The PGA Tour has two stages this week, and they could not look much different at first glance.
One is in North Berwick, Scotland, where The Renaissance Club gives the Genesis Scottish Open the feel of a major championship dress rehearsal. Scottie Scheffler is there. Rory McIlroy is there. Chris Gotterup is there as the defending champion and one of the hottest players in the sport. Robert MacIntyre is back on Scottish soil. Brooks Koepka is making his Genesis Scottish Open debut. The Open Championship sits one week away at Royal Birkdale, and the entire week feels like the last meaningful test before links golf takes over the sport’s center stage.
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The other is in Louisville, Kentucky, where the ISCO Championship returns to Hurstbourne Country Club with a different kind of energy. There may not be as many top-10 players in the world, but there is no shortage of urgency. Max Homa is trying to build on his best PGA Tour finish in years. William Mouw is back where he authored one of the most unlikely closing charges of last season. Jackson Koivun, Miles Russell and Preston Stout bring a wave of young talent into the week. Patrick Rodgers and Beau Hossler arrive still chasing a first PGA Tour win.
That is what makes this week fascinating. It is not just a split-field week. It is a split-purpose week.
In Scotland, players are chasing trophies, form, world-ranking weight, FedExCup points and Open Championship momentum. In Kentucky, players are chasing job security, breakthroughs, exemptions and the kind of Sunday that can change the trajectory of a career.
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Chris Gotterup heads to Scotland as the PGA Tour’s current hot hand and defending Genesis Scottish Open champion after winning the John Deere Classic. Mandatory Credit: Marc Lebryk-Imagn Images.
PGA Tour Split Week
Two Events, Two Completely Different Pressure Tests
Scotland
Genesis Scottish Open
The star-powered lead-in to The Open Championship brings Scottie Scheffler, Rory McIlroy, Chris Gotterup, Robert MacIntyre, Viktor Hovland and Brooks Koepka to The Renaissance Club.
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Location: North Berwick, Scotland
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Course: The Renaissance Club
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Par/Yardage: 70 / 7,282 yards
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Winner points: 500 FedExCup points
Kentucky
ISCO Championship
Louisville gets the opportunity field, where Max Homa, William Mouw, Patrick Rodgers, Jackson Koivun and Miles Russell headline a week full of FedExCup urgency.
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Location: Louisville, Kentucky
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Course: Hurstbourne Country Club
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Par/Yardage: 70 / 7,056 yards
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Winner points: 300 FedExCup points
Genesis Scottish Open Brings Major-Level Names To The Renaissance Club
The Genesis Scottish Open has become exactly what the PGA Tour and DP World Tour hoped it would be when the event became co-sanctioned. It is no longer simply a good international stop the week before The Open. It is now one of the better fields of the summer and one of the most compelling weeks on the regular-season calendar.
This year’s field includes six of the top 10 players in the Official World Golf Ranking and 48 of the top 70 in the FedExCup standings. That matters. At this point in the season, there are only so many chances left to sharpen form before the FedExCup Playoffs arrive, and there are even fewer chances to test shots in conditions that can translate directly to an Open Championship week.
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The Renaissance Club will host the event for the eighth consecutive year, and the par-70, 7,282-yard layout again gives players a different examination than the target golf they often see through the heart of the PGA Tour schedule. This is a week where controlling trajectory, judging wind, managing bounces and accepting imperfect outcomes can matter as much as pure ball-striking.
That is where Scottie Scheffler becomes such an interesting centerpiece.
Scheffler enters the week as the world No. 1, the FedExCup leader and, somehow, still looking for only his second PGA Tour win of the season. That sounds absurd when the resume is examined closely. He leads the Tour in top-10 finishes, Strokes Gained: Total, greens in regulation percentage, scoring average and birdie average. He has made 78 consecutive cuts and owns a staggering streak of 35 straight top-25 finishes, the second-longest such run in the past 40 years behind Tiger Woods.
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The only thing missing lately has been the finishing punch. Scheffler lost in a playoff to Viktor Hovland at the Travelers Championship in his most recent start, which marked his fourth runner-up finish of the season. For most players, that would be a career year in disguise. For Scheffler, it becomes a reminder of the impossible standard he has created.
