2026 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am Open Odds & Preview: Everything You Need To Know, Early Bets Including Robert MacIntyre
It’s another week of golf action on the PGA Tour. The next stop is the 2026 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. Compare AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am odds at the best sports betting sites to increase your potential PGA Tour golf betting payouts. Scottie Scheffler, Rory McIlroy, and Tommy Fleetwood project as the top favorites for this upcoming tournament.
The West Coast swing continues on the PGA Tour, with the tour’s brightest stars flocking to Monterey, California, for the first of eight signature events this season. The stage is set for what promises to be a highly entertaining four rounds of golf at the 2026 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.
Pebble Beach is one of my favorite courses in the world to watch, and I’ve been glued to my TV screen for this event recently. I’ve cashed in on outright bets on Gary Woodland in 2019 (US Open), Daniel Berger in 2021, and Tom Hoge in 2022. After backing Shane Lowry, a solo 2nd-place finisher last year, we’ll look to keep that momentum going into this week. This event has long rewarded strategic course management and elite approach proximity from within 150 yards. With the modifications that come with new signature event status, we’ll dive into the stats that will remain predictive for success at Pebble Beach, as well as new areas to find value.
Here’s a look at everything you can expect at the 2026 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. Click on odds anywhere to bet now.
2026 OPENING AT&T PEBBLE BEACH PRO-AM ODDS: THE FAVORITES
Find players with odds shorter than 20-1 below. Scroll to the bottom to compare complete outright odds at major sportsbooks in your state.
A NEW LOOK FOR THE AT&T PEBBLE BEACH PRO-AM
A staple on the PGA Tour since 1937, Pebble Beach has undergone several notable changes in recent years.
For starters, it’s been deservedly tapped as a Signature Event for the third straight season. With The Sentry cancelled this season, this marks the first time in 2026 in which all of the PGA TOUR’s best will compete against one another. As a signature event, the field will be limited to 80 (down from the historical full field of 156) and will be a no-cut event. The event remains a pro-am, but amateurs will only play alongside the pros for the first two rounds.
Previously a three-course rotation, the tournament will not have Monterrey Peninsula in the mix in 2026. Instead, players will alternate between Pebble Beach and Spyglass Hill for the first two days, setting the stage for Saturday and Sunday action at Pebble Beach.
Of note, Rory McIlroy and Wyndham Clark both rank in the top 30 in SG: TOT on both Pebble Beach and Spyglass Hill, but were below average on Monterey Peninsula. Perhaps not-so-coincidentally, these are the first two winners of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am since becoming a Signature Event and dropping Monterrey Peninsula from the rotation. Conversel,y Kurt Kitayama and Lucas Glover are potential sell-high candidates with great history on the Monterey Peninsula and lesser performances on Pebble Beach and Spyglass Hill.
THE FIELD AT A GLANCE
The AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am is the first of eight Signature Events on the 2026 schedule. As a signature event, the purse increases to $20M, there is no cut, and the field shrinks to just 80 players. Qualifying for the field in a signature event requires one of the following:
- Top 50 in 2026 FedExCup Points (reached the Truist Championship)
- No. 51-60 FedExCup Points via FedExCup Fall performance
- Aon Swing 5: Top-five FedEx Cup point earners since the previous signature event (The Sentry)
- 2026 winners
- Top 30 in OWGR
- Five sponsors exemptions
It can be a bit confusing to track who is and is not qualified in the early days of Signature Events, but in short, all the best players on the PGA Tour are here. From an OWGR standpoint, all eligible PGA Tour players inside the top 25, with the exception of Justin Thomas (No. 10), are here to tee it up. Thomas continues to recover from off-season back surgery.
The “signature bump” is a welcome sight for the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, which has long produced one of the weakest fields of the season when going head-to-head with the Saudi International. That opens the door for international players like Rory McIlroy, Tommy Fleetwood, Matt Fitzpatrick, Viktor Hovland, and Shane Lowry, whose schedules previously did not allow them to participate in this event.
Rory McIlroy is back to defend his 2025 Pebble Beach Pro-Am victory, a win that foreshadowed even more iconic victories to come at The Players and The Masters later that season. Other past winners of this event returning to the field this week include Wyndham Clark, Justin Rose, Tom Hoge, Nick Taylor, and Jordan Spieth.
INTRODUCTION TO THE TWO-COURSE ROTATION
It’s the third instance in four weeks where we’ll be navigating a multi-course rotation. Mercifully, this will be the last rotating course setup we see until the final event of the year in Sea Island. Variety is fine, but cycling through multiple courses means less strokes gained data and an added variable of the field not playing the same courses under the same daily conditions.
Pebble Beach is one of my favorites and one of the most iconic, picturesque courses in the United States. This year, we’re blessed to see a third round on the infamous course, but historically, we have only been able to glean insights from two rounds per tournament at this event, as Pebble Beach is the only course in rotation equipped with ShotLink. That will be used as the basis of this week’s strokes gained research.
Similar to the Farmers Insurance Open, players will rotate between two courses — Pebble Beach and Spyglass Hill — over the first two days, then play Pebble Beach on Saturday and Sunday.
Unlike the last pro-am we saw — The AmEx — there is some bite to these courses. Pro-ams are typically designed not to kill the amateurs. The Poa greens will roll on the slower side, and the rough will not be grown to its limits with the amateurs in mind. However, we’ve seen modest winning scores in the mid-teens year in and year out at this event. The exposure to high coastal winds is mostly to thank for keeping the scoring in check, but despite all three courses playing under 7,100 yards, they each present their own challenges.
Pebble Beach
Pebble Beach features some of the smallest greens we see on tour all season at just 3,500 square feet in average green size. This puts an emphasis on playing from the fairway and dialing in approach shots. It also yields one of the lowest greens in regulation percentages on tour, making SG: around the green a key stat for this week.
Due to the angular hole layouts, Pebble Beach concedes the shortest average driving distance on tour. That forces layups on many holes off the tee and almost completely removes any advantage for longer hitters. The average driving distance at Pebble Beach has fallen around 274 yards (well below the tour average of 290 yards) to illustrate the persistence of forced layups here. Rory McIlroy bucked this trend in 2025, however, taking a driver-heavy approach and cutting off angles by driving over doglegs. It will be interesting to see whether other bombers in this field take inspiration from Rory’s successful game plan this time around.
The historical scoring average is 0.9 strokes over par. Depending on how much the winds decide to pick up, this course can really pose a challenge to the field despite the short length of the scorecard. The top 10 players in terms of SG: TOT at Pebble Beach are Daniel Berger, Jason Day, Justin Rose, Xander Schauffele, Rory McIlroy, Maverick McNealy, Taylor Pendrith, Ludvig Aberg, Michael Kim, and Patrick Cantlay.
Spyglass Hill
Spyglass Hill poses a bit more of a challenge. Five holes are exposed to the coast, but otherwise, it is tree-lined to help protect itself from the elements. When the winds are up, Spyglass has historically played as the most difficult course at this event; when the winds are down, it plays slightly easier than Pebble Beach. Slightly longer than Pebble Beach at 7,035 yards, this par-72 features four par 4s under 400 yards, where players will need to capitalize. The scoring average here has played to about 0.5 strokes over par.
Similar to what we saw most recently at Torrey Pines last week — as well as other coastal layouts like Port Royal and Waialae CC — these grounds are very exposed to the coastline and will be highly susceptible to coastal winds. It will be key to keep an eye out for weather reports throughout the week to see if there is an advantage for any of the course rotation waves or AM/PM tee time splits.
The top 10 players in terms of SG: TOT at Spyglass Hill are Justin Rose, Jason Day, Daniel Berger, Patrick Cantlay, Denny McCarthy, Emiliano Grillo, Shane Lowry, Jordan Spieth, Sepp Straka, and Ben Griffin. Top iron players who can confidently flight approaches into varying coastal winds have found the most success at Spyglass Hill. That correlates similarly with the list of players who have found success at Pebble Beach as well. This furthers the point that putting specialists who are inconsistent ball-strikers have been exposed on Spyglass Hill when it plays difficult.
For Pebble Beach course specs, hole-by-hole breakdown with yardages, and past AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am winners with their pre-tournament odds, visit our AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am odds page.
EVENT HISTORY & COMP COURSES
There is a decorated group of players who come to this signature event with great track records at Pebble Beach. Justin Rose — who remains in California after a near-perfect display of golf at Torrey Pines — boasts the best resume here. The 2023 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am champion has finished T3, T11, and 1st in his last three appearances at this event.
Removing Monterrey Peninsula, the top nine players in this field in terms of total strokes gained at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am after Rose are Jason Day, Daniel Berger, Taylor Pendrith, Patrick Cantlay, Rory McIlroy, Shane Lowry, Jordan Spieth, Maverick McNealy, and Xander Schauffele.
Eleven players have posted multiple T15 finishes over the last five years. That list consists of Tom Hoge, Si Woo Kim, Denny McCarthy, Scottie Scheffler, Jordan Spieth, Patrick Cantlay, Jason Day, Justin Rose, Keith Mitchell, and Taylor Pendrith.
Just seven players have avoided missing the cut and finished inside the top-40 as a Signature Event, over the last five years (min. three appearances): Sam Burns, Patrick Cantlay, Jason Day, Justin Rose, Taylor Pendrith, Maverick McNealy, and Tom Hoge.
Comp Conditions
It’s not the easiest week to home in on comp courses. The courses share sub-7,200 yardage and exposure to the coastline, which is susceptible to high winds. In general, history on short courses appears to be translatable here. The top 10 players in SG: TOT (<7,200 Yards) are Scottie Scheffler, Rory McIlroy, Russell Henly, Tommy Fleetwood, Patrick Cantlay, Jason Day, J.J. Spaun, Ben Griffin, Harry Hall, and Aaron Rai. All are sensible fits with proven prior results at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.
It’s tricky factoring performance in high winds into any modeling, given that gusting winds do not affect all players the same. Homing in on SG: TOT across short, coastal, and windy courses, the top 10 are Shane Lowry, Tommy Fleetwood, Jason Day, Rory McIlroy, Hideki Matsuyama, Justin Rose, Patrick Rodgers, Sam Burns, Harris English, and Alex Noren.
Comp Courses
Looking at specific comp courses, Colonial CC looks to be the best one in terms of corollary success. Like the courses on tap this week, Colonial is short and rewards accurate, positional play off the tee, and it can be played in high sustained winds. That places more of an emphasis on around-the-green play. Daniel Berger, Jordan Spieth, and Phil Mickelson have each won at both events.
I also like Waialae CC, Port Royal, Sea Island, Harbour Town, Liberty National, and El Camaleon as recent short, windy, and coastal tracks. TPC River Highlands, Stadium Course, and Sedgefield CC place a similar emphasis on positional play, while Riviera CC is worth a reference for similar Poa greens.
The top 10 players in SG: TOT at these comp courses are Scottie Scheffler, Russell Henley, Patrick Cantlay, Viktor Hovland, J.T. Poston, Sam Burns, Ben Griffin, Alex Noren, Collin Morikawa, and Rory McIlroy.
KEY STATS TO CONSIDER FOR 2026 AT&T PEBBLE BEACH PRO-AM ODDS
- SG: APP
- Good Drives Gained / Driving Accuracy
- SG: ARG
- Prox: 75-150 (100-125 emphasis)
- Par-4: 350-450
- Opportunities gained
- SG: TOT (<7,200-yard courses)
- SG: P (Poa)
- Course history and comp course history
Off The Tee
You don’t have to be a fairway-finding specialist to put yourself in position off the tee this week. Many players who may normally reach back for extra distance at the expense of hitting more fairways will be forced to keep their driver in the bag on these courses. With that in mind, driving accuracy may be a bit of a misleading stat to weigh heavily this week, knowing that players will be looking to lay up more often.
This week is setting up as more of a second-shot course. I like the good drives gained stat in place of the usual SG: OTT, driving distance, or driving accuracy stats, as it also incorporates approach play. Players who get themselves into position to reach greens in regulation should create the most scoring opportunities at this event. The top 10 players in good drives gained are Max McGreevy, Pierceson Coody, Si Woo Kim, Aaron Rai, Keith Mitchell, Andrew Putnam, Emiliano Grillo, Matt McCarty, Michael Thorbjornsen, and Ryo Hisatsune.
Approach
Strokes gained: Approach is crucial every week on tour, but at a second-shot course like Pebble Beach, which features some of the smallest greens we see all year, it’s even more paramount. The top nine players in SG: APP entering this week are Scottie Scheffler, Si Woo Kim, Viktor Hovland, Russell Henley, Shane Lowry, Rico Hoey, Hideki Matsuyama, Aaron Rai, Tommy Fleetwood, and Kurt Kitayama.
Looking at the distribution of approach shots historically at Pebble Beach, they largely funnel below 150 yards, with an emphasis on 100-125. It’s difficult to rely on proximity in 25-yard increments, so I’m looking for players who excel from inside of 150 yards. The top 10 from that group are Collin Morikawa, Chris Kirk, Lucas Glover, Sepp Straka, Denny McCarthy, Sam Burns, J.T. Poston, Andrew Putnam, Tom Hoge, and Russell Henley.
Par-4 Hole Range
The hole ranges are fairly evenly distributed between the three courses, but 40% fall between 350 and 450 yards. The top 10 in par 4 scoring from this range are Scottie Scheffler, Tommy Fleetwood, Sam Burns, Cameron Young, Russell Henley, Jason Day, Patrick Cantlay, Justin Rose, Aaron Rai, and Jacob Bridgeman.
With only half of the rounds historically being played on Pebble Beach at this event, it’s difficult to draw any conclusive trends from past SG: TOT correlations. What we do know in looking through the list of players with top event history is that stats like Good Drives Gained, SG: APP, Comp Short Course History, SG: ARG, SG: P (Poa), Par 4: 350-450, and Prox: 75-150 should serve as reliable indicators of success. Six players rate out as above average in each of those categories: Scottie Scheffler, Tommy Fleetwood, Russell Henley, J.J. Spaun, Aaron Rai, and Lucas Glover.
PLAYER SPOTLIGHT: ROBERT MACINTYRE
As one of the shortest and most positional courses on the PGA TOUR each year, it’s easy to forget that Pebble Beach Golf Links is, in fact, a links golf course. Sitting along the scenic coastline of the Monterey Peninsula, Pebble Beach is tremendously exposed to gusting winds and has long rewarded the skill of flighted ball-striking to combat its unpredictable climate. Europeans with proven links experience have fared well at Pebble Beach over the years, as last year’s podium of Rory McIlroy, Shane Lowry, and Justin Rose supports.
MacIntyre, a winner at the Scottish Open and Alfred Dunhill Links Championship, is able to separate best when the winds are at their highest. He continued to show an affinity for short, coastal courses with a T4 finish at the Sony Open in his first start of 2026.
MacIntyre, now ranked No. 6 in OWGR, is one of the most underrated players in the world of golf today, as he continues to play like a star without getting the star treatment on the odds board. With five top-12 finishes in his last six starts, I expect we’ll still get a nice discount on MacIntyre in this loaded Signature Event field.
2026 AT&T PEBBLE BEACH PRO-AM: DFS PLAYER POOL
With all the course-fit profiles in mind, I’m leaning early toward the below player pool. Naturally, I’m looking their way in the 2026 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am odds as well. I’ve broken the list down by projected pricing/odds tier for DraftKings, with odds and pricing expected to be released on Monday.

MODEL RESULTS & BREAKDOWN
For my model this week, I’m prioritizing SG: APP, course history and comp course history, prox: 100-125, good drives gained, SG: TOT (short and windy courses), and opportunities gained, followed by a more balanced mix of SG: P (TOT + Poa), SG: TOT (L24), and SG: ARG to help navigate Pebble Beach Pro-Am odds.
Model Favorites
In the most top-heavy field we’ve seen so far in 2026, it’s no surprise to see Scottie Scheffler back in the No. 1 position in my model. Scottie made his first start of the 2025 season at this event last year, recovering from his freak ravioli accident, and still managed a T9 finish. In this limited field, I fear I have no choice but to take on Scheffler in the standard outright market. He’s finished T6 and T9 in two career appearances at this event.
After Scheffler, my model’s top 10 is rounded out by Russell Henley, Tommy Fleetwood, Patrick Cantlay, Rory McIlroy, Ben Griffin, Sam Burns, Justin Rose, Jason Day, and Si Woo Kim.
I’ll look to have exposure to a couple non-Scheffler favorites when sportsbooks release AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am odds. Top focus goes to those with strong course history and who made a habit of returning to Monterrey year over year. I have my eye on Russell Henley, Robert MacIntyre, and Chris Gotterup at the top, with some appealing mid-range values like Nick Taylor, Maverick McNealy, and Akshay Bhatia in mind as well.
Thanks for reading, and good luck navigating 2026 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am odds!









