Here is some background info on the Tournament and Course
2023 Arnold Palmer Invitational: Field
Field: 120 Players
Cut: Top 65 and Ties
Lineup Lock: Thursday, March 2
Defending Champ: Scottie Scheffler
The Arnold Palmer Invitational is now offering up $20M in the kitty, which means all the top PGA TOUR players will be in attendance at Bay Hill. Most of the elite have made consistent to sporadic cameos in this event over the years, with some notable expectations.
Patrick Cantlay and Tom Kim are getting their first crack at the course. Jon Rahm (T17), Xander Schauffele (T24), Justin Thomas (T49), Jordan Spieth (T4), and Cameron Young (T13) have only seen this course once apiece over the the past eight seasons. Collin Morikawa (T9), Tony Finau (MC) and Brian Harman (MC) each made their last Bay Hill start a week before the pandemic commenced in 2020.
Representing international tours, Ryan Fox, Adrian Meronk, Min Woo Lee and for the first time on US soil, World No. 83 Thriston Lawrence will all be at Bay Hill. Plus, we’ll get a look at top ranked amateur, the Swede, Ludvig Aberg.
2023 Arnold Palmer Invitational: Key Stats
- Strokes Gained: Approach
- Proximity 200+ Yards
- Opportunities Gained
- Par 3s Gained 200-225 Yards
Mayo’s Key Stats powered by
FantasyNational.com
2023 Arnold Palmer Invitational: Course
- Course: Bay Hill
- Yardage: 7,466
- Par: 72
- Greens: Bermuda
Par 3s
- Average length (216.5 yards), the shortest is 199 with the other three all checking in at 215 yards or longer
- These were four of the six toughest holes last season in terms of birdie rate (all under 11%), with Hole 2 being the toughest in that category (7.8%)
Par 4s
- Average length (421.8 yards), while the average length is what you’d expect, there are three holes measuring 400 or fewer yards and three that top 460.
- Par 4s at the end of each nine take back strokes (Hole 18 was the toughest a season ago and Hole 8 was second — both notching a bogey-or-worse rate north of 25%).
Par 5s
- Average length (557.5 yards), the shortest is 511 with the other three all checking in at 555 yards or longer
- The four easiest holes on the course, all carrying a birdie rate over 30% a season ago (Hole 16 had a crazy 5% eagle rate, nearly matching the 6.4% bogey rate).
2023 Arnold Palmer Invitational: Past Winners
- 2023: Scottie Scheffler -5
- 2021: Bryson DeChambeau -11
- 2020: Tyrrell Hatton -4
- 2019: Francesco Molinari -12
- 2018: Rory McIlroy -18
- 2017: Marc Leishman -11
- 2016: Jason Day -17
- 2015: Matt Every -19
- 2014: Matt Every -13
- 2013: Tiger Woods -13
2022: Scottie Scheffler (-5, one stroke clear of Tyrrell Hatton, Billy Horschel and Viktor Hovland)
- Highlight: He was just a stroke under par through two days, but a 68 on moving day proved to be plenty (a combined 20 strokes better than the three that tied for second on the final leaderboard in that round).
- Note: The top-10 finishers all gained with the putter, with four of them picking up at least six strokes on the field.
2021: Bryson DeChambeau (-11, one stroke clear of Lee Westwood)
- Highlight: He was the only player to go under par in all four days, his best round coming on Thursday with a 67 that put him one off the pace).
- Note: DeChambeau may have won, but he was one of just three golfers that finished top-9 on the final leaderboard that gained distance off the tee on the field.
2020: Tyrrell Hatton (-4, one stroke clear of Marc Leishman)
- Highlight: A pair of rounds in the 60s to start the event allowed Hatton to cruise to the finish line (over par in both weekend rounds).
- Note: Matt Every went full Keegan (65 in Round 1 with an 83 in Round 2). Of note, 11 of the top-12 finishers gained on proximity in that 100-125 yard bucket (nine of them lost in either the 175-200 or 200+ range)
2019: Francesco Molinari (-12, two strokes clear of Matt Fitzpatrick)
- Highlight: Molinari was two strokes better than anyone in the field on Sunday with a 64 (seven strokes better than Fitzpatrick).
- Note: Six of the top-7 for the week in SG:OTT cashed top-10 paychecks when all was said and done.
2018: Rory McIlroy (-18, three strokes clear of Bryson DeChambeau)
- Highlight: Like Molinari, it was a Sunday 64 that got the job done (he was -13 over the weekend after a less impressive -5 start through two rounds).
- Note: McIlroy road a red-hot putter (+10 strokes on the field), and four of the top-5 putters for the week finished T7 or better on the final leaderboard.
2023 Arnold Palmer Invitational: Notes
This is your yearly reminder to consult the
weather report before submitting lineups or making any wagers. A clear wave stack due to wind may emerge and you’ll want to take advantage of that. If the gusts are up, that will dramatically change the type of player you may want to target this week. The wind is up at this course as a default and it may not be too big of a deal.
