Where Does Hideki Matsuyama Rank Amongst PGA Tour’s Other Great Players?

Hideki Matsuyama, of Japan, holds the champions trophy after the final round of The Sentry golf event, Sunday, Jan. 5, 2025, at Kapalua Plantation Course in Kapalua, Hawaii.
(AP Photo/Matt York)

Following a dominant performance from start to finish at The Sentry, during which he set a new PGA Tour scoring record at 35-under-par, Hideki Matsuyama is a slam-dunk, no-doubt-about-it favorite for this weekโ€™s Sony Open, the only player with single-digit odds at a tournament he won three years ago.

The ceiling-to-floor range, though, remains a decent-sized cavern for Hideki, whoโ€™s obviously capable of beating the worldโ€™s most elite players when he has his best stuff but can look rather ordinary when the putter isnโ€™t behaving and has been known to frustrate bettors when his balky neck issues lead to unforeseen withdrawals.

All of which got me thinking: If we were to play, โ€œWould you rather?โ€ with Matsuyama up against some of the gameโ€™s other superstars from right this very second through the end of the season-finale Tour Championship, there might quickly be some very difficult decisions.

I played this game with my co-host Andres Gonzales on the SiriusXM PGA Tour Radio postgame show after the final round of The Sentry, and itโ€™s worth playing it again now, as we post the worldโ€™s fifth-ranked player up against some of the other biggest names.

Matsuyama orโ€ฆ Scottie Scheffler?

Nope. Donโ€™t even think about it. Look, I donโ€™t care if youโ€™re the biggest Hideki fan in the entire world, unless the counter-proposal is Prime Tiger Woods, you canโ€™t pick against Scottie here.

Matsuyama orโ€ฆ Xander Schauffele?

Same goes for this one. Can Matsuyama have a better year than Schauffele? Maybe Hideki claims his second career major at Oakmont or Quail Hollow โ€“ a few venues which should suit his game โ€“ while Xander struggles to replicate his two-major performance of a year ago? Sure, thatโ€™s entirely possible. Iโ€™ll still, however, lean toward the more known commodity in Schauffele, who mightโ€™ve only reached the tip of the iceberg as far as his best golf at the highest level.

Matsuyama orโ€ฆ Rory McIlroy?

Whether itโ€™s recency bias or personality bias against a player whoโ€™s so stubbornly stumped for the PGA Tour over the past few years, I think Matsuyama would get a decent percentage of the public votes in this poll, though nothing close to the majority that McIlroy would receive. And rightly so, as the latter has proven that his A-game is at a gear that very few others will ever own โ€“ even if it hasnโ€™t shown itself at a major championship in more than a decade.

Matsuyama orโ€ฆ Ludvig Aberg?

File this one under IYKYK. If you posed this question to casual golf fans who only tune in on a handful of occasions each year, theyโ€™d look at you funny while recalling that one guy has a green jacket and the other guy still gets his name mispronounced half the time. All of this is true, but those who live and breathe the game understand that Aberg is a next-level talent whoโ€™s only just started his journey toward world domination. I happen to be one of those Ludvig truthers and will continue to maintain heโ€™s a generational player until he proves otherwise.

Matsuyama orโ€ฆ Collin Morikawa?

Alright, now weโ€™ve got a healthy debate. After all, weโ€™re just a few days removed from Morikawa playing incredible golf at Kapalua, only to lose by three strokes, which compelled him to say afterward of Matsuyamaโ€™s performance: โ€œExcuse my language, but fโ€”k, 35-under-par, thatโ€™s low.โ€ Itโ€™s been 15 months since Morikawaโ€™s last victory, though he remains one OWGR spot ahead of Matsuyama, whoโ€™s won three times during that span. That speaks to Collinโ€™s high-level consistency, which is largely the reason Iโ€™d choose him in this one. It can be argued that Matsuyamaโ€™s ceiling is just slightly higher than that of Morikawa, but I believe Morikawaโ€™s floor is a few notches higher. All of that said, if you wanted to vehemently argue that youโ€™d take Hideki over the next eight months, Iโ€™d certainly listen.

Matsuyama orโ€ฆ Patrick Cantlay?

I skipped over higher OWGR rankings in Viktor Hovland and Tommy Fleetwood to get to Cantlay, who might be an even tougher matchup to analyze here than Morikawa. Each has struggled with his game at time over the past year, though Matsuyamaโ€™s done a much better job of bouncing back than Cantlay, who owns just a pair of top-10s in only 11 starts since last May, though admittedly eight of those have been inside the top-25. This question, however, isnโ€™t about whoโ€™s played better in the past, but who will play better in the future. By thinnest of margins, Iโ€™m going to take Cantlay โ€“ less as some dissertation on his skills over those of Matsuyama and more of a selection of regression to the mean than anything else.

Matsuyama orโ€ฆ Wyndham Clark?

As we work our way down the list, the scales start to tip in Matsuyamaโ€™s favor a little more with each question and we now get to the point where heโ€™d be an obvious betting favorite for greater success over his opponent for the rest of the season. Nothing against Clark, whoโ€™s a wildly talented guy and should tend to keep playing his best golf at the biggest events, but this one feels pretty firmly like a Hideki play for now.

Matsuyama orโ€ฆ Sahith Theegala?

I wrote earlier in this piece about biases and Iโ€™m an unabashed fan of Theegalaโ€™s game. Heโ€™s got a certain โ€œit factorโ€ which makes him simultaneously a fan fave and a player on the verge of massive success. Even the biggest Sahith fan, though, can admit that Matsuyamaโ€™s ball-striking is a tier better and his experience at majors offers an advantage over a guy whoโ€™s still trying to figure some of that out.

Matsuyama orโ€ฆ Bryson DeChambeau, Jon Rahm and Brooks Koepka?

I didnโ€™t want to finish this piece without including some of LIV Golfโ€™s best players, though Iโ€™m not exactly sure how we can weight them against each other, considering theyโ€™ll only play the same events four times during the year. If this question comes down to whether Iโ€™d choose Matsuyama to win a major or the other three individually, I think Iโ€™d certainly go with DeChambeau, almost certainly go with Rahm and probably go with Koepka, as his major championship profile makes every other player over the past decade pale in comparison.

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About the Author

Ryan Hannable

Read More @RyanHannable

Ryan Hannable is a Content Managing Editor on the Web Content Team for BetMGM. Previously, he was a New England Patriots beat writer for WEEI in Boston. He also has published a golf book, โ€œThe Ultimate Book of Golf Trivia: 600 Questions and Answers.โ€

Ryan Hannable is a Content Managing Editor on the Web Content Team for BetMGM. Previously, he was a New England Patriots beat writer for WEEI in Boston. He also has published a golf book, โ€œThe Ultimate Book of Golf Trivia: 600 Questions and Answers.โ€