Since graduating from the Challenge Tour in 2016, Thomas Detry had failed to win on a major tour and had finished runner-up a combined eight times from 2017-to 2024 on the DP World and PGA Tours. That came to an end in resounding fashion on Sunday as the Belgian won the Waste Management Phoenix Open by seven strokes (-24) for his first major tour victory. Detry began the week priced as high as 100-1 and now has risen to No. 22 in the OWGR with the convincing win.
Detry (55-1 this week) will be part of a 72-player field for this week’s “Signature Event” at the Genesis Invitational. This year, the Genesis will not be played at its customary venue Riviera Country Club because of the damage from the California wildfires. The tournament has been moved to San Diego at Torrey Pines Golf Course, which hosted the Farmers Insurance Open three weeks ago won by Harris English (60-1 this week).
Scottie Scheffler (4-1) heads up the field in his customary favorite position. He was on the periphery of contention heading into the weekend but settled for a T-25 finish last weekend in Phoenix.
Rory McIlroy (7-1) won two weeks ago at Pebble Beach and has good finishes at Torrey Pines — third in 2020, fifth in 2019 and seventh in 2021 (U.S. Open).
Collin Morikawa (14-1) has a couple of solid finishes of his own at Torrey Pines — third in 2023 and fourth in the 2021 U.S. Open.
Justin Thomas (18-1) does not exactly have a great run of form on this course but is inching closer and closer to getting into the winner’s circle with a runner-up at the AMEX and a T-6 last week in Phoenix.
Hideki Matsuyama (25-1) opened the 2025 season with a win at the Sentry and has a couple of top-10s at Torrey Pines. He is also the defending Genesis champion, having won last year at Riviera.
Ludvig Åberg (25-1) was the first-round leader at the Farmers here three weeks ago with a 63 on the easier North Course but was struck with an illness and tumbled down the leaderboard over the weekend. He also withdrew the following week at Pebble Beach.
The second tier of the odds board starts with Sungjae Im (28-1), Patrick Cantlay (35-1), Tommy Fleetwood (35-1), Jason Day (40-1), Tom Kim (40-1), Rasmus Højgaard (40-1), Taylor Pendrith (40-1) and Jordan Spieth (40-1), whose T-4 last week in Phoenix is his best finish in over a year.
This tournament was established in 1926 as the Los Angeles Open and was first played at the Los Angeles Country Club and has been played at a variety of courses in the greater Los Angeles area. Riviera Country Club, located in Pacific Palisades, has hosted the event 59 of 95 times and has been its permanent home essentially since 1984 (Valencia CC hosted in 1998). The event has been the site for several historic milestones in the game of golf. In 1938, the legendary Babe Zaharias became the first woman to play in a professional men’s golf event. In 1992, the Nissan L.A. Open was the site of Tiger Woods’ first PGA Tour event, which he played as a 16-year-old high school sophomore amateur.
Woods, who withdrew from the field on Monday, serves as the tournament host as his Tiger Woods Foundation is the event organizer. This event has had many legendary winners, including Ben Hogan, Sam Snead, Tom Watson, Johnny Miller, Hale Irwin, Byron Nelson, Ben Crenshaw, Nick Faldo, Phil Mickelson, Fred Couples, Ernie Els and numerous other major champions.
South Korea-based Hyundai Motor Group, through its Genesis Motors subsidiary, took over the tournament’s sponsorship in 2017.
The Genesis is one of four “Signature” events that will maintain a 36-hole cut, which includes the top-50 and ties and also every player within 10 strokes of the 36-hole lead.
46 of the top 50 in the OWGR are in this week’s field.
