2026 RBC Canadian Open Odds & Betting Preview: Everything To Know About TPC Toronto at Osprey Valley

The PGA Tour heads to TPC Toronto at Osprey Valley with the 2026 RBC Canadian Open. Compare Canadian Open odds at the best sports betting sites to increase your potential PGA TOUR golf betting payouts. Matt Fitzpatrick, Tommy Fleetwood, and Collin Morikawa project as the top favorites for this upcoming tournament.

Perhaps the most underrated event on the PGA TOUR schedule, the RBC Canadian Open brings a fan atmosphere that stands alone. Canada’s national open brings its countrymen out in masses and has the potential to make legends out of its locals, as we saw with Nick Taylor in 2023. His winning moment has been ingrained into the RBC Canadian Open logo as a testament to how much this tournament means to Canadians.

Historically a rotating course event, we’ll see TPC Toronto at Osprey Valley run it back for the second time in as many years this week. The freshly renovated course was quite literally built to host an event of this stature and will feature all the stadium-style designs and theater of boisterous crowds we’ve grown accustomed to seeing at other TPC venues on the PGA Tour.

In its first act, TPC Toronto held up well against the PGA Tour’s best, producing a winning score of -18 in 2025, and an eventful playoff finish. I’m expecting another moderate test on this ~7,400-yard par-70, offering a mix of short scoring holes and long grind-it-out par-4s. Like many other modern PGA TOUR venues, it’s a weak where the top-trending iron players will be equipped to separate.

Without further ado, let’s run through the key facts and info about TPC Toronto at Osprey Valley ahead of the 2026 RBC Canadian Open.

RBC Canadian Open: Betting Odds

Compare favorites with 25-1 or shorter odds below. Scroll to the bottom for complete, outright RBC Canadian Open golf odds.

The Field At A Glance

The RBC Canadian Open features a full field of 147 players. Set to host for the 113th time, the Canadian Open is one of the longest-standing events on the PGA TOUR, dating back to 1904.

The RBC Canadian Open is a fantastic, high-energy event that consistently draws great fields. With next week’s U.S. Open being played close by in New York, many of the game’s best will make the trip up north for one final tune up. A total of nine OWGR top-25 players are in the field this week, a slight improvement in field depth relative to last year, when just seven top-25 players competed. The headlining favorites at TPC Toronto include Matt Fitzpatrick, Collin Morikawa, Tommy Fleetwood, Justin Rose, Sam Burns, Viktor Hovland, and Brooks Koepka.

Canada’s national open will feature 21 Canadian’s, with Corey Conners, Taylor Pendrith, Nick Taylor, Mackenzie Hughes, and Sudarshan Yellamaraju each in good form and poised to contend.

Perhaps collateral damage from the new 2026 schedule, Rory McIlroy’s absence is notable this week. He’s played the RBC Canadian Open in each of the last four years and has won this event twice over five career appearances. His missed cut here last year was the first time Rory had ever finished outside the top-10 at the RBC Canadian Open, so it’s possible there’s something out at TPC Toronto specifically that McIlroy wants to avoid.

Ryan Fox is back to defend his 2025 RBC Canadian title, where he outlasted Sam Burns in a pillow fight of a playoff in which no player seemed capable of hitting the shot needed to win it. Nonetheless, Fox will be a player to watch at the 2026 RBC Canadian Open.

He’ll be joined by Nick Taylor, Jhonattan Vegas, and Brandt Snedeker to represent the list of former champions back in the field this week.

Introduction To TPC Toronto At Osprey Valley

Constructed in 2001 by Doug Carrick, TPC Toronto at Osprey Valley has spared no time rising up the ranks of Canadian golf courses, now solidified in the country’s top 100. TPC Toronto features two 18-hole setups – the North Course and Hoot Course – with the latter playing host to the 2026 RBC Canadian Open.

Minimal routing changes have been made from the original course set up ahead of this tournament, but those changes include flipping the 8th and 17th holes, and converting two usual par-5s into long par-4s. The course will play as a 7,389-yard par-70 this week.

It’s refreshing to see a new golf course on the PGA TOUR schedule, and TPC Toronto at Osprey Valley will be up to the task after Ian Andrew completed his renovation work in 2024. The renovation project took inspiration from other PGA TOUR courses in the TPC network, with the goal of creating a fan-friendly viewing experience while offering more of a challenge to the PGA TOUR’s best. As part of those efforts to challenge the professionals, Andrew installed deeper greenside bunkers and pushed back fairway hazards to ensure players would have to think twice before bombing past them off the tee.