Now he gets a week in Scotland before defending his Open Championship title. The timing could not be better, or more revealing.

The Renaissance Club offers a classic Scottish links-style setting along the North Berwick coastline, giving the Genesis Scottish Open one of the most picturesque stages on the PGA Tour schedule. Credit: Kevin Murray / The Renaissance Club.
Rory McIlroy Returns To A Place That Fits His Eye
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Rory McIlroy’s relationship with the Genesis Scottish Open has become one of the better recent storylines in the event. He won it in 2023, finished T4 in 2024 and was T2 last year behind Gotterup. Three straight top-five finishes at the same event is not a coincidence. It tells you the golf course fits him, the week fits him and the atmosphere suits him.
McIlroy is making his first PGA Tour start since a T32 at the U.S. Open, and his season already includes a Masters victory and a runner-up finish at The Genesis Invitational. He is also chasing a fifth consecutive season with multiple PGA Tour wins, which says plenty about how consistent his high-end golf has remained even when the spotlight around him feels louder than ever.
There is another layer here. McIlroy could become the first player to win the Masters and Genesis Scottish Open in the same season. That would not carry the historical weight of another major, but it would be another reminder that his 2026 season has been far more than one brilliant week at Augusta.
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For McIlroy, Scotland can serve two purposes. It can be a chance to win. It can also be the perfect bridge into Royal Birkdale.
Chris Gotterup Arrives As The Defending Champion And A Real Problem
A year ago, Chris Gotterup won the Genesis Scottish Open by two strokes over Rory McIlroy and Marco Penge. His week included a second-round 61 that tied the course record and reinforced what has always been obvious when Gotterup is firing: his ceiling is enormous.
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Now the defending champion returns in even better form.
Gotterup won last week’s John Deere Classic, giving him three PGA Tour wins this season and five career victories in just 85 starts. That moved him to No. 6 in the FedExCup standings and No. 7 in the Official World Golf Ranking. He is no longer just a talented player with a big engine and a high ceiling. He is now one of the central characters of the PGA Tour season.
The task this week is difficult. No player has successfully defended at the Genesis Scottish Open. Gotterup is trying to do it while traveling across time zones after a win, into a field that looks more like a playoff event than a standard regular-season stop.
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Still, this is where confidence can become dangerous. He knows he can win here. He knows he can go low here. And after what he did last week, he arrives in Scotland with the kind of belief that can make a good player feel like a force.
Hovland, Rai, MacIntyre And Koepka Add Real Depth
Viktor Hovland may be the most dangerous player in the field not named Scheffler or McIlroy. He won the Travelers Championship in a playoff over Scheffler in his most recent start, giving him his eighth PGA Tour victory. He is making his fifth consecutive start at the Genesis Scottish Open, with his best finish a T11 last year. A confident Hovland with his ball-striking in order is a problem anywhere, but especially on a course that rewards clean contact and disciplined decisions.
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Aaron Rai brings one of the better course-history angles. He earned his breakthrough DP World Tour victory at The Renaissance Club in 2020, defeating Tommy Fleetwood in a playoff. He is also a different player now, arriving as a reigning PGA Championship winner and a top-20 player in the world. Rai’s game is not built on flash. It is built on precision, routine and a willingness to win ugly when conditions demand it. That travels well.
Robert MacIntyre gives the week its emotional heartbeat. He won this event in 2024, joining Colin Montgomerie as a Scottish winner of the Genesis Scottish Open. Every home crowd wants a local story, and MacIntyre has already proven he can carry that noise without being swallowed by it. His best finish this season is a runner-up at the Valero Texas Open, and he enters the week inside the top 35 of the FedExCup standings.
Then there is Brooks Koepka, who is playing on a sponsor exemption and making his 200th PGA Tour start. It is also his Genesis Scottish Open debut. Koepka has one top-10 finish in 13 starts this season and missed the cut at the U.S. Open in his most recent start, but he still enters the week ninth on Tour in Strokes Gained: Approach the Green. For a player whose major championship identity is built on precision under pressure, that statistic is worth watching.
