Sunday at Bay Hill delivered exactly what golf fans want from the Arnold Palmer Invitational — a stacked leaderboard, a heartbreaking golf course, and just enough chaos on the back nine to keep everyone glued to the TV.
When it was over, Akshay Bhatia was the last man standing.
The 24-year-old defeated Daniel Berger in a sudden-death playoff after both players finished regulation at 15-under par, earning the biggest victory of Bhatia’s career and a tidy $4 million payday from the tournament’s $20 million purse.
Not a bad Sunday afternoon for Akshay at Arnold Palmer’s Bay Hill Club & Lodge.
Oh — and he also was awarded Arnie’s famous red cardigan. Which might honestly be the better prize.
Bay Hill did Bay Hill things this weekend. If you’ve watched this tournament long enough, you know how it goes.
Someone looks like they’re in control… then Bay Hill politely reminds everyone who’s actually in charge.
Berger entered Sunday with the lead and appeared to be cruising toward his first PGA TOUR win in five years. His ball-striking was sharp, his putting was solid, and for most of the afternoon he looked like the guy who was about to close the door.
Then Bhatia caught fire.
Trailing late on the back nine, he made a series of birdies and then produced the moment that flipped the tournament — an eagle on the par-5 16th that erased Berger’s commanding lead and sent the leaderboard into full panic mode. (NOTE: The 6-iron he pured into the 16th was as good a shot under pressure we have ever seen!)
Suddenly, the tournament that felt mostly decided turned into a two-man sprint to the finish.
Classic Bay Hill.
Both players survived the closing hole in reg and posted 15-under, which meant fans got bonus golf.
The playoff returned to the 18th hole, which is one of the more dramatic finishing holes on the PGA TOUR schedule. Water lurks, nerves show up, and the margin for error is basically zero.
Berger found trouble early in the playoff, forcing him into scramble mode. Bhatia played it safe.
Berger’s long lag putt came up short, and a three-putt bogey suddenly opened the door.
Bhatia didn’t do anything fancy.
He rolled a comfortable two-putt par and let the celebration begin.
Simple golf. Smart golf. Winning golf.
Fun fact: Bhatia winning in playoffs is becoming his thing. All three of Bhatia’s PGA TOUR wins have come in playoffs — and every single one ended on the first extra hole.
Some players hate extra holes.
Bhatia treats them like a quick errand.
“Yeah, just one more hole and we’ll wrap this thing up.”
At this point, if he’s tied after 72 holes, the rest of the field should probably be a little nervous.
The money Is getting silly. The PGA Tour continues to throw around prize money like a tech startup that just raised another funding round.
The Arnold Palmer Invitational is now one of the Tour’s Signature Events, meaning the purse sits at a massive $20 million.
Here’s how the top of the payout sheet looked:
- 1st — Akshay Bhatia: $4,000,000
- 2nd — Daniel Berger: $2,200,000
- T3 — Ludvig Åberg: $1,200,000
- T3 — Cameron Young: $1,200,000
- 5th — Collin Morikawa: $840,000
- T6 — Sahith Theegala: $702,000
- T6 — Russell Henley: $702,000
- T6 — Min Woo Lee: $702,000
- T9 — Rickie Fowler: $578,000
- T9 — Harry Hall: $578,000
Yes, finishing 10th still pays more than half a million dollars.
Golf is doing just fine, thanks for asking.
Beyond the playoff drama, the leaderboard looked exactly like you’d expect from a Signature Event.
Ludvig Åberg and Cameron Young shared third place at 12-under, while Collin Morikawa quietly worked his way into the top five.
Elsewhere, players like Sahith Theegala, Min Woo Lee, Russell Henley, and Rickie Fowler filled out the top ten.
In other words: a leaderboard loaded with Full Swing stars makes for great TV.
That’s what happens when the TOUR’s best players all show up for a $20 million purse.
Next Stop: The Players. With Bay Hill wrapped up, the PGA TOUR now heads to its next big stage — The Players Championship at TPC Sawgrass.
If the Arnold Palmer Invitational felt big, The Players is even bigger.
And after what he showed this weekend, Bhatia won’t be flying under the radar anymore.
The kid who once felt like a rising star just added another massive win to his résumé.
And if he finds himself tied after 72 holes again?
Well… history says that’s probably a problem for everyone else.
