The sheer drama and magnitude of the Masters is a heavy weight to off-load, but the PGA Tour is right back at it with a signature event in the Lowcountry of South Carolina for the 2026 RBC Heritage. Held at the iconic and demanding Harbour Town Golf Links, this tournament serves as a highly lucrative, $20 million event that softens the post-Masters blues.

Designed by the incomparable Pete Dye, Harbour Town is revered for its ability to demand precision and strategy from the modern player. At just over 7,200 yards, it is one of the shorter venues on the PGA Tour schedule. The fairways are narrow and winding, lined with a dense mix of trees and overhanging Spanish moss.

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Plenty of holes activate strict water hazards, providing penalties for missing these tiny greens in regulation. The field this week is loaded, with 18 of the world’s top 20 making the trip to Hilton Head. Coming off an emotionally charged week at Augusta, who has the mental fortitude and precision to prevail at Hilton Head?

Scroll down for my top 10 contenders at the 2026 RBC Heritage.

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10. Patrick Cantlay 2270817020

Erick W. Rasco

Back-to-back quality starts, his best in 2026 and exceptional course history at Harbour Town lands Patrick Cantlay on my list of contenders. He ranked #1 in around the green at Augusta National and seventh on approach, two strongly correlated assets that this tournament annually rewards.

He has also proven throughout his career that he performs better on short, less-than-driver golf courses. His career record at this event is second to none, finishing third-or-better on five different occasions. The only thing he hasn’t done at Harbour Town is win … yet.

9. Jordan Spieth

The roller-coaster that is the Jordan Spieth experience will always exist, but he’s actually started to smooth out some of the peaks and plunges. It starts with his iron play, which has been extremely good in his past five tournaments, most recently gaining +5.3 strokes on Approach at Augusta last week.

I was holding a Spieth ticket when he won here via a playoff in 2022, and he backed that up with a solo second the following year. He might be considering a change to the iconic black blade putter given his recent shortcomings on the greens, but remember that he has won this tournament before while losing strokes putting. Spieth is always a name to watch at Harbour Town.

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8. Ludvig Aberg Masters 2026

Adam Glanzman

Currently in the midst of one of the most consistently great runs of his young career, I still wonder if he acquired any scar tissue from another Pete Dye gem just south of Harbour Town a few weeks ago. At any rate, Ludvig Aberg often excels on these shorter courses by adopting a different strategy, electing to still hit driver everywhere and overpowering doglegs with ease.

We finally saw the blip in his chipping stats at Augusta, a somewhat familiar kryptonite for Aberg. There are a few opaque concerns that kept him from being higher on my list, but the potential feels valid that we are approaching a Ludvig wins by six strokes-week coming soon.

7. Viktor Hovland

I feel it coming. The stats don’t tell the full story, but Viktor Hovland feels on the precipice of getting his game back to elite levels. The approach play, which does most of the heavy lifting at Harbour Town, is Hovland’s most polished skill and he struck the ball beautifully around Augusta National.

He’s gained strokes both on approach and off the tee in all three prior visits to the RBC Heritage. Few can go flag hunting on difficult-to-hit greens, and this is the week that we are going to get the breakout performance of 2026 for Viktor Hovland.

6. Tommy Fleetwood Masters 2026

Adam Glanzman

With so few weaknesses, Harbour Town is the kind of golf course that aligns naturally with the game of Tommy Fleetwood. The demand of ball-striking and approach to small greens is paramount to success, and the only person better in that regard statistically than Fleetwood is Scottie Scheffler.

He finished four back on the winner last season here, and also nearly (should have) won at TPC River Highlands, another short Pete Dye golf course. Strategy and precision often wins out over pure power this week, and few players are better equipped with that in mind than Fleetwood.

5. Cameron Young

I think it’s fair to question the physical and emotional toll for Cameron Young, who teed off in the final pairing at the Masters. That said, the other side of the coin is that Young has the most positive momentum in the entire field, going third, first and third in his past three starts.

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That kind of sustained excellence on the biggest stages is not to be overlooked. He also has often demonstrated the ability to strategize precision-based layouts and keep the ball in play, something that can be overlooked given his well-documented power. This tournament gives Young a real opportunity to capitalize on this sizzling stretch and notch his second win this season.

4. Xander Schauffele

The best player in the field over the past 20 rounds based on approach play is Xander Schauffele. The iron-merchant is back to attacking pins at a world-class level, evidenced by Schauffele hitting more greens in regulation at Augusta National than anyone.

A strong course history only reinforces his chances this week. Schauffele packs a stat-profile that looks custom-built for this tournament, and his form is razor sharp. Everything that he’s done over the past six weeks is the perfect recipe for a victory. Ever the popular pick last week to dawn the green jacket, I’m sure Team Schauffele will be ok settling for rartan.

3. Matt Fitzpatrick Masters 2026

J.D. Cuban

We heard the noise, fair or foul, surrounding the course knowledge and preparation advantage for Rory at Augusta. The same could be said for Matt Fitzpatrick and Harbour Town, a course he’s been playing since his childhood.

Winner here in 2023, Fitzpatrick leveraged a stellar week on approach with a hot putter. I fully expect the iron play to remain elite, as he arrives this week with tremendous numbers and brimming with confidence off a recent victory at the Valspar Championship. Fitz has to be firmly on your radar, especially this week at Hilton Head.

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2. Russell Henley

He couldn’t get any putts to drop on the back nine, but I was thoroughly impressed with the performance by Russell Henley at the Masters. He led the field in strokes gained/approach, routinely attacking treacherous pins down the stretch with unbelievable precision. He’s made plenty of runs, but that was the best I have seen Henley look at a major.

He makes the voyage to Harbour Town, a course definitely more aligned with his trademark accuracy. If you are courageous to look beyond the obvious top favorites, then I truly believe that Russell Henley has as good of a chance as anybody in the field to hoist a trophy under the lighthouse.

1. Scottie Scheffler Masters 2026

Adam Glanzman

Last week was about the “ifs” for Scheffler. If he didn’t catch the bad tee time wave. If he only played the par 5s on the back even par. If that putt on 17 dropped. To someone who didn’t know he finished runner-up, it would sound like everything went wrong for Scheffler at Augusta.

That’s never the case for the best player in the world. A few bad breaks are often the only things the prevent him from winning every week. He’s always deeply self-motivated, and eager to quiet the noise around the status of his game and persona. Winner here in 2024, the winner’s circle is where Scheffler belong, and it’ll be nice to see him happy and all smiles once again.

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Joe Idone is a Read The Line contributor and host of the Preferred Lines podcast.

This article was originally published on golfdigest.com