
Most weeks on the PGA Tour, the results of victory are best measured in millions of dollars. Just not this week, at the Zurich Classic. The biggest impact of this week’s event was always of a different form — it would mean full PGA Tour membership for someone who didn’t have it, as numerous non-PGA Tour winners found themselves in contention.
Littered among the pack was one of the best golfers on the planet, Matt Fitzpatrick, paired up with his younger brother, Alex. Even if Alex isn’t a top 5 player in the world, he’s been playing like one of the 100 best in recent months. He is no slouch, as evidenced by his recent win on the DP World Tour, but he was not a Tour member when he woke up Sunday morning, earning entry as a sponsor’s exemption.
But as Sunday played out and tension increased on the back nine, the Brothers Fitzpatrick seemed to grow tight. They turned to the back nine with a four-shot lead but surrendered it in an hour’s time. Two different duos reached the clubhouse at 30 under and tied for the lead. But the Fitzpatrick’s would have the last chance to end it in regulation.
Matt ripped a drive 322 yards into the fairway, offering Alex a hero moment. But younger brother — after carrying his brother, according to Matt at least, on the back nine — dumped his 9-wood into the greenside bunker short of the hole. Suddenly, a playoff looked incredibly likely.
Alex still had an overnight flight back to Turkey for next week’s Turkish Airlines Open on the DPWT. But he had also done enough to put the ball in the hands of the No. 3 player in the world. From the center of the bunker, Matt Fitzpatrick took a full lash at it, carrying the ball all the way to the hole and spinning it back inside of one foot.
“I got to the ball, and the lie was unbelievable,” Matt said later. “I couldn’t have placed it on a better tee. So I knew I was going to have to hit it, wind it all the way there.
“Did I plan that perfectly? Honestly, no, but you know, yeah, I played it to perfection. What more can I say?”
GOLF SHOT!Matt Fitzpatrick plays it beautifully to set up for birdie and the win @Zurich_Classic. pic.twitter.com/FAnaC08xEE
Alex shot his hands in the air when he saw the result, surely in part because his putt to become a PGA Tour member was as sure a thing as can be. He let the other pair playing with them finish out before remarking their ball and tapping in and dropping into a crouch with his head in his hands. In that moment, he wasn’t just the newest member of the PGA Tour. He had booked full status on Tour for 2027 and 2028, too.
That two-years-plus Tour-winner exemption is the biggest prize most pro golfers are constantly in pursuit of. It implies job security and the ability to select your schedule with clarity — not needing to see where you ranked to figure out if you’d get into any fields. It’s also one of the key things up for debate in the board room deciding the future competitive structure of the Tour. Should a highly meritocratic Tour be guaranteeing places to players years in advance? Not everyone thinks so. But that’ll get decided in the months to come, and Alex Fitzpatrick got his uncommon victory in at exactly the right time. In the post-round press conference, he was asked if he would be accepting this one-way ticket to pro golf’s promised land.
“I am, indeed,” Alex said, giddy. “I signed as quick as I could. I’m still shaking, and yeah, it was crazy.”
He no longer needs to jump on that flight to Turkey, because winning a Tour event in 2026 also pushes you instantly into the biggest fields in the sport for the next two months. Alex will now be in the fields of this coming week’s Signature Event, the Cadillac Championship, and the three others that follow this season: the Truist Championship, the Memorial Tournament and the Travelers Championship. He also earns a spot in this year’s PGA Championship, two weeks from now at Aronimink in Philadelphia, and next year’s Players Championship. So yeah, the month of May will be a sign of things to come for pro golf fans: there is a second Fitzpatrick on Tour. You’ll be seeing a lot of him.
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