Pat Mayo
4 months ago
Mayo takes a deep dive into tournament and player stats with the Rabbit Hole Tool from Betsperts Golf, making his early 2026 Pebble Beach Pro-Am Picks, highlighting stats that matter inside the model, and previewing the course.
Two years ago, Pebble was given signature status. Something I found exciting. Pebble Beach is one of the TOUR’s most iconic courses, and for decades, it delivered the worst broadcast of the year. The event was a massive disservice to viewers. Especially since, being the first event after football ends, Pebble is where many casual fans tune in for the first time every year. Classic put your worst foot forward type of stuff.
The broadcast suffered from all the problems we still witness at The American Express: Limited cameras and a shotlink at the other courses. Brutal stuff.
For decades, this tournament was marred by the awful three-course rotation, 54-hole cut, and Pro-Am format. But that changed in 2024. While I’m usually a hater of smaller fields, shrinking this one from 156 to 80 players was a godsend. Anyone who ever sat through one of those brutal CBS Saturday rounds, where they spend more time breaking down Larry the Cable Guy’s swing in slow motion (sorry, Konica Minolta Vision!) than actually showing shots of, you know, professional golfers, knows precisely what I’m talking about.
Since the upgrade to signature event status, there’s no cut, which isn’t awesome, but they dropped Monterey Peninsula from the course rotation and limited the Pro-Am portion of the event to just the first two rounds. The field splits between Pebble Beach GL and Spyglass Hill for the first two rounds before only playing at Pebble over the weekend.
The Gods decided this was too much of a good thing in 2024. The weather blew everything up, and it became the first 54-hole tournament on TOUR since the 2016 Zurich Classic of New Orleans. We were robbed of a fantastic weekend showdown at Pebble in the first tournament with all the best players TOUR. They got us back last year. Rory put on a clinic, bombing and gouging his way to a two-stroke win, kicking off a run where he’d win at Pebble, Sawgrass, and Augusta National over a two-month period.
Of the top players in the world (excluding LIV guys, obviously), only Justin Thomas and Sungjae Im aren’t playing. Still no word on when they’ll be returning. Aaron Rai is back listed in the field after pulling out of the Farmers’ after lineup lock for DFS players. Helpful stuff.
Keith Mitchell, Tony Finau, and Billy Horschel are in the field on sponsor’s exceptions.
The final stragglers from Europe are all making their debut too: Rory McIlroy, Shane Lowry, Tommy Fleetwood. Each played back-to-back weeks in Dubai in January. Rory and Lowry both posted a T3 at the Dubai Invitational, while Tommy didn’t finish better than 25th in either start.
The big question I had for 2024 was: Will we see the top-end players dominate, or will Pebble Beach be ripe for shorter-hitting long shots like previous years? Wyndham Clark won at +6000 in three rounds, but was surrounded on the leaderboard by equal parts betting favorites and super long shots.
Answer: Inconclusive.
Last year, it was Rory, Lowry, and Rose at the top with the shorter-hitting Lucas Glover, Tom Kim, Russell Henley, and Sepp Straka, with a spattering of Cam Davis. Davis’ up-and-down from the tree roots on the 72nd hole was one of the shots of the year.
Answer: Also Inconclusive
Mayo’s Key Stat Rankings Powered by the Rabbit Hole Tool


Course: Pebble Beach GL (Three Rounds)
Par 3’s (4): Average distance – 170 yards
Par 4’s (10): Average distance – 413 yards
Par 5’s (4): Average distance – 541 yards
DFS Streak
Pebble Beach GL is designed to keep us from leveraging the starting hole in showdown. If you’re going front-to-back, you run into holes 8-9-10 in succession, all of which rank among the five toughest on the course. If you’re going back-to-front, you get access to Holes 18-1, both of which are among the seven easiest, but to go streaking, you need three straight … holes 2 and 17 rank as the second and third toughest on the course respectively. I don’t think many streaks cross over the 9’s this week, but if they do happen, I think going back-to-front is the play, as you only have to birdie one tough hole as opposed to two.
While Wyndham Clark did it in 2024, the odds of birding 8-9-10 are under 0.1%. Going the other direction, Hole 1 is tough (13% under par rate), but the surrounding holes are manageable (Holes 18-2-3 all rank easier than course average).
Course: Spyglass Hill GC (One Round)
Par 3’s (4): Average Distance – 171 yards
Par 4’s (10): Average Distance – 410 yards
Par 5’s (4): Average Distance – 567 yards
DFS Streak
The advantage is limited, but by going back-to-front, you get access to a short Par 4 (#17) and a Par 5 (#1), making that the way to go if you’re really trying to split hairs.