TPC Toronto at Osprey Valley will look fantastic on the TV broadcast, with elevation changes offering panoramic views of the Toronto skyline in the distance. Like many other TPC layouts, there are short par-4s and reachable par-5s that will tempt players to play aggressively in search of birdies-or-better. It is the deep greenside bunkers and length of the par-3s and par-4s that will stand as TPC Toronto’s greatest defense; however, all indications point towards this being a course where the longest hitters can separate, given the openness off-the-tee and lack of severe penalty for wayward tee shots.

How It Breaks Down

By simply featuring only two par-5s, we can expect the score relative to par to remain in check this week. The North Course at TPC Toronto at Osprey Valley will play as a 7,389-yard par-70. As far as par-70s go, TPC Toronto is certainly on the longer side, getting its length from the six par-4s measuring over 480 yards. The par-3s are likely to average above par this week as well, with two of the four measuring over 225 yards. Depending on the tee boxes used each day, bombers will have a chance to give it a go at the green on two short par-4s.

What I find most interesting about TPC Toronto is its bookended par-5s. It’s traditional for RBC Canadian Open venues to begin with a par-5; however, it’s very rare for any PGA TOUR venue to begin with a par-5 and not see another until the final hole. That can be a frustration for streaky players, as there will be fewer bounce-back birdie opportunities here. Conversely, those who begin on the 10th hole on Thursday or Friday will have that opportunity to pick up back-to-back birdie opportunities when playing the 18th and 1st hole consecutively.

TPC Toronto shares very little in common with Torrey Pines, with the exception of their finishing holes. The par-5 18th figures to be the signature hole here, with the clubhouse in the background, and offers the same risk-reward proposition. A good drive down the fairway will allow players to go for the green in two. Miss short, and you’ll trickle down into the water hazard for a penalty. Bail out long, and you’ll give yourself a very difficult up and down from behind the green, as was Cameron Young’s demise on the 72nd hole last year. Any misfires off the tee are likely to force a layup. All of these factors make for a brilliant closing hole with two-shot swings abound. I can’t wait to see how the closing stretch plays out this week.

TPC Toronto at Osprey Valley Specs

  • Yards: 7,389
  • Par: 70 (4x 3s / 12x 4s / 2x 5s)
  • Greens: Bent & Poa blend
  • Rough: 3.75” Bluegrass (Moderate)
  • Avg. Fairway Width: 37 Yards (Average)
  • Avg Green Size: 6,500 sq. ft. (Above-average)
  • Architect: Doug Carrick (2024 Renovation by Ian Andrew)
  • Comp Courses: Philadelphia Cricket Club, TPC River Highlands, St. George’s G&CC, Hamilton G&CC, Oakdale G&CC, Glen Abbey, TPC Potomac, Colonial CC, Detroit Golf Club, Memorial Park
  • Official Scorecard:

Screenshot 2026 06 07 at 8.44.44%E2%80%AFAM

Course History & Comps

There is only one year of course history to speak of this week, with TPC Toronto at Osprey Valley making its PGA Tour debut in 2025. The two playoff finalists – Sam Burns and Ryan Fox – must have liked what they saw, as both will return to the field again in 2026.

While data is limited on TPC Toronto, it will share a very similar agronomical breakdown to each of the other rotating RBC Canadian Open host venues before it, so Event History will still be very useful to reference. The top-10 in terms of SG: TOT at the RBC Canadian Open over the last 36 rounds are Sam Burns, Tommy Fleetwood, Ryan Fox, Aaron Rai, Justin Rose, Tony Finau, Shane Lowry, Jhonattan Vegas, Robert MacIntyre, and Danny Willett. 

Course Comps

With only 4 professional rounds at TPC Toronto to reference, identifying the right comp courses is crucial for handicapping this week’s event.

Philadelphia Cricket Club is the one above all others that stands out to me as the primary course to reference this week. Both courses feature similar agronomy in the Northeast; they are each par-70s of similar yardage with a mix of scoreable and long, difficult holes, and we don’t have to look back very far to compare performance between the two venues, as Philadelphia Cricket Club hosted the Truist Championship just last year. Sepp Straka won the Truist Championship with a score of -16, and Ryan Fox won at a similar score (-18) at this contest last year. Shane Lowry and Cameron Young each finished in the top 15 at both the 2025 Truist Championship and 2025 RBC Canadian Open.

