Harbour Town rewards restraint, angle management, and emotional reset
after Augusta — not the same profile the market prices in.
Intelligence Briefing
Five Edges for Harbour Town
Best Harbour Town Fit
Collin Morikawa
The player whose game most naturally matches Harbour Town’s demands: precision iron play, club-down discipline, small-green accuracy, and Dye-course patience.
Most Stable Profile
Corey Conners
The player with the highest floor this week: consistent positional play, no blow-up holes, strong scrambling from tight lies.
Most Fragile Favorite
Viktor Hovland
The highest-ranked player whose game has structural mismatches with Harbour Town — over-reliance on distance, poor small-green miss quality, or post-Masters fatigue.
Biggest Value Discrepancy
Russell Henley
The player where sportsbook perception diverges most from Harbour Town fit — the market is underpricing their structural advantages.
Strongest Post-Masters Bounce
Jordan Spieth
The player best positioned to reset after Augusta — emotional composure, Dye-course comfort, and a game that thrives when shifting from power to precision.
Course Intelligence
What Actually Wins at Harbour Town
01
Sightline Tolerance
Some players lose comfort when the course visually narrows them off the tee. Dye courses create decision stress, not just execution stress. Harbour Town is famous for tight visual corridors through live oaks that reward players who trust their shape.
02
Small-Green Miss Quality
Not just GIR% — where the miss finishes relative to short-sided runoffs and awkward chips matters more here than almost any other PGA Tour stop. Harbour Town’s greens average 3,800 sq ft vs the Tour average of 5,500.
03
Closing-Stretch Wind Adaptability
The exposed water-adjacent finish (holes 15–18) changes club selection and trajectory more than season-long numbers capture. Players who can hold a low stