And just like that, only a few months remain on the 2026 golf calendar. Two major championships have come and gone with a titan of the game in Rory McIlroy claiming the Masters and a surprise winner — albeit an extremely deserving one — in Aaron Rai at the PGA Championship.In between the two biggest tests of this campaign, the stars have mostly shone bright. World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler continues to play the most consistent golf on the planet, although the wins have not followed ever since entering the winner’s circle in the first event of his season.Matt Fitzpatrick leads the way in terms of wins on the PGA Tour with three — he nearly picked up a fourth on Sunday at the RBC Canadian Open — but his play in the first two major championships was somewhat forgettable. Cameron Young continues to be a weekly fixture on leaderboards, while Ludvig Åberg and Xander Schauffele play great golf but seem to be missing something.
Over on LIV Golf, the questions continue to swirl, not just about the league’s staying power. Two-time major champion Jon Rahm silenced some critics with his performance at the PGA Championship, but Bryson DeChambeau invited those voices to get even louder with his third missed cut in his last four major championship starts occurring outside of Philadelphia. While some questions have been answered, others remain up in the air as the third major championship of the season — the U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills — approaches this week.
The Power 18 provides insight into how golfers are currently performing with the benefit of their play over recent events. It is a wider lens than simply what happened at the last tournament to be played but more narrow than the Official World Golf Rankings, which take into account how more than 2,000 golfers perform across an entire season.1
