Charles Schwab Challenge 2026: Why So Many Golf Stars Skipped Colonial
If you showed up at Colonial Country Club this week expecting a leaderboard packed with golf’s biggest superstars, you may have found yourself squinting at the player list and asking, “Wait… where’s everybody?”
The 2026 Charles Schwab Challenge is underway in Fort Worth, and while the tournament remains one of the PGA Tour’s most respected stops, this year’s field has sparked plenty of conversation—mainly because several household names decided to take the week off.
But before we start sounding alarm bells, let’s talk about what’s really happening.
The Cut Line Drama Is Already Heating Up
As Friday’s second round unfolded, the projected cut line became one of the hottest topics around Colonial.
By late morning, players sitting at 1-under par or better were safely positioned to play the weekend. However, analytics experts at DataGolf projected the final cut line could settle closer to 2-under or even 3-under par by the end of the day.
Translation? Nobody near the bubble can relax.
Every birdie matters. Every missed putt feels expensive. And for many players, Friday afternoon could determine whether they’re chasing a trophy on Sunday or booking an early flight home.
A Good Field… Just Not a Star-Studded One
Let’s be clear: this isn’t a weak tournament.
The field still includes several elite players, including world No. 9 J.J. Spaun, who continues to ride the momentum of his breakthrough major victory.
Fans also get to watch defending champion Ben Griffin and former major winner Justin Thomas, along with several other players ranked inside the world’s top 20.
Still, let’s be honest.
When Texans think of Colonial, they think of Scottie Scheffler and Jordan Spieth.
And neither is here.
For many fans walking through the gates this week, that’s the equivalent of attending a Dallas Cowboys game and realizing Micah Parsons and CeeDee Lamb both decided to stay home.
So Why Are Golf’s Biggest Stars Skipping Colonial?
The answer isn’t complicated.
It’s the calendar.
Professional golfers today plan their schedules around the four major championships, and we’re currently stuck in one of the busiest stretches of the season.
Just a couple weeks ago, players battled in the PGA Championship. Before that came the CJ Cup in nearby McKinney. Next week, many players will head to The Memorial Tournament, one of the most prestigious non-major events on the schedule.
Then comes the U.S. Open.
That’s a lot of golf in a very short amount of time.
Even the world’s best players need a breather.
Unfortunately for Colonial, this year’s scheduling window landed right in the middle of a stretch where many stars decided rest was more valuable than another tournament start.
Why Scottie and Spieth’s Absence Feels Different
This isn’t just about rankings.
It’s personal.
Both Scheffler and Spieth have deep ties to North Texas. Both live in the Dallas area. Both have consistently praised Colonial and the Charles Schwab Challenge throughout their careers.
Spieth won the tournament back in 2016.
Scheffler has twice finished runner-up and routinely draws massive crowds whenever he tees it up in Fort Worth.
Their absence isn’t a reflection of the event itself.
If anything, it highlights how difficult the modern PGA Tour schedule has become.
The Brooks Koepka Surprise
One player fans actually expected to see this week was Brooks Koepka.
Koepka originally committed to playing Colonial after returning from LIV Golf earlier this year.
For casual sports fans, Koepka remains one of golf’s most recognizable personalities—a player whose name carries weight far beyond golf circles.
That’s why his late withdrawal created some buzz.
While tournament organizers understand schedule adjustments happen, losing a player with Koepka’s star power certainly didn’t help an already thinner field.
Why Colonial Still Matters
Despite the missing headliners, Colonial remains one of the most beloved courses on tour.
Nicknamed “Hogan’s Alley” in honor of legendary golfer Ben Hogan, the course has hosted professional golf for nearly eight decades.
Players consistently rank it among their favorite stops because it rewards precision, creativity, and strategy rather than simply overpowering the course with length.
In today’s era of 350-yard drives and launch-monitor golf, Colonial still asks players to think.
That’s part of what makes the tournament special.
Better Days Ahead for 2027
If you’re worried about future Charles Schwab Challenge fields, there is good news.
The 2027 schedule could significantly improve the tournament’s positioning.
The 2027 PGA Championship is expected to be held at Fields Ranch East in Frisco, Texas. If the Charles Schwab Challenge follows immediately afterward, many players already traveling to Texas may decide to remain in the area for another week.
That could create one of the strongest fields Colonial has seen in years.
Tournament officials are expected to announce the official 2027 dates shortly after this year’s event concludes.
The Bottom Line
The 2026 Charles Schwab Challenge may not feature every superstar golf fans hoped to see, but it still offers everything that makes Colonial special: a historic course, passionate Texas crowds, dramatic cut-line battles, and the opportunity for new stars to emerge.
And sometimes that’s what sports are all about.
Because while everyone came looking for Scottie Scheffler and Jordan Spieth, the next great PGA Tour story might already be hiding somewhere on the leaderboard.
One thing is certain: by Sunday afternoon, somebody will be holding the trophy—and golf fans will have a whole new storyline to talk about.