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ISCO Championship Offers A Completely Different Kind Of Drama

William Mouw hoisted the winning trophy after he shot a 9 under 61 during the fourth round to win the ISCO Championship golf tournament at the Hurstbourne Country Club in Louisville, Ky. on July 13, 2025. He finished at 10 under par for the tournment.
While Scotland gets the marquee names, the ISCO Championship gets something just as meaningful in its own way.
It gets the desperate middle of the PGA Tour.
Hurstbourne Country Club played tough in the event’s Louisville debut last season. The field made more bogeys than birdies, and the cut line swung dramatically compared with the year before. In 2024, the 36-hole cut was 8-under, the lowest cut relative to par in a PGA Tour individual stroke-play event since 1970. In 2025, the cut was 1-over, the highest in relation to par in the 10-year history of the tournament.
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That kind of volatility matters. It tells players they cannot assume anything about the week. Hurstbourne may not have the Open Championship connection of The Renaissance Club, but it has already shown it can punish sloppy golf and reward players who stay patient.
The ISCO Championship also has one of the more distinct identities on the PGA Tour schedule. Aside from Scott Piercy’s three-shot win in the inaugural edition in 2015, every ISCO Championship since has been decided by one stroke or a playoff. Six players have made the event their first PGA Tour victory, including each of the last five champions: Seamus Power, Trey Mullinax, Vincent Norrman, Harry Hall and William Mouw.
That is the hook. If you are looking for the next breakthrough winner, Louisville is a good place to search.
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Max Homa Has A Chance To Turn One Good Week Into A Run

Max Homa tees off on the 2nd hole during the final round of the John Deere Classic. July 5, 2026; Silvis, Illinois. Credit: Marc Lebryk-Imagn Images.
Max Homa’s solo-second finish at last week’s John Deere Classic was more than a nice result. It was his best finish on the PGA Tour since the 2023 Genesis Invitational, where he also finished runner-up.
That is why this week matters.
Homa has not won since the 2023 Farmers Insurance Open, and last year he finished No. 111 in the FedExCup standings, his first time outside the top 100 since 2017. This season has been better. He enters the ISCO Championship at No. 49 in the FedExCup standings with five top-25 finishes in 16 starts, including a T9 at the Masters and last week’s runner-up.
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The question is whether the John Deere was a spark or the start of something more. Homa is tied with Lucas Glover for the most PGA Tour wins by any player in this week’s ISCO field. That matters in a tournament where so many players are still trying to learn how to close.
Homa knows what Sunday feels like. He knows what winning feels like. If the ball-striking and confidence from last week carry into Louisville, he becomes one of the clear players to watch.
William Mouw Returns To The Scene Of His Breakthrough

William Mouw reacted after making a birdie on the 17th hole during the fourth round of the ISCO Championship at the Hurstbourne Country Club in Louisville, Ky., on July 13, 2025. USA TODAY Network via Reuters Connect.
William Mouw’s win at last year’s ISCO Championship was one of the more remarkable closing charges of the 2025 PGA Tour season. He entered the final round seven shots back, shot a bogey-free 61 and completed the largest final-round comeback in tournament history.
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That 61 was the low final round by a PGA Tour winner in 2025. It also made Mouw the fifth consecutive ISCO champion to earn his first PGA Tour victory at the event.
The tricky part is what comes next. Mouw has one top-10 finish in 16 starts this season, a T6 at the Cognizant Classic in The Palm Beaches. Returning as a defending champion always sounds comfortable from the outside, but it rarely is. The memories are good. The expectations are different.
Still, when a player returns to the place where everything changed, it can unlock something. Mouw does not need to chase last year’s 61. He needs to remember the patience that made it possible.
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Young Stars Give Louisville A Future-Focused Feel
The ISCO field also has a strong youth and amateur storyline, and it might be the most interesting part of the tournament.
Miles Russell, the 17-year-old Florida State commit from Jacksonville Beach, is making his seventh PGA Tour start. He made the cut at the U.S. Open this year and finished T39 after advancing through sectional qualifying with fellow Florida State commit Charlie Woods as his caddie. Russell also became the youngest player to make the cut in Korn Ferry Tour history in 2024 and is a two-time AJGA Player of the Year, joining a list that includes Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson and Brian Harman.
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Jackson Koivun is making his second PGA Tour start as a professional after accepting membership through PGA Tour University Accelerated. His amateur resume is already loaded. He was the McCormack Award winner, shared low amateur honors at the U.S. Open, led Auburn to another national title and became the first player in college golf history to win the Haskins, Hogan and Nicklaus awards twice.
Preston Stout adds another layer. The rising Oklahoma State senior won the NCAA individual title in June, closed his season with five wins and is expected to rise to No. 1 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking once Koivun is removed from the list.
These players are not curiosities. They are part of the PGA Tour’s next wave, and the ISCO Championship gives them a stage where making the cut is not enough. They can contend.
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Players To Watch
Six Names That Shape The Week
Scottie Scheffler
World No. 1, FedExCup leader and still chasing another 2026 victory before defending his Open title.
Rory McIlroy
A former Genesis Scottish Open winner with three straight top-five finishes in the event.
Chris Gotterup
Defending champion, fresh off a John Deere Classic win, trying to become the first repeat Scottish Open winner.
Max Homa
Coming off a solo-second at the John Deere, his best PGA Tour finish since early 2023.
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Jackson Koivun
New professional, PGA Tour University Accelerated graduate and one of the most decorated college players ever.
Miles Russell
The 17-year-old lefty already owns made cuts on the PGA Tour and a historic Korn Ferry Tour milestone.
The FedExCup Bubble Makes Both Events Matter
The biggest mistake anyone can make this week is assuming all the pressure is in Scotland because the bigger names are there.
That is not how the PGA Tour works in July.
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At the Genesis Scottish Open, stars are trying to win, sharpen their games for The Open and improve playoff positioning. At the ISCO Championship, players are trying to secure status, move closer to the top 70 and create a life-changing week before the regular season gets away from them.
Only two players in the ISCO field enter the week inside the top 70 in the FedExCup standings: Homa at No. 49 and Patrick Rodgers at No. 56. Rodgers is making his 332nd PGA Tour start and remains the active player with the most starts without a victory. Beau Hossler, another talented player still seeking a first win, is next in the field at 248 starts.
That is real pressure. It may not look like Scheffler trying to win before defending The Open, or McIlroy trying to keep a historic season moving, but it can feel just as heavy.
One tournament has a major championship shadow. The other has career stakes all over the leaderboard.
That is why this is one of the sneaky-good weeks on the PGA Tour calendar. The stage is split, but the story is not. In Scotland, some of the best players in the world are trying to prove they are ready for links golf’s biggest week. In Kentucky, players are trying to prove they belong in the biggest weeks still to come.
By Sunday night, one player may leave The Renaissance Club looking like the man to beat at Royal Birkdale.
Another may leave Hurstbourne Country Club with a PGA Tour career changed forever.
Different courses. Different fields. Same truth.
This time of year, every week matters.
Why It Matters
The PGA Tour’s July Pressure Cooker
500
FedExCup Points
Awarded to the Genesis Scottish Open winner.
300
FedExCup Points
Awarded to the ISCO Championship winner.
3
Open Spots
Available through the final Open Qualifying Series event in Scotland.
5
Straight First-Time Winners
The ISCO Championship has crowned five consecutive maiden PGA Tour winners.
PGA of America Golf Professional Brendon Elliott is an award-winning coach and golf writer who serves as Athlon Sports Senior Golf Writer. Read his recent “The Starter” on R.org, where he is their Lead Golf Writer. To stay updated on all of his latest work, sign up for his newsletter or visit his MuckRack Profile.
Related: The Monday Mowdown: Three Very Different Courses Take Center Stage in a Huge Week for Golf
Related: The U.S. Adaptive Open Delivers Golf’s Most Powerful Message
Related: Chris Gotterup Isn’t Coming Anymore. He’s Here.
This story was originally published by Athlon Sports on Jul 6, 2026, where it first appeared in the Golf section. Add Athlon Sports as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
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