After the Philadelphia Cricket Club, there is a second tier of TPC River Highlands, Colonial CC, and Detroit Golf Club that come to mind as top comps for TPC Toronto at Osprey Valley. All of these courses are short on the scorecard, but are not necessarily “positional”. Shorter plodders will benefit from creating the right angles into these undulated greens, but the penalty for near misses off the fairway is not severe either at TPC Toronto. Like these other three comp courses, long hitters have begun to pick up an edge by playing aggressively with the driver, producing leaderboards with an equitable mix of bombers and plodders alike.

Recent Canadian Open venues, Hamilton Golf & Country Club, Oakdale Golf & Country Club, and St. George’s Golf & Country Club, should serve as fair comps as well, featuring the same agronomy with Bentgrass and Poa mixed throughout. Compared to the last three years, TPC Toronto should resemble the 2023 host, Oakdale G&CC, more closely, given the increased scoring opportunities and elevation changes.

And on a more tertiary basis, I will also look to TPC Potomac, TPC San Antonio, and Memorial Park as par-70s that favor the longer hitters in the field. Looking down the line of other PGA Tour TPC venues, TPC Toronto reminds me most of TPC San Antonio, as there is an advantage for longer hitters and the routing features some enticing risk-reward holes, but overall, I believe scoring will be kept in check. That would spell good news for Canadian and two-time Valero Texas Open champion Corey Conners if true.

Wrap that altogether, and the top-10 players in comp course history are Tommy Fleetwood, Aaron Rai, Sam Burns, Corey Conners, Collin Morikawa, Tony Finau, Shane Lowry, Viktor Hovland, Brooks Koepka, and Keith Mitchell.

Key Stats To Consider

  • SG: T2G (L16)
  • SG: APP / Prox: 150+
  • Par 4 Scoring
  • Driving Distance
  • SG: ARG / Sand Saves Gained
  • SG: Putting (L36, Bent-Poa)
  • Comp Course History
  • Event History

I find myself taking a more broad-strokes approach to the stat model profile this week, with a limited sample size of one prior tournament at TPC Toronto to reference. Beginning most simply with recent form, the top-10 players in terms of SG: T2G over the last 16 rounds are Eric Cole, Mac Meissner, Brooks Koepka, Wyndham Clark, Brandt Snedeker, Zach Bauchou, Matt Fitzpatrick, Kristoffer Reitan, Christiaan Bezuidenhout, and Aaron Rai.

With fairly generous fairways, sparse fairway bunkers, and negligible rough penalty, TPC Toronto has all the makings of a second-shot golf course. While I do believe there is an advantage to be had for longer hitters taking less club into these greens, it’s approach play at the end of the day that will serve as the great separator. The top-10 players in SG: APP leading up to the week are Collin Morikawa, Brooks Koepka, Matt Fitzpatrick, Tom Kim, Justin Rose, Aaron Rai, Sam Ryder, Wyndham Clark, Jackson Suber, and John Parry.

TPC Toronto features six par-4s measuring over 480 yards. When adding in two additional par-3s beyond 220 yards and a pair of reachable par-5s, it becomes apparent that short iron approaches will be few and far between this week. With that said, I’ll be focused on the top approach players from beyond 150 yards, with a focus on Prox: 200+. The top-10 approach players from long range are Michael Brennan, Matt Fitzpatrick, Alex Fitzpatrick, Brooks Koepka, Max Greyserman, Danny Willett, Michael Thornjornsen, Keita Nakajima, Sudarshan Yellamaraju, and Aldrich Potgieter.

Combination Stats

TPC Toronto is not overbearingly long, but it is routed in a way that gives an advantage to the longer hitters in the field. Driving Accuracy is helpful here, but may be a misleading stat on its own, as inaccurate drivers can get away with a more conservative approach off the tee here. Just 10 players rank above-average in SG: APP, Driving Distance, SG: Putting (Bent-Poa), and SG: T2G on Comp Courses: Brooks Koepka, Justin Rose, Sam Burens, Wyndham Clark, Michael Brennan, Mac Meissner, Thorbjorn Olesen, Harry Hall, Jackson Suber, and Keita Nakajima. 

With fairly generous fairway landing areas and expanded greens, TPC Toronto profiles as a course where elite long iron players and putters will be best equipped to separate themselves from the pack. Just six players rank top-40 in Weighted Putting (SG: P L36, Bent-Poa), Sand Saves Gained, and Prox: 150+: Shane Lowry, Sudarshan Yellamaraju, Mac Meissner, Andrew Putnam, Alex Noren, and Marty Dou.

