Everything about Chris Gotterup is a sign of the times in pro golf

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Chris Gotterup (Photo by Stuart Franklin/R&A/R&A via Getty Images)

Irish Golfer & GOLF.com

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It would be easy to look away from the first PGA Tour event of the year, or pay it just an ounce of attention. A solid, young pro wins in Hawaii against a sunny backdrop and a ho-hum PGA Tour field. How much is there to it?

A lot, if you just look a bit closer.

Gotterup, at 26, represents much of what pro golf has become, and has worked through, in recent years. He figures to be a big part of its future, too, and will benefit handsomely from it.

For starters, he turned pro in 2022 and took the maximum amount of sponsor exemption starts, just as many young, promising stars do. This was just as LIV Golf launched, and just as the PGA Tour realised it needed to create more pathways for players like him. A few of his collegiate opponents took the leap to LIV. Gotterup chose the traditional route, with his collegiate performance earning him Korn Ferry Tour membership via the Tour’s “PGA Tour University” rankings.

But once he graduated from the KFT, Gotterup found a crowded scene. The Tour had created Signature Events with limited fields, controversially pushing some veteran pros out of tournaments they’re used to playing and down into the second rung of Tour stops. Many Korn Ferry Tour (and DP World Tour) graduates simply couldn’t enter tournaments even if they had a badge in their wallets that said “PGA Tour Member.”

They were required, however, to fly to Hawaii during the week of the 2024 Sony Open to sit through PGA Tour orientation. Gotterup was “one of those guys” as he said Sunday night, stuck in a conference room for eight hours, unable to hit a competitive golf shot during that week in Hawaii two years ago — a very 2024 issue the Tour has solved by limiting memberships ever since.

Rookies take all the starts they can get, so Gotterup played every single Tour event he was allowed to play. The 13th consecutive one was an opposite field event (played at the same time of a Rory McIlroy victory), the 2024 Myrtle Beach Classic, which Gotterup won by six. Was everyone paying attention? Probably not. But that’s life on the come-up. Not many were paying attention this week when he won the Sony Open to kickstart the 2026 season, a perfect ending to a weird three years with that tournament.

2024 Sony: Not in the field, but in town for orientation.
2025 Sony: Missed cut.
2026 Sony: Victory, calm as ever.

He becomes the most recent player to win three Tour events in 70 starts or less, joining Tom Kim, Viktor Hovland, Collin Morikawa, Jon Rahm and Xander Schauffele.

Gotterup’s post-round press time offered a few additional reminders of why he seems to be a player born of this specific PGA Tour era (to say nothing of the fact that he hits it as far as anyone). First, he not-so-gracefully mentioned how the Tour pension plan was top of mind after notching that third win. If you can lock yourself into a bunch of PGA Tour seasons, the retirement plan is as good as they come. Next, he mentioned how seriously he took his statistical shortcomings from 2025 — proximity from 100-150 yards and putts made from 9-20 feet — and spent the offseason grinding on them. This week he felt like he just recreated all that work.

Finally, Gotterup was asked about the Sony Open’s future, given the tournament is at risk of being dropped from the Tour’s schedule starting next year. He is well aware that the tour he plays on in 2027 will look different than it does in 2026 — and perhaps drastically so — but knows it doesn’t pay to meddle with specifics he can’t control. He bumbled through a statement and ultimately undercut it, saying, “I’m just spewing nonsense.”

What he can control is how straight he can hit a golf ball, and the people who do that best are going to be made endlessly rich by this Tour, no matter what its schedule looks like. He’s now ranked 17th in the world and is already answering questions about the upcoming Presidents Cup. “I hope [Brandt Snedeker] was watching,” Gotterup said.

Sneds surely was, even if most of the country may have had their TVs dialed to the NFL playoffs. They’ll have time to come around and catch him in the Signature Events, now that he’s qualified for every meaningful tournament the rest of the year. They’ll have time to catch him on TGL, too, the Tour’s mid-week simulator league, where he’s filled in for an injured Justin Thomas twice already — his 1-iron stinger earning plenty of online affection as it skids underneath a virtual hanging cliff.

Because of what he’s done lately, PGA Tour fans don’t have much of a choice. They are going to get plenty of Chris Gotterup in the months (and likely years) to come. Tour executives would say that is exactly the point.

This article originated on Golf.com

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