on Sunday when scoring conditions demanded it. In a $20 million signature event, a few missed birdie opportunities can mean the difference between lifting a trophy and simply cashing another nice check.
The biggest loser may not have been a player at all.
It was the fans who showed up on Sunday, regardless of the weather forecast.
The storms robbed them of what should have been one of the best Sunday finishes of the season, forcing thousands to leave before the tournament reached its conclusion. Instead of packed grandstands surrounding the 18th green, the championship had to wait until Monday morning. The golf was still outstanding. The ending just deserved a bigger audience.
A few things became crystal clear by week’s end.
Scottie Scheffler is still the standard. Collin Morikawa looks ready to win again. And Viktor Hovland, however, reminded everyone that when his swing cooperates and the pressure rises, he’s more than capable of beating anyone in the world.
Including World #1.
Winners and Losers from Sunday TPC River Highlands:
Winner: Hovland. We thought he would buckle down the stretch, but he didn’t. Now he has eight PGA TOUR winners’ trophies on display in what must be a very large office in his massive mansion, wherever he calls home.
Winner: Alex Fitzpatrick. He finished up in T-7 position. Since winning the Zurich member guest with his brother, he has made all seven cuts in big events and has picked up four top-10 finishes. He’s now sitting in 20th position in the FedEx Cup points list and is in a great position to earn himself a spot in the Tour Championship if he posts 1-2 good finishes down the stretch.
Losers: Eric Cole and Si Woo Kim. Both gents are having good seasons, but they are having trouble turning good into great. Their Sunday performances did help their causes, with both posting 3-over 73s while most others were breaking par on the easy TPC River Highlands track.
Winner: Captain Keegan. He didn’t win the tourney like he did last year, but he did close out with a final round 64 and jump 19 spots on the leaderboard, finishing up T-14. We didn’t get to watch most of his round because he teed off so early, but surely he made a few more fans from those who watched him play in person on Sunday.
Loser. Spieth. We love you dealy, Spieth. But not your T-66 finish. If you can’t turn your game around in the next 18 months, you’ll be headed straight to the PGA TOUR Challenger track.
2026 Travelers Championship prize money payouts
| Position | Player | Score | Earnings |
| 1 | Viktor Hovland | -21 | $3,600,000 |
| 2 | Scottie Scheffler | -21 | $2,180,000 |
| 3 | Collin Morikawa | -20 | $1,380,000 |
| 4 | Matt Fitzpatrick | -19 | $980,000 |
| T5 | Wyndham Clark | -18 | $772,500 |
| T5 | Akshay Bhatia | -18 | $772,500 |
| T7 | Corey Conners | -17 | $628,333 |
| T7 | Alex Fitzpatrick | -17 | $628,333 |
| T7 | J.J. Spaun | -17 | $628,333 |
| T10 | Robert MacIntyre | -16 | $525,000 |
| T10 | Ben Griffin | -16 | $525,000 |
| T12 | Russell Henley | -15 | $445,000 |
| T12 | Sam Burns | -15 | $445,000 |
| T14 | Nicolai Højgaard | -14 | $315,000 |
| T14 | Keegan Bradley | -14 | $315,000 |
| T14 | Denny McCarthy | -14 | $315,000 |
| T14 | Tommy Fleetwood | -14 | $315,000 |
| T14 | Hideki Matsuyama | -14 | $315,000 |
| T14 | Bud Cauley | -14 | $315,000 |
| T14 | Justin Thomas | -14 | $315,000 |
| T14 | Patrick Cantlay | -14 | $315,000 |
| T22 | Kristoffer Reitan | -13 | $209,000 |
| T22 | Keith Mitchell | -13 | $209,000 |
| T22 | Shane Lowry | -13 | $209,000 |
| T25 | Nick Taylor | -12 | $157,000 |
| T25 | Daniel Berger | -12 | $157,000 |
| T25 | Kurt Kitayama | -12 | $157,000 |
| T25 | Brian Harman | -12 | $157,000 |
| T25 | Justin Rose | -12 | $157,000 |
| T30 | Andrew Novak | -11 | $117,250 |
| T30 | Michael Kim | -11 | $117,250 |
| T30 | Matt McCarty | -11 | $117,250 |
| T30 | Nico Echavarria | -11 | $117,250 |
| T30 | Sungjae Im | -11 | $117,250 |
| T30 | Aaron Rai | -11 | $117,250 |
| T30 | Chris Gotterup | -11 | $117,250 |
| T30 | Jackson Suber | -11 | $117,250 |
| T38 | Brandt Snedeker | -10 | $85,000 |
| T38 | Rickie Fowler | -10 | $85,000 |
| T38 | Ryo Hisatsune | -10 | $85,000 |
| T38 | Tom Hoge | -10 | $85,000 |
| T38 | Harris English | -10 | $85,000 |
| T38 | Eric Cole | -10 | $85,000 |
| T44 | Ryan Gerard | -9 | $67,000 |
| T44 | Mac Meissner | -9 | $67,000 |
| T44 | Si Woo Kim | -9 | $67,000 |
| T47 | Cameron Young | -8 | $54,800 |
| T47 | Alex Smalley | -8 | $54,800 |
| T47 | Jacob Bridgeman | -8 | $54,800 |
| T47 | Brian Campbell | -8 | $54,800 |
| T51 | Sahith Theegala | -7 | $48,700 |
| T51 | Jhonattan Vegas | -7 | $48,700 |
| T51 | Harry Hall | -7 | $48,700 |
| T51 | Xander Schauffele | -7 | $48,700 |
| T55 | Ludvig Åberg | -6 | $46,000 |
| T55 | Jake Knapp | -6 | $46,000 |
| T55 | Jason Day | -6 | $46,000 |
| T55 | Alex Noren | -6 | $46,000 |
| T55 | Tony Finau | -6 | $46,000 |
| T55 | Maverick McNealy | -6 | $46,000 |
| 61 | Taylor Pendrith | -5 | $44,600 |
| T62 | Min Woo Lee | -4 | $43,800 |
| T62 | Sam Stevens | -4 | $43,800 |
| T62 | Ben James | -4 | $43,800 |
| 65 | Adam Scott | -3 | $43,000 |
| T66 | Ryan Fox | E | $42,200 |
| T66 | Jordan Spieth | E | $42,200 |
| T66 | Lucas Glover | E | $42,200 |
| 69 | J.T. Poston | 1 | $41,400 |
| 70 | Mark Hubbard | 2 | $41,000 |
| 71 | Gary Woodland | 5 | $40,600 |
| 72 | Sepp Straka | 10 | $40,200 |
