While most of the professional golf world had its eyes locked on Bay Hill last week, something was happening in Puerto Rico — the effects of which pro golf might not feel for some time.
Opposite-field events on the PGA Tour are a weird mix of longtime pros preparing to exit, those stuck in the middle still trying to claw their way up and young talents either still trying to put it all together or just getting their feet wet on the pro level — the have-beens, never-weres and might-bes. The future of these events is, at best, uncertain as new PGA Tour CEO Brian Rolapp prepares to roll out a new schedule that is expected to highlight scarcity and competition. We’ll learn more about that this week at the Players Championship.
John Daly II contending is sign of the future. Just not the one you thinkBy: Sean Zak
But, as my colleague Sean Zak wrote, last week in Puerto Rico was a sign of what the future of the PGA Tour could and should entail as it potenitally moves toward a more tiered system: a group of tournaments that serve as a proving ground for the next wave of the PGA Tour and a place where those whose game has slipped can go to try and reclaim it.
As the weekend at Grand Reserve Golf Club went on, the meaning of this event and its importance to the incoming youth wave crystallized.
There was 18-year-old Blades Brown on Sunday, holding a back-nine lead in search of a win that would vault him from the Korn Ferry Tour to the main circuit. Brown played in the final group at the American Express alongside Scottie Scheffler and Si Woo Kim, but faltered on Sunday as Scheffler went on to take the title. That round was an important moment for Brown, who chose to forgo college and turn pro at 17. He saw how Scheffler went about his business, watched in awe of the World No. 1’s crisp short game and got his first taste of a Sunday cauldron on the PGA Tour.
“I would just say it’s experience, just having that moment and that experience with Scottie and Si Woo and being in the final group is going to help me tomorrow being in the hunt again,” Brown said after the third round.
But often, more lessons are required to get from Point A to Point B in professional golf. Contending and winning are completely different worlds. Traversing between them is a terrifying experience that requires everything to come together.
Brown went out in 4-under 32 on Sunday and passed leader Ricky Castillo with a birdie at No. 12 to take the outright lead. Then, the 18-year-old’s hands slipped off the wheel. On the par-4 13th, Brown hit his tee shot into the fairway bunker. His approach shot found the water and he ended up walking off with a triple bogey en route to a third-place finish.
Winning is hard.
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) March 8, 2026
Blades Brown falls to two-shots back with a triple bogey @PuertoRicoOpen.
📺 Golf Channel pic.twitter.com/0Xnd4owQTX
There was Gordon Sargent, the 22-year-old who became the first player to earn his PGA Tour card through the PGA Tour University Accelerated program, finding himself in contention for the first time as a professional. The long-hitting Vanderbilt product made just five of 11 cuts last year after taking up his card. His lone top 25 came at the ISCO Championship and he had made just one cut in five starts in 2026 before arriving in Puerto Rico.
Sargent went 65-70-72 over the first three rounds to enter Sunday’s final round three shots back of the lead. A final-round 2-under 70 meant he never really threatened on Sunday, but the four days in Puerto Rico were vital for a talented player who hasn’t found his game among the world’s best.
“Definitely first time in [contention in] a PGA Tour event, so kind of tried to lean on experiences in the past in college golf and amateur golf,” Sargent said on Sunday. “It’s definitely different. I think it’s easy to get ahead of yourself a little bit and think about kind of the results, so tried to kind of just stay present and definitely going to take a lot away from this week.”
The transition to the PGA Tour has been a hectic experience for Sargent. The challenges begin on the course but spread to all aspects of his life as he tries to get accustomed to life as a PGA Tour pro.
“Playing a lot of weeks in a row, trying to figure out how you can stay healthy and energized and stuff, and being excited to go out there,” Sargent said of the challenges he’s faced. “Golf-wise, just trying to get better each week, and then off the course, kind of figure out what works [for a routine].”
Then, there was John Daly the Second. The 22-year-old amateur entered the final round three back of the leader. He made the turn in 2-under but came home in 40 to finish in a tie for 37th. Daly, who shot 83 in his first tournament as a walk-on freshman at Arkansas, has been slowly building his game to a point where contending in a PGA Tour event is a possibility. Years of hard work have taken him from Power 4 walk-on to No. 54 in the amateur rankings. A rough finish in blustery conditions didn’t dim the four-day experience that is just the next step in an incremental golf journey.
“I learned that you’ve got to put four rounds together and it’s not easy out here,” Daly said. “But very happy, not mad at all. Just a great day, great week.”
In the end, it was 25-year-old Ricky Castillo who was the last man standing. Castillo made 16 of 28 cuts last season, his first on the PGA Tour, and posted two top-five finishes. But he missed a 20-footer for birdie on the final hole of the RSM Classic, which knocked him out of the top 100 in the FedEx Cup Fall and left him with just conditional status for the 2026 season.
“You feel like you’re doing everything right and feel like you’re coming in 40th and you can do the same thing and end up winning like I did this week,” Castillo said after earning his first PGA Tour win about the 2025 season. “Sometimes you’re going to put in a lot of work and it’s not going to show for a while and that can be difficult, but that’s golf.”
Castillo’s win got him into the PGA Championship at Aronimink and bumped him inside the top 100 in the OWGR. The win and major ticket are nice, but it was also validation of a process for navigating choppy professional seas. But Castillo leaves Puerto Rico with something more valuable than the trophy — contending experience, confidence in his plan and ambitions to chase.
“I still have things to look forward to and strive for,” Castillo said, mentioning trying to get into the Masters. “That was kind of the positive thing about this event. Regardless if I won or not, I was still going to have things to strive for afterward.”
For professional golf’s next youth wave, events like the Puerto Rico Open have an essential purpose: Win or lose, they are just the beginning.