Then there was 2020. Weekend wind made the course a scoring death trap for the field. Matthew Fitzpatrick (69 in Round 4) was the only player to crack 70 on the weekend. Tyrrell Hatton was the first player since Geoff Ogilvy at the 2006 U.S. Open to fire two rounds over par on a weekend and still win. Last year, Scottie Scheffler charged from the pack Saturday when the leaders started to get dealt treacherous conditions. Obviously, the forecast can change as the week goes on, but early indications show Friday may be an absolute bloodbath.
Rory McIlroy and Francesco Molinari both staged at least six-stroke Sunday comebacks in 2018 and 2019, so no one is ever dead at Bay Hill. This can provide an excellent live betting opportunity if you have the guts to believe in a massive comeback from someone not necessarily showing the form in the moment.
Water ripples in the eye line of almost every shot and sand is ubiquitous (84 bunkers), not to mention that the rough tends to be longer than the opening in
Deer Hunter. That wedding sceen makes
The Neverending Story feel like a pulp novella.
Similar to Riviera a few weeks back, Bay Hill actually plays longer than its 7,419 yards. With the prevalent water and series of doglegs, the holes have more distance to carry than they are actually measured on the scorecard. More so when you consider the average drive is over five yards shorter than the average PGA TOUR event (277 yards to 283 yards). While there are only nine officially listed water hazards, the wetness directly affects those nine holes in an impactful way. Fortunately, the greenside bunkers at Bay Hill are some of the easiest on the PGA TOUR annually, so bailing out to the non-water side of the greens is the preferred option on the longer approaches.
Players are forced to lay up off the tee to keep dry or set themselves up for a clean look at the green, the reason driving accuracy at Bay Hill (65%) is over four percentage points above the PGA TOUR average (61%). Do that, or risk paying the price — like on the par 5 sixth hole. You can take the water on to save some distance (RIP Bryson DeChambeau in this event) and try to get on the green in two, or you can end up carding an 18 like John Daly in 1998. Since 1983, No. 6 has produced 23 scores in the double-digits. That’s the most on PGA TOUR by a large margin.
If you’re someone who leans on stats and modeling to make decisions, beware of the international players whose primary tour is not the PGA TOUR. Small samples, strung across myriad years for some, will yield insufficient results — both good or bad. With the wind playing a factor, there has been an inordinate amount of international players who’ve succeeded over the years at Bay Hill. That may be less so in 2023 now that the API is an elevated event featuring all the best players, but the ability to navigate the wind and scramble from all over have proven to be valuable skills which are simply more practiced on DP World Tour courses.
Strokes Gained: Approach has been over two times as influential on the Top-5 finishers as SG: Off The Tee, and three times more impactful than SG: Around The Green. The gap between each of the SG stats shrinks if expanded to the top-20 finishers. Looking at winners only, SG: APP is 2.7 times more impactful than SG: OTT and 4.2 times against SG: ATG. Yes, SG: APP is always the most important stat to look at, however it’s more pronounced this week with so many approaches coming from beyond 200 yards. Historically, around 30% of approaches will come from that distance, one of the largest distributions of approach shots from 200+ yards of any course on the PGA TOUR.
Much of that has to do with the Par 3s, as they average over 215 yards in length. Patrick Rodgers, Viktor Hovland, Tom Kim, Sam Burns and Joesph Bramlett are the top players on holes from this length over the past 36 rounds.
The greens at Bay Hill have annually played extremely quick in comparison to most courses. The players with the most Strokes Gained: Putting per round on fast + LIGHTNING greens per round over their past 36 rounds are: Andrew Putnam, Taylor Montgomery, Beau Hossler, Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Max Homa, Sam Burns, Jon Rahm and Harris English.
Isolating those fast and lightning greens to just Bermuda putting surfaces: Thomas Detry, Taylor Montgomery, Ben Taylor, Kevin Kisner, Sam Burns, Tyrrell Hatton and Sam Ryder lead all players.
Marc Leishman and Jason Day have won both at Bay Hill and Torrey Pines in the past seven years. Other Farmers champs Justin Rose, Luke List and Max Homa have multiple Top-10 results at Bay Hill as well. Tiger Woods historically dominates both courses. That’s everywhere but Riviera, though.
Rory McIlroy, Chris Kirk, Matthew Fitzpatrick, Sungjae Im and Tyrrell Hatton have the most Strokes Gained: Total in the past five years at Bay Hill.
Scottie Scheffler, Will Zalatoris, Tyrrell Hatton, Matt Fitzpatrick, Chris Kirk, Corey Conners, Keegan Bradley, Rory McIlroy, Max Homa, Hideki Matsuyama, Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Charley Hoffman and Tommy Fleetwood have posted Top-20 finishes in each of their past two starts at API. In only one appearance from the past three years, Jordan Spieth and Collin Morikawa boast Top-10 finishes.