World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler makes his 2026 PGA Tour debut at The American Express in La Quinta, California, entering as the +300 favorite in one of the strongest fields in tournament history. The event features a unique three-course rotation and a $9.2 million purse, with defending champion Sepp Straka aiming to repeat. Betting experts highlight longshots like Pierceson Coody and Matt Fitzpatrick amid favorable scoring conditions.
The American Express kicks off the PGA Tour's West Coast Swing on Thursday, January 22, 2026, at three venues in La Quinta: the Pete Dye Stadium Course (7,210 yards, par 72), Nicklaus Tournament Course (7,147 yards, par 72), and La Quinta Country Club (7,060 yards, par 72). Players rotate through one round on each course for the first three days, followed by a 54-hole cut, with the final round exclusively on the Stadium Course. This Pro-Am format typically yields low scores, as evidenced by Straka's 25-under victory in 2025.
Scheffler, absent from the Sony Open due to skipping the Hawaii Swing, seeks his first win here in six starts, having posted just one top-10. The field, bolstered by the cancellation of The Sentry, includes top contenders like Ben Griffin (+2000), Ludvig Åberg (+2500), and Patrick Cantlay (+2700). SportsLine's model simulates Burns fading outside the top 10 despite +2700 odds, while backing Fitzpatrick (+3500) as a top-four threat after his strong 2025 finish.
Betting analyst Brady Kannon favors longer shots: Pierceson Coody (80-1) for his par-5 prowess, Denny McCarthy (90-1) for elite putting, Patrick Rodgers (92-1) post-third at Sony, J.T. Poston (100-1) with consistent La Quinta results, and Lee Hodges (150-1) after a sixth in Hawaii. PGA Tour experts like Will Gray endorse Poston for top-10 (+550) in birdie-fests. Coverage airs on Golf Channel (4-7 p.m. ET Thursday-Sunday) and ESPN+ streams from 11:30 a.m.
The tournament's birdie-friendly setup—short par 4s (350-450 yards), minimal rough, and overseeded greens—emphasizes greens in regulation and approach play. Historical volatility, with four triple-digit winners in seven years, adds intrigue to this early-season event.