These 8 Tour Stars Struggled Big Time In 2025
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These 8 Tour Stars Struggled Big Time In 2025

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These 8 Tour Stars Struggled Big Time In 2025

The Tour Championship (and Tommy Fleetwood’s victory drought) is officially behind us, so it’s a good time to look back at the 2025 season.

Tomorrow, I will be taking a look at the PGA Tour players who emerged with breakout seasons.

Today? Not to be a Debbie Downer, but today is for those who are on the struggle bus.

It’s all relative here. A bad year for an elite player might be a career best for someone else.

Regardless, these players did not live up to expectations—including their own. None of them won a tournament or contended in a major. Some were rarely cracking the top 10.

If you asked each of them directly, they would be the first to admit their 2025 campaign was a disappointment.

This list is just for PGA Tour players. If you are looking for disappointing LIV players that golf fans have slowly forgotten about, you can find that story here.

For each player, I give his Data Golf chart. That shows his overall ranking (and Official World Golf Ranking) over the past few years. Data Golf includes all golf played professionally, including LIV, whereas the OWGR excludes LIV events from gaining points.

8. Xander Schauffele

Schauffele was injured throughout much of the year. He had a stellar season in 2024 so there is no panic at all.

However, Schauffele is held to a high standard—and for good reason. He opened the year as the second-best player in the world and has been hyper-consistent for several years now.

Ending the 2025 season down at No. 8 in Data Golf is a sizable step back and his worst mark since 2022. Schauffele did not have a single top-five finish the entire year, which is hard to believe.

I have no doubt he’ll bounce back next year.

7. Jordan Spieth

Spieth’s chart shows improvement from the depths of 2024. He climbed from outside the top 100 all the way to No. 30.

That is the good news.

The bad news is that Spieth is who he is now. He is a good player who can easily keep his Tour card. He is slightly above average in all Strokes Gained categories.

That is all he is.

Spieth is coming up on four years since his last win. He has gone 11 consecutive majors without a top-10 finish. He had four top-10s this season, two of them in lower-tier events.

I’m including him here because going winless and not even sniffing contention at a major should be considered struggling for someone of his reputation.

The reality? Spieth isn’t a star anymore.

6. Will Zalatoris

It’s sad to see what back injuries have done to Zalatoris, a player who went on an incredible run at the majors in 2021-2022.

He’s been scuffling for the past two years, falling all the way to No. 99 in Data Golf after not registering a single top-10 finish in 2025. That is down from No. 66 to start the year.

It’s an incomplete grade because Zalatoris got another back surgery this spring to repair two herniated discs. We haven’t seen him since the PGA Championship. Well, except for when he played Mr. Gilmore’s caddie in Happy Gilmore 2.

Zalatoris has a high ceiling. Hopefully he can get healthy soon.

5. Wyndham Clark

The 2023 U.S. Open champion was the No. 10 player in the world about 15 months ago.

He’s now down to No. 49, which begs the question of whether his major victory was a flash in the pan more than a sign of things to come.

Clark did make the 2023 Ryder Cup and 2024 Presidents Cup teams, but he didn’t come close to making the Ryder Cup team this time around.

A T4 in the Open Championship was pretty much the lone bright spot for Clark, who made more headlines for destroying locker rooms than being a disrupter on leaderboards.

4. Sahith Theegala

It’s a stretch to call Theegala a star based on his play, but he did make the U.S. Presidents Cup team in 2024 after having a productive season. He’s also among the most well-liked player on Tour.

To put it generously, this year did not go well.

Theegala fell from No. 37 to No. 202 in Data Golf, finishing just two tournaments in the top 20.

In the brave new world of professional golf, Theegala’s standing on Tour will be in jeopardy unless he quickly turns it around.

3. Collin Morikawa

Morikawa is starting to eerily mirror Jordan Spieth’s career. Both had a lot of success early on and then settled into “very solid but unspectacular pros” in the following years.

The 28-year-old Morikawa has no victories since October 2023. He started the year at No. 5 in Data Golf and now sits at No. 26, well outside of his potential. In his last 14 starts, he has just one top-10 finish (a T8 at the Rocket Mortgage Classic).

As with Spieth, Morikawa’s lack of distance seems to put a ceiling on his star power. He’s still a phenomenal iron player, and his floor is quite high because of that, but a lot of golf fans were hoping Morikawa could be more.

2. Tony Finau

In full transparency, I completely forgot about Tony Finau.

After he won five times between 2021-2023, Finau was a top-five player in the world. By the time 2025, came around he was a borderline top-20 player in the world.

Now? Avert your eyes. Finau is No. 124 in the world.

Incredibly, Finau has one top-10 finish in his last 26 starts. It’s been a failure on all fronts as his normally reliable ball striking has been just as mediocre as his putting.

1. Max Homa

I wrote about Homa earlier in the week, so you can get a more detailed breakdown here.

The short story is that Homa is going through a lot of change right now. He changed swing coaches last October, moved from Titleist to COBRA in January and parted ways with longtime caddie Joe Greiner in April.

After winning six times between 2019 and 2023 and starring for the Americans in the 2023 Ryder Cup, Homa started to lose his way last summer. The last 15 months or so have been a nightmare.

He started 2024 at No. 8 in Data Golf. He’s now No. 149.

Let’s hope Homa finds his way. Golf is better when he’s in the mix.

Do you agree with this list? Let me know below in the comments.

Top Photo Caption: Collin Morikawa hasn’t won since October 2023. (GETTY IMAGES/Jeff Robinson)

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Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean is a longtime golf journalist and underachieving 10 handicap who enjoys the game in all forms. If he didn't have an official career writing about golf, Sean would spend most of his free time writing about it anyway. When he isn't playing golf, you can find Sean watching his beloved Florida Panthers hockey team, traveling to a national park or listening to music on his record player. He lives in Nashville with his wife, Anja, and dog, Hogan.

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

 
Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm





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      Krauter

      10 months ago

      Morikowa is my least favorite/most hated, actually only hated player on TOUR. It has nothing to do with his “responsibility” comments. He comes across as an insincere, unctuous……liberal. Ugh! If he gets 0 points, I’m fine with a US loss. I’m kidding. USA! USA! USA!

      Reply

      OpMan

      10 months ago

      Well, Spieth went down and he hasn’t recovered since. Don’t know if he really needs to be on this list in that case, because it’s not like this year was specifically his down year, he’s been down for a couple years. We’d all love to see him do well again, but may be this is it for him.
      Clark is the type of guy who can’t handle being in the public eye, because he doesn’t have that open and friendly, engaging personality that sponsors use to sell images and products. He doesn’t know how to handle fame, and the responsibility to do so after winning something like an Open got to him, and he showed it by blowing up instead of having class, which he does not possess.

      Reply

      Peter Landreth

      10 months ago

      Wasn’t Sahith Theegala injured for most of the year?

      Reply

      Anthony Pettinelli

      10 months ago

      Became a Max fan when he went on Bob Does Sports. He’s a guy with character and the PGA does an amazing job at hiding that. I can’t wait to see his climb back up.

      Reply

      Livininparadise

      10 months ago

      I agree with the list. I also believe that morikowa should not be on the team. His putting is atrocious and his lack of distance will probably be an issue at bethpage

      Reply

      Chandler

      10 months ago

      Totally agree. Collin is one of my favorite players but he’s just not rolling the ball that well. His best iron shots are amazing but his consistency has slipped and it’s the hallmark of his game. Bethpage is so brutally long that I don’t think it will suit him well. Thinking Harmon didn’t get the call for this reason. It’s a shame that length is such an issue but it just is at a course like this.

      Krauter

      10 months ago

      When I see a few of these names, the 1st thing that comes to mind is that they should have taken the LIV $$$$ when it was offered.

      Jason S

      10 months ago

      And 2 of these guys are on the Ryder Cup team, including a captain’s pick. Ugh.

      Reply

      OpMan

      10 months ago

      Shocked that Keegan didn’t pick Brian Harmon.

      Reply

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