Winners & Losers from Sunday at Bay Hill
Winner/Loser: Billy Horschel. He moved up the leaderboard on Sunday more than any other player – 17 spots to finish up T-13. But for Billy to earn a spot in this week’s Players Championship, he would have had to shoot a PGA-record final round 58 and then beat Akshay and Daniel in a playoff. He’ll be watching The Players from his living room this upcoming weekend.
Winner: Akshay. His putting on Sunday was magnificent, and when the pressure was turned up, he stepped up. Akshay is a wonderful talent who will rack up victories on tour. It would not surprise us at all to see him contend in early April at the Masters.
Winner: Jordan Spieth. Jordan had himself another good tourney finish and is steadily climbing up the world rankings. Currently sitting in 64th position, if he continues posting finishes inside the top 20, he’ll earn a spot in the biggest events the rest of the year.
Loser: Sepp Straka. He struggled on Sunday, posting a final-round 4-over 76. He drove it poorly and didn’t make enough putts to keep himself in the mix coming down the stretch. He finished up T-13.
Loser: Tommy Boy Fleetwood. Over four days, he only shot par or better one time and fired a sour 1-over 73 on Sunday, finishing up T-49. We think this bad finish is an anomaly. We’ll know for sure this weekend at The Players.
Arnold Palmer Invitational 2026 prize money payouts:
| Position | Player | Score | Earnings |
| 1 | Akshay Bhatia | -15 | $4,000,000 |
| 2 | Daniel Berger | -15 | $2,200,000 |
| T3 | Ludvig Aberg | -12 | $1,200,000 |
| T3 | Cameron Young | -12 | $1,200,000 |
| 5 | Collin Morikawa | -11 | $840,000 |
| T6 | Sahith Theegala | -10 | $702,000 |
| T6 | Russell Henley | -10 | $702,000 |
| T6 | Min Woo Lee | -10 | $702,000 |
| T9 | Harry Hall | -8 | $578,000 |
| T9 | Rickie Fowler | -8 | $578,000 |
| T11 | Adam Scott | -6 | $493,000 |
| T11 | Jordan Spieth | -6 | $493,000 |
| T13 | Sepp Straka | -5 | $373,200 |
| T13 | Billy Horschel | -5 | $373,200 |
| T13 | Maverick McNealy | -5 | $373,200 |
| T13 | Si Woo Kim | -5 | $373,200 |
| T13 | Viktor Hovland | -5 | $373,200 |
| T18 | Chris Gotterup | -3 | $261,000 |
| T18 | Max Greyserman | -3 | $261,000 |
| T18 | Kurt Kitayama | -3 | $261,000 |
| T18 | Jacob Bridgeman | -3 | $261,000 |
| T18 | Jhonattan Vegas | -3 | $261,000 |
| T18 | Bud Cauley | -3 | $261,000 |
| T24 | Lucas Glover | -2 | $157,000 |
| T24 | Robert MacIntyre | -2 | $157,000 |
| T24 | Nicolai Hojgaard | -2 | $157,000 |
| T24 | Ryan Fox | -2 | $157,000 |
| T24 | Patrick Rodgers | -2 | $157,000 |
| T24 | Alex Noren | -2 | $157,000 |
| T24 | Harris English | -2 | $157,000 |
| T24 | Scottie Scheffler | -2 | $157,000 |
| T24 | Xander Schauffele | -2 | $157,000 |
| T33 | Keith Mitchell | -1 | $109,000 |
| T33 | Michael Kim | -1 | $109,000 |
| T33 | Corey Conners | -1 | $109,000 |
| T33 | Ryo Hisatsune | -1 | $109,000 |
| T33 | Michael Thorbjornsen | -1 | $109,000 |
| T38 | Nick Taylor | E | $90,000 |
| T38 | Taylor Pendrith | E | $90,000 |
| T38 | Andrew Novak | E | $90,000 |
| T41 | Hideki Matsuyama | 1 | $78,000 |
| T41 | Matt McCarty | 1 | $78,000 |
| T41 | Matt Fitzpatrick | 1 | $78,000 |
| T44 | Nico Echavarria | 2 | $66,000 |
| T44 | Taylor Moore | 2 | $66,000 |
| T44 | Andrew Putnam | 2 | $66,000 |
| T47 | Chris Kirk | 5 | $58,000 |
| T47 | Daniel Bennett (a) | 5 | $0 |
| 49 | Tommy Fleetwood | 6 | $56,000 |
| 50 | Brian Harman | 10 | $54,000 |
