One of golf’s budding stars ultimately shone brightest across four rounds of action at the 2026 Arnold Palmer Invitational as Akshay Bhatia battled a wayward driver and a world-class field en route to the most substantial victory of his young career. Bhatia finished his week at Bay Hill Club & Lodge at 15 under, edging 18-, 36- and 54-hole leader Daniel Berger on the first playoff hole.
The playoff was the first held at the Arnold Palmer Invitational since 1999, three years before its new champion was born. Bhatia became the eighth PGA Tour player in history to win his first three tournaments in playoffs, improving to 3-0 in extra holes for his young career.
Bhatia and Berger went to the 72nd hole tied at 15 under. Bhatia made a relatively stress-free par, while Berger got up-and-down from 70 yards to force extra holes. Opening the playoff, Bhatia once again found the fairway while Berger hit into the left rough. Berger was unable to conjure up the same magic from regulation, carding a bogey and giving way to Bhatia’s tournament-sealing par.Â
The wiry left-hander’s arrow continues to point up as his third PGA Tour trophy marks his first signature event victory. Bhatia previously held a substantial lead over the weekend at the first signature event of the season, the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, before ultimately squandering a 54-hole lead on the West Coast.
Bhatia bounces up to No. 2 in the FedEx Cup standings behind only Collin Morikawa.
Berger and Bhatia were forced to return to the golf course Sunday morning to finish their third rounds. Bhatia made inroads as he dropped in a birdie over the edge of the cup on the par-4 18th, while Berger made bogey to make the eventual champion’s 54-hole deficit just a single stroke.
The two returned in the same pairing in the afternoon, where Bhatia was the first to blink with an opening bogey. The back-and-forth came in waves all day as runs were materialized by those out in front of them on the course, such as Morikawa, Ludvig Ã…berg and Cameron Young.
Despite the barrage of birdies from their peers, it was Berger who made the turn with a commanding four-stroke lead as Bhatia struggled to find fairway — as he did all week — and finally ran into his fair share of bogeys, carding three on his front nine.
However, once the final two made the turn, the tides moved with them. Bhatia made birdies on Nos. 10-12 to cut Berger’s lead to three before a monumental two-shot swing came on the par-4 13th as Berger made bogey and Bhatia once again rolled in a beauty from 10 feet.
The lead expanded once more to two strokes when Bhatia made bogey on the next, but he more than made up for it with a laser approach into the par-5 16th that nearly resulted in an albatross. He instead settled for an eagle, and when Berger scored bogey on the par-3 17th, the two were tied going to the last hole.
While Bhatia appeared to have the upper hand in regulation, he had to wait a few minutes longer to cash in on what is sure to be the first of many big-time wins in the young man’s career. Grade: A+
Here are the grades for the rest of the notables on the leaderboard at the 2026 Arnold Palmer Invitational.
2. Daniel Berger (-15): Berger led for what felt like 99% of the golf tournament — just not the 1% that mattered. He nearly became the third player in tournament history to go wire-to-wire; instead, he emerged as a playoff loser as he was unable to find the fairway on the 18th hole, missing it three times on Sunday alone. The climb back to relevance has been impressive for Berger, who dipped outside the top 600 in the Official World Golf Rankings while nursing an injury and has since returned to being considered a serious threat at significant tournaments. Grade: A
T3. Ludvig Ã…berg (-12): A sluggish start to his 2026 campaign has been brushed aside. After notching a top 20 finish at Riviera, Ã…berg seriously threatened the leaders on Sunday before settling for a top-five finish. Ã…berg is always going to drive the ball well — he ranked top five in strokes gained off the tee, driving accuracy and driving distance — which means it was the iron play that raised eyebrows. Flighting mid-irons, hitting his windows while in between clubs, the Swedish superstar took a substantial step in the right direction with the clubs that hold the fate of his winning aspirations. Grade: A
5. Collin Morikawa (-11): While his story at Bay Hill did not come full circle from a season ago when he squandered a three-stroke lead over the final six holes, Morikawa made his presence known. A month removed from looking lost, he’s arguably the most confident golfer in the world. Elite accuracy off the tee, precision into the greens and improving on the greens themselves, the two-time major champion is playing a lot like the player who raised those two major trophies. Grade: A-
T9. Rickie Fowler (-8): There is a lot to like about Fowler’s game at the moment, especially considering how he navigated through Bay Hill. The six-time PGA Tour winner ranked top 10 in driving accuracy, greens in regulation and strokes gained putting. The par-4 18th gave him some issues over the weekend, but he managed to keep mistakes off the scorecard and collect his fourth top 20 finish in five starts this year. Once he starts to hit his irons a hair closer, his scoring will improve, and his chances of winning will as well. Grade: B+
T24. Scottie Scheffler (-2): One tournament after snapping his top 10 streak, Scheffler ended his run of top 20 finishes. The two-time tournament winner looked discombobulated from the jump, and he was never able to threaten the top of the leaderboard at a golf course he has largely dominated of late. Scheffler’s iron play was once again the main culprit, although it was not without accessories. Putting a new driver in play, he hit just north of 50% of fairways, causing him to play more defense than offense.
“Today, one of the things I was hoping to feel a little bit better about was my iron play, and [I] got out there and I hit a lot of really, really nice iron shots,” Scheffler said. “Some worked out, others got some wind shifts, but overall, I felt like I struck it really nicely today, which was an improvement I was hoping to see after yesterday.” Grade: C-