To sum this all up, I’m looking to zero in on players in trending form with proven results on comp courses and elite ranks in Driving Distance, SG: APP (Prox: 150+), and Weighted Putting. Just seven players meet that criteria: Sam Burns, Justin Rose, Nicolai Hojgaard, Wyndham Clark, Sudarshan Yellamaraju, Harry Hall, and Mac Meissner. 

Player Spotlight: Brooks Koepka

Brooks Koepka Misses Out On First PGA Tour Signature Event Appearance | Golf Monthly

The post-LIV era for Brooks has been as encouraging as golf fans could have asked for. He has clearly been humbled on his road to redemption by playing in opposite field events, and knows opportunities like these to play a significant PGA Tour event are never guaranteed. That should add a sense of urgency for Brooks at the 2026 RBC Canadian Open, where, in past years, the old Brooks may have used this as a final tune-up for the U.S. Open.

The “Brooks only cares about Majors” narrative has been fully refuted in recent years. Sure, when his career is all said and done, his greatness will be measured by major performance and little else, but Brooks’ story is far more about finding a way to peak leading into each major. Brooks won five times on LIV over his three years playing on the rival tour; two of those wins came in his last start before a major.

As it relates to TPC Toronto, this should be a perfect course set up to accentuate Koepka’s skills as an elite ball-striker with elite distance. Koepka ranks top-10 in SG: TOT, SG: APP, Prox: 150+, and Comp Course History. He also ranks No. 1 overall in SG: Ball Striking over the last 36 rounds.

Brooks has played in three RBC Canadian Opens, with a career-best finish of T18 in 2015, but this will be his first return since 2019. The Canadian Open is always a high-octane event and the closest crowd atmosphere we get to the WM Phoenix Open on the PGA Tour schedule. It’s no secret that Brooks relishes any opportunity to feed off the crowd atmosphere, so this is an ideal arena for him to cash in on his first post-LIV victory. He’ll look to keep the momentum going, as he’s finished top-20 in six of his last nine starts.

2026 RBC Canadian Open Odds: DFS Player Pool

With all the course-fit profiles in mind, I’m leaning early towards the below player pool. Naturally, I’m looking their way in the 2026 RBC Canadian Open odds as well. I’ve broken the list down by projected pricing/odds tier for DraftKings.

Screenshot 2026 06 07 at 10.27.16%E2%80%AFAM

RBC Canadian Open Model Results & Breakdown

In my model, I’m emphasizing Recent Form (SG: T2G L16), SG: APP, and Comp Course History first and foremost, followed by a more balanced mix of Prox: 150+, Event History, Driving Distance, SG: ARG, and SG: P (L36, Bent-Poa blend).

Matt Fitzpatrick claims the No. 1 spot in my model this week. With no Scheffler or McIlroy in the 2026 RBC Canadian Open field, it’s Fitzpatrick who figures to be one of the favorites to win, in search of his fourth win on the PGA Tour this season. Fitzpatrick was not in the field to play TPC Toronto last year, but has finished T20 and T10 in his last two RBC Canadian Open starts.

After Fitzpatrick, the rest of my model’s top 10 is rounded out by: Brooks Koepka, Collin Morikawa, Wyndham Clark, Tommy Fleetwood, Mac Meissner, Nicolai Hojgaard, Shane Lowry, Justin Rose, and Sam Burns.

When the 2026 Canadian Open odds open Monday, I’ll look to Brooks Koepka, Michael Thorbjornsen, and Nicolai Hojgaard among the favorites as my first potential targets. I’ll also keep an eye on Alex Fitzpatrick, Mac Meissner, and Zach Bauchou in a second tier of values, depending on where the odds ultimately open.

Check back in later this week for more updates. Best of luck navigating 2026 RBC Canadian Open odds!

Best Sportsbooks For RBC Canadian Open Odds

 

Photo Credit: AP/Frank Franklin II

Post
John Haslbauer writes about golf betting and DFS strategy for Lineups. He is a passionate golf fan, golf writer, and (casual) golfer. A graduate of Syracuse University, John works full-time in Social Influencer Marketing Strategy and is based out of Long Island, N.Y. He created thepgatout.com at the start of 2021 and co-hosts the Preferred Lines weekly podcast.

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