Torrey Pines Golf Course in La Jolla is a 36-hole public course owned by the City of San Diego. Unlike the Farmers Insurance Open three weeks ago, only the South Course will be played for the Genesis Invitational. The South Course, which was renovated in 2019 by Rees Jones before the 2021 U.S. Open, is now the longest annual course on the PGA Tour at 7,765 yards. It plays as a par-72, The fairways (fifth narrowest on tour at 28-yard average) and rough on the South Course are Kikuyugrass but with a Ryegrass overseed. The South Course greens (fifth smallest on tour at 5,000 square feet) are faster (12.5 stimpmeter) Poa Annua.
Torrey Pines South played as the ninth most difficult course last season with an average round score of 72.40 (+0.40 par). It could be even more difficult this year as the rough is a half-inch longer (four inches) to start the tournament than in past years. Southern California, including San Diego, has been very dry over the last several months, so the rough may play a bit easier with little to no moisture. There are 82 bunkers on the course and only one water danger hole on the layout.
The South Course record is 62 set by Tiger Woods (third round, 1999).
Correlated courses to the South Course include Glen Abbey, Muirfield Village, Riviera, Augusta National, Quail Hollow, Chapultepec, Olympia Fields and Bethpage Black.
Golf Digest provides a hole-by-hole flyover video of Torrey Pines South.
2024: Hideki Matsuyama (-17/267); 80-1
2023: Jon Rahm (-17/267); 8-1
2022: Joaquin Niemann (-19/265); 50-1
2021: Max Homa (-12/272); 60-1*
2020: Adam Scott (-11/273); 33-1
2019: J.B. Holmes (-14/270); 150-1
2018: Bubba Watson (-12/272); 50-1
2017: Dustin Johnson (-17/267); 9-1
2016: Bubba Watson (-15/269); 25-1
2015: James Hahn (-6/278); 200-1**
2014: Bubba Watson (-15/269); 33-1
2013: John Merrick (-11/273); 250-1***
2012: Bill Haas (-7/277); 50-1****
2011: Aaron Baddeley (-12/272); 100-1
2010: Steve Stricker (-16/268); 16-1
Playoff win over Tony Finau – *
Playoff win over Paul Casey & Dustin Johnson – *
Playoff win over Charlie Beljan – **
Playoff win over Keegan Bradley & Phil Mickelson – ***
All of the above events were played at Riviera Country Club and the Genesis Invitational became a “Signature Event” just last year.
We can also include the Farmers Insurance Open history as well, but keep in mind that players play one round at the substantially easier Torrey Pines North Course during that tournament.
2025: Harris English (-8/280); 100-1
2024: Matthieu Pavon (-13/275); 150-1
2023: Max Homa (-13/275); 22-1
2022: Luke List (-15/273); 90-1*
2021: Patrick Reed (-14/274); 25-1
2020: Marc Leishman (-15/273); 55-1
2019: Justin Rose (-21/267); 14-1
2018: Jason Day (-10/278); 22-1**
2017: Jon Rahm (-13/275); 55-1
2016: Brandt Snedeker (-6/282); 18-1
2015: Jason Day (-9/279); 14-1***
2014: Scott Stallings (-9/279); 250-1
2013: Tiger Woods (-14/274); 15-2
2012: Brandt Snedeker (-16/272); 22-1****
2011: Bubba Watson (-16/272); 66-1
2010: Ben Crane (-13/275); 80-1
Playoff win over Will Zalatoris – *
Playoff win over Alex Noren and Ryan Palmer – **
Playoff win over Harris English, JB Holmes and Scott Stallings – ***
Playoff win over Kyle Stanley – ****
Course history is ordinarily something to examine weekly, and this week is no exception, but it is probably less important than usual with the change in venue for this event and it being a “Signature Event.” A perfect example is Rory McIlroy two weeks ago. He did not have all that much history at Pebble Beach but won the tournament.
Unlike three weeks ago at Torrey Pines, weather will be a factor as rain and wind are expected.
In terms of statistics to examine, they largely remain the same. The course may not necessarily play harder from a scoring standpoint because the rain will soften the fairways and greens. It will not play as firm and fast. The length of the course already makes it a bear. Add to that some rain and wind and it makes for a long trek around this place.
