The Players Championship returns to Ponte Vedra Beach this week with history on the line, a returning villain in the field, and the most famous par-3 in golf ready to break hearts all over again.
PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — Every year, the debate resurfaces. Is The Players Championship golf’s fifth major? The arguments go back and forth, the traditionalists push back, and the conversation never quite resolves. But here is what nobody argues: when the world’s best players tee it up at TPC Sawgrass on Thursday morning, it is the most loaded field in professional golf, playing for the largest purse on the PGA Tour calendar. That tends to settle most debates.
The 52nd edition of The Players Championship runs March 12-15 on the Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida , just a mile from PGA Tour headquarters. The purse stands at $25 million, with $4.5 million and 750 FedExCup points going to the winner. Forty-seven of the top 50 players in the world are in the 123-man field. The three absentees are not taking anything away from what shapes up as one of the best weeks in recent memory.
The Race for Three
The headline narrative this week belongs to the two best players in the world, and the number three.
World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler won The Players in back-to-back years — 2023 and 2024 — becoming the first repeat winner in tournament history, posting scores of 17-under and 20-under respectively. World No. 2 Rory McIlroy won it in 2019 and again in 2025, defeating J.J. Spaun in a three-hole aggregate Monday playoff after weather suspended Sunday’s final round.
Both men arrive at TPC Sawgrass this week chasing a third title, which would be unprecedented at this venue. Jack Nicklaus holds the all-time record with three Players victories — all in the event’s early years across different courses before it settled permanently at TPC Sawgrass in 1982. No player has won three times on this specific layout.
Scheffler comes in as the betting favorite, though he arrives under a mild cloud. He finished tied for 24th at the Arnold Palmer Invitational last week, his worst result since the U.S. Open. Scottie has now gone three consecutive events without a top-10. His putting was the culprit at Bay Hill, where he took back-to-back double bogeys on the 18th in rounds three and four. But TPC Sawgrass is a course he has conquered before, and the world No. 1 tends to correct problems quickly.
McIlroy’s situation carries more uncertainty. He withdrew from the Arnold Palmer Invitational on Saturday after feeling a twinge in his back during warmup, opting to protect himself ahead of bigger targets. As of Sunday, he remains in the Players field and is expected to defend his title — but his health will be the week’s most closely watched subplot before a single ball is struck.
The Return of Brooks Koepka
If Scheffler and McIlroy provide the week’s primary storyline, Brooks Koepka supplies the subplot that will have fans leaning forward.
Koepka resigned from LIV Golf last December and rejoined the PGA Tour in mid-January under the Tour’s newly created Returning Member Program, which is a pathway that allows LIV defectors to rejoin without displacing existing Tour members. He is playing The Players Championship this week for the first time since 2022, his best career finish at TPC Sawgrass being a tie for 11th in 2018.
Brooks Koepka’s albatross on No. 16 at THE PLAYERS
His return to the PGA Tour has been gradual. A tie for 56th at the Farmers Insurance Open. A missed cut at the WM Phoenix Open. A tie for ninth at the Cognizant Classic. The results suggest a player who is finding his footing, not one who is dominating. But Koepka has spent his career thriving on the grandest stages, with five major championships to his name. At a tournament of this magnitude, in front of the largest galleries he has faced since leaving for LIV, it would be unwise to dismiss him.
He remains one of professional golf’s most polarizing figures. A significant portion of the fan base never forgave the LIV defection. Another portion quietly roots for the return of a player who delivered some of the sport’s most compelling major Sunday performances. Whatever your view, Brooks Koepka at TPC Sawgrass is must-watch television.
Hole 17: Golf’s Most Brutal Par-3

No course on the PGA Tour schedule has a hole that generates the raw emotional response of TPC Sawgrass’s 17th. Pete Dye’s island green par-3 — roughly 137 yards in tournament conditions, surrounded entirely by water with no bailout of any kind — has spawned over a hundred imitations worldwide in the 40 years since it was built. None of them carry the same weight.
The hole has ended more Players Championships than any other. It ended J.J. Spaun’s title bid last year when his tee shot carried the green into the water during the Monday playoff. It has swallowed the hopes of world-class players who have done everything right for 71 holes only to see it unravel in a single swing.
What makes it particularly brutal under tournament conditions is the Atlantic coast wind. TPC Sawgrass sits in northeast Florida near Jacksonville, and the breeze coming off the water can turn a straightforward wedge into one of the most frightening shots in golf. Players who make their living shaping the ball, controlling trajectory, and reading the wind have a meaningful edge on this hole. Players who guess wrong end up in the water — and the water, at The Players, has no mercy.

Other Names to Watch
The field extends well beyond the top two. Collin Morikawa enters in the best form of his season — he won the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am in January, his first victory in over two years, and has followed it with back-to-back top-10 finishes in signature events. He currently leads the FedExCup standings and finished fifth at Bay Hill last week. The switch to a mallet putter that kickstarted his season at Pebble Beach appears to be more than a one-week fix.
Akshay Bhatia arrives with a trophy still warm in his hands, having won the Arnold Palmer Invitational in a playoff just 24 hours ago. Five shots back at the turn on Sunday, he ran off four straight birdies and nearly holed his approach on the par-5 16th for a double eagle before tapping in for eagle. He is 24 years old, 3-for-3 in Tour playoffs, and currently playing the best golf of his life. He is worth watching at every tournament he enters for the foreseeable future.
Seven past Players champions are in the field: McIlroy, Scheffler, Adam Scott, Rickie Fowler, Jason Day, Si Woo Kim, and Justin Thomas. Scott will be making his 25th appearance in the event — more than anyone else competing this week.
Why This Tournament Matters
Beyond the history, the money, and the personalities, The Players carries unique weight because of what it signals. The Masters is four weeks away. The winner of this tournament receives a three-year invitation to Augusta National, along with three-year exemptions for the U.S. Open, The Open Championship, and the PGA Championship. Winning The Players does not just add a trophy to the shelf — it secures a player’s place at the sport’s biggest stages for years to come.
For the contenders still chasing major invitations, this week is as critical as it gets. For Scheffler and McIlroy, it is a chance to write their names alone in the tournament’s record book. For Koepka, it is a statement event — a chance to show the Tour, and himself, that the return is real.
First round tee times begin Thursday morning. By Sunday afternoon, the 17th hole will have claimed its victims, the leaderboard will have reshuffled multiple times, and someone will have navigated Pete Dye’s masterpiece better than everyone else. That is all this tournament has ever asked. It is usually enough.