PAST WINNER NOTES
2025 – Rory McIlroy (+1400 as the second favorite) at -21, two clear of Shane Lowry
2024 – Wyndham Clark (+6000) at -17, one clear of Ludvig Aberg (Only 3 Rounds)
2023 – Justin Rose (+3500) and -18, three clear of the Brandon’s (Todd and Wu)
2022 – Tom Hoge (+6000) at -19, two clear of Jordan Spieth … three-course rotation
2021: Daniel Berger (+1400)
2020: Nick Taylor (+12500)
2019: Phil Mickelson (-19, three shots clear of Paul Casey)
2018: Ted Potter (-17, 3 clear of Day/Mickelson/Reavie/DJ)
2017: Jordan Spieth (-19, 4 clear of Kelly Kraft)
2016: Vaughn Taylor (-17, 1 clear of Mickelson)
First Round Leaders
2025 ROUND 1
Pebble Beach GL
65 – Justin Rose, Cam Davis, Victor Hovland, and Jake Knapp
Spyglass Hill
2024 ROUND 1
Pebble Beach GL
Spyglass Hill
2023 ROUND 1
Pebble Beach
Spyglass Hill
2022 ROUND 1
Pebble Beach
Spyglass Hill
2021 ROUND 1
Pebble Beach
SpyGlass hill
Pebble Beach is annually the course with the shortest average drive on TOUR (274 yards vs. 291yards) and the one with the fewest number of drives over 320 yards (5.3%). In theory, this should mitigate the advantage of the premier drivers in the world — aka most of the elite players — since so many players will be less than driver off the tee. Unless you’re Rory and simply smash it over the trees.
Elite drivers dominated during the 2019 US Open when all of the top guys played. Woodland won, with Brooks, Rahm, Xander, Louis, and Rory all finished Top 10 that year. That was under USGA conditions, though. In the much easier Pro-Am setup, will it just play like normal, and the skill advantage will be equalized? In the regular tournament, as much as we don’t want to really say, it’s kind of a putting contest.
The Pebble Beach Pro-Am has historically opened the door for long-shot winners. Three of the past nine winners — Potter, Nick Taylor, and Vaughn Taylor — all went off at triple digits. Overall, the last nine winners have been either 30/1 or lower (Rose, Spieth, Mickelson, and Berger) or 100/1 or higher (Rory). Hoge became the lone outlier opening 65/1 in the betting market and running down Spieth over the final holes. I’m not counting Clark since it was a 54-hole event.
Coastal winds can also be a contributing factor. Pebble Beach can switch from easy to frustratingly difficult with a wind shift. Spyglass tends to be more protected by the trees.
Shot Link data is only available for Pebble Beach GL. When you’re researching the statistics, keep this in mind, as half the rounds golfers have played historically at this event are not weighted in the Strokes Gained metrics.
Course history has been strong at Pebble Beach. All winners this millennium had previously made a cut at Pebble Beach in their career before winning, and most had a Top 10 finish on their resume (Clark at a T18 in 2020). A lot of that can be attributed to the comfort level on these greens. If you thought the short misses were bad at Torrey Pines, just wait for the misses this week, especially with three rounds at Pebble Beach GL.
Pebble Beach Putting Ranks by Distance
Of players with four or more rounds at Pebble Beach GL, only Andrew Putnam, Denny McCarthy, Tom Hoge, and Daniel Berger are averaging over 0.85 SG/PUTT per round at Pebble Beach GL.
Stats & Research Tools Powered by the Rabbit Hole from Betsperts Golf

Green sizes at Pebble Beach are just 3,500 square feet. Hence, the extra consideration for SG: Around The Green, as making putts from outside 10-feet is quite the chore.
2026 Smallest Avg. Greens by sq. ft.
(Daniel Berger has four career wins: 2 at Southwind, 1 at Colonial, 1 at Pebble)
Since 2000, the leader or co-leader after 54 holes has gone on to win 13 times, including nine of the past 11 years. Rose led by a stroke a year ago; Hoge was tied with Hossler and Putnam; Berger was T2, one stroke behind Spieth in 2021; and Phil Mickelson was three back of Paul Casey entering the final round in 2019.
Six first-round leaders have gone on to win at Pebble Beach since 2000, as Nick Taylor became the sixth in 2020. He also became the first international winner of this event since Vijay Singh in 2004. With his 2023 victory, Justin Rose became the first player from Europe to win.
Russell Henley — While it appears the bloom is off the rose with the calendar switch, Henley’s actually well above his usual performance on approach play. He was waylaid at Waialae with a wonky driver and simply couldn’t make enough putts at Stadium Course to truly contend at AMEX. He still has T19/T9 results to begin the year. Henley is, however, gaining an outrageous 1.56 SG: APP over those two starts. If he can keep his accuracy up off the tee, continue this amazing iron play, and not gag away all his chances on missed short putts, he’s primed to build off his T5 at Pebble Beach a year ago.
Daniel Berger — The chipping woes continue to be an issue, so be wary, but there has been no event where Berger has been better in his career. He’s never failed to clinch a Top 10 in his three starts at the Pro-Am (1st, T5, T10) and enters off a week in Phoenix where his ball striking flirted with those at the top of the leaderboard. Plus, he’s averaging close to +1.00 SG: PUTT/Round at Pebble Beach GL. Additionally, Berger’s four career wins have all come at courses with green sizes of 5,000 sq. ft. or fewer (2 at Southwind, 1 at Colonial, 1 at Pebble).