Here are some early weather forecasts courtesy of AccuWeather:
Thursday Morning
Thursday Afternoon
Friday conditions are anticipated to be a tad warmer with more intermittent precipitation.
Saturday and Sunday look clear from a rain and wind standpoint.
Torrey Pines South Course is the longest course on the PGA Tour, so distance matters, but the fairways are also some of the narrowest on the tour and Driving Accuracy is only around 52%. Total Driving consists of Driving Distance Rank + Driving Accuracy Rank. Harris English, who won for us three weeks ago here at 100-1, was the PGA Tour leader in Total Driving heading into that Farmers Insurance Open.
Ball Striking takes into account Total Driving + Greens In Regulation Rank, and these greens only average 5,000 square feet, fifth smallest on tour.
Harris English led the field three weeks ago for Scrambling, getting up and down 22 out of 26 times at 84.6%.
Even the most accurate drivers are going to miss plenty of these narrow fairways. Moreover, the greens at Torrey Pines South are some of the smallest on tour, so players will have to be even more precise with the irons whether from the fairway or the rough.
The top three finishers three weeks ago at the Farmers — Harris English, Sam Stevens and Andrew Novak — rated fourth, third and seventh, respectively, in the field for Strokes Gained: Approach.
The plurality of the approach shots will come from 200 yards and out.
Torrey Pines South has pure Poa greens. They are fast (12.5 stimpmeter) but also bumpy and unpredictable.
Torrey Pines South is a challenging course, and it is easy to drop shots in a hurry here.
NOTE: Percentage of time player makes bogey.
In recent years, scoring has been around low teens under par, so players are going to need to score on par-5s especially.
Morikawa was a W/D from the Farmers three weeks ago when it became apparent that Torrey Pines was going to host this year’s Genesis Invitational.
He leads the PGA Tour for Strokes Gained: Approach and Bogey Avoidance for the young 2025 season and ranks near the top for Ball Striking and Scrambling.
While he gives up a little distance off the tee, Morikawa is one of the PGA Tour’s best with long irons and even bombers off the tee will have long irons on their approaches.
Pendrith has consecutive top-10 finishes, including a T-9 at Torrey Pines three weeks ago where he was second for Strokes Gained: Tee-To-Green, fifth for Strokes Gained: Ball Striking, fifth for Driving Distance and sixth for Strokes Gained: Off-The-Tee.
Combining his performances at Torrey Pines and Pebble Beach, Pendrith ranked second in Greens In Regulation, third in Strokes Gained: Off-The-Tee and fifth in Total Driving.
Despite a rare missed cut three weeks ago at Torrey Pines, Finau has been a “horse for the course” as he has finished ninth or better in six of the last nine years, including sixth or better five times.
Finau, who played the South Course on Wednesday and the North Course during Thursday’s high winds, was on the wrong end of a bad draw bias.
He was 20-1 three weeks ago here and is over double the price this week. With the weather conditions looking iffy to start the event, Finau’s carry distance off the tee should play to his advantage.
Hovland was runner-up at Torrey Pines in 2021.
He is not exactly in stellar form, so he is a bit of a flier here, but he is typically strong off the tee in elevated events on more difficult courses.
Around the green has long been a weakness in Hovland’s game, but he is a substantially better chipper out of thick grasses that will surround the greens this week as opposed to short grass.
Young opened with a first-round 74 last week in Phoenix but finished with rounds of 64-66-67 to finish T-12.
Last week, he ranked second for Driving Distance and fourth for Strokes Gained: Putting.
His big game off the tee should fit well in the tough conditions this week.
Clark was the first-round leader last week in Phoenix before settling for a T-16 finish.
He has two PGA Tour wins in California, the 2023 U.S. Open and 2024 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am (also on Poa greens).
Clark’s length off the tee plus his proficiency with long irons can put him into contention here.
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