Xander Schauffele is an American golfer from San Diego, California, ranked world number 3, with two major championships: the 2024 PGA Championship at Valhalla and the 2024 Open Championship at Royal Troon. After years of being labeled the best player without a major, he won two in ten weeks and buried the narrative for good.
Schauffele is one of the most complete players in professional golf, and his numbers prove it. He ranks near the top of the PGA Tour in strokes gained across every category: off the tee, approach, around the green, and putting. That kind of across-the-board excellence is exceptionally rare. His swing is compact and efficient, producing consistent distance without the violence that characterizes some of the tour’s longest hitters. His temperament is the other weapon. Schauffele does not fist-pump. He does not celebrate wildly. He simply grinds, hole after hole, with the emotional steadiness of a player who knows that four rounds is a long time and the leaderboard sorts itself out.
Before 2024, Schauffele had accumulated a frustrating collection of close calls: runner-up at the 2019 Masters, tied second at the 2018 U.S. Open, Olympic gold in Tokyo (2021) that showed he could win under the highest pressure. At Valhalla, he held off a packed leaderboard to finally claim a major. At Royal Troon, he backed it up with a composed final round in brutal Scottish weather, proving the first win was not a fluke but a dam breaking.
In 2026, Schauffele’s all-around game makes him dangerous at every venue. Aronimink’s demand for precision suits his iron play. Shinnecock Hills rewards the kind of patient, error-free golf that is his signature. His Open Championship pedigree at Royal Birkdale is already proven, and his ability to perform in wind and challenging conditions makes him a genuine threat on links terrain. His father, a former Olympic decathlete for Germany, instilled the athletic discipline and multi-sport mentality that underpins Schauffele’s consistency across different courses and conditions. He will compete at all four: The Masters, PGA Championship, U.S. Open, and The Open Championship. Follow along in United States time.