“The more I practice, the luckier I get.”
— Gary Player
“The more I practice, the luckier I get.”
— Gary Player
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CoursesNews“The more I practice, the luckier I get.”
— Gary Player
The Masters hangover lasts precisely one week on the PGA Tour. By Thursday at Harbour Town Golf Links, the talk of Augusta gives way to a very different kind of examination – one that punishes the big hitters and rewards the thinkers, the scramblers, and the putters who can read Pete Dye’s notoriously tricky Bermudagrass greens.
The RBC Heritage runs April 16-19 with a $20m purse. Harbour Town is a par 71 measuring 7,213 yards – compact by modern standards, but don’t let that fool you. This is one of the toughest greens-in-regulation tests on the PGA Tour year after year. The Statz data makes it clear: the players who contend here are the ones who can do damage from 100-200 yards and who can rescue pars when they miss the tiny, dome-shaped green complexes. And miss them they will – even elite ball-strikers average 15+ missed greens for the week.
Note: Justin Rose has withdrawn from this event.
The Statz course profile is unambiguous. Looking at historical top-10 finishers at this event, the skill gaps that matter most are on approach (+0.79 SG per round) and on the greens (+0.76 SG per round). Off the tee is a factor (+0.43), but it is firmly third in the pecking order.
This is 419 Bermudagrass throughout – fairways, rough, and greens. In April, the greens carry Poa Trivialis overseed, which adds another layer of complexity. The grain matters. Putts from 10-20 feet are notoriously tricky. Players who rely on pace alone get exposed. The winners here are those who can hit it close on approach and convert when they do find the putting surface.
The course layout means the par-4s and par-5s are genuinely scoreable when the wind stays down – past winning scores range from -13 in firm conditions to -22 in benign ones. Position off the tee beats distance every time. The oak trees, pines, and strategically placed bunkers make accuracy a premium even from relatively short distances.
Over the last 16 rounds on the Statz trending leaderboard, the players posting the biggest SG Total numbers in this week’s field are:
Cross-reference that with course fit and course history, and the picture becomes clearer. Trending form matters here – but only if the player can actually hit approach shots at Harbour Town. The course demands precision, not just hot form in any direction.
Xander Schauffele sits third in the Statz projections this week with a 5.1% win probability, a 58.2% top-10 probability, and a projected -14 for the tournament. The two players above him – Scottie Scheffler and Tommy Fleetwood – are the clear favourites. Schauffele is the pick at a bigger price with a compelling all-round case.
The numbers behind the number are what matter. His course fit score is 84.2, paired with a 65.0 recent form rating and 65.3 course history score. He is 4th on tour in trending SG Approach among the RBC Heritage field at +0.968 per round. Harbour Town’s biggest premium is on approach play – Schauffele is delivering right now.
He won at Pebble Beach this year, his game is in sharp order, and the course suits him. The each-way case is strong.
Sepp Straka has the third-highest Statz course fit score in the entire field at 93.7. Only Akshay Bhatia and Nicolai Hojgaard score higher. For a player with a 4.2% win probability and a 55.7% top-10 chance, that course fit number stands out.
Straka’s course history score is 66.1 – among the better figures in the field – reflecting a solid record at Harbour Town. The recent form sits at 45.6, which is the concern, but this is a course where accumulated knowledge and a specific skill profile can outperform trending hot streaks. The projected score is -13.
The Austrian is an elite Bermudagrass player. At courses that demand short-game precision and putting touch on grainy surfaces, he performs. The Statz model scores him as one of the best course fits in this week’s draw, and that is not by accident.
Nicolai Hojgaard is the best combination of course fit and recent form outside the top two in the Statz rankings. His course fit score is 97.7 – second only to Akshay Bhatia. His recent form score is 68.5. His composite projection score of 64.4 puts him 6th in the field despite a world ranking that means he should be available at a price.
SG Approach is solid at +0.588 (Tour#27 among the RBC field), and he is 32nd on tour in SG Putting among the field at +0.507. That is a well-rounded profile. SG Total over the last 16 rounds is +1.17 – comfortably in the zone for a genuine contender.
The course fit is the real story. Statz is telling us Hojgaard’s game profile matches Harbour Town as well as almost anyone in this draw. He has not built a long course history here yet – hence the 50.0 course history score – but the fit and current form combination makes him a compelling each-way play.
Jake Knapp is the most interesting each-way dart at a long price this week. His recent form score on the Statz model is 73.2 – the third-best figure in the field. His SG Putting over the last 16 rounds is +1.463, which makes him the second-best putter in the field behind only Jacob Bridgeman.
At Harbour Town, putting is worth +0.76 SG per round among top-10 finishers. Knapp is delivering exactly that right now. His SG Total is +1.761 – 11th in the field over recent rounds. The Statz projection has him at -11 for the week with a 48.7% top-10 probability.
The weakness is course fit at 61.0 and a limited course history (26.2 score). But at a big price, you are not looking for certainty – you are looking for a player with a live skill that matters on this particular course right now. Knapp’s putter qualifies.
Check the full RBC Heritage tournament page on Statz for live projections, course fit rankings, and field analysis. See the Find Me a Winner tool for the full model breakdown.
EW terms: 1/4 odds, 5 places, bet365.
The RBC Heritage is an annual PGA Tour event held at Harbour Town Golf Links in Hilton Head Island, South Carolina, United States of America. The 2026 edition takes place Apr 16 - 19 with a prize fund of $20m.
The RBC Heritage is played at Harbour Town Golf Links, a par 71 course measuring 7,213 yards. Designed by Pete Dye, the course opened in 1969. Located in Hilton Head Island, South Carolina, United States of America.
The RBC Heritage is contested annually during the PGA Tour season. The 2026 edition was held Apr 16 - 19.
Harbour Town Golf Links features 419 Bermudagrass & Buffalo Naturals throughout — on the greens, fairways and 419 Bermudagrass & Buffalo Naturals rough. Bermudagrass is common at warm-climate venues and tends to produce a firm, fast surface.
Historically, players who contend at The RBC Heritage gain the most strokes on approach (+0.79 SG/round) and on the greens (+0.76 SG/round). Off the tee also matters, with top-10 finishers averaging +0.43 SG/round.
In 2025, The RBC Heritage was won by Justin Thomas at -17.
| Pos | Player | Score |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Justin Thomas | -17 |
| 2 | Andrew Novak | -17 |
| T3 |
| Daniel Berger |
| -14 |
| T3 | Mackenzie Hughes | -14 |
| T3 | Brian Harman | -14 |
| Year | Champion | Score |
|---|---|---|
| 2025 | Justin Thomas | -17 |
| 2024 | Scottie Scheffler | -19 |
| 2023 | Matt Fitzpatrick | -17 |
| 2022 | Jordan Spieth | -13 |
| 2021 | Stewart Cink | -19 |
| 2020 | Webb Simpson | -22 |
| 2019 | C.T. Pan | -12 |
| 2018 | Satoshi Kodaira | -12 |
| 2017 | Wesley Bryan | -13 |
| 2016 | Branden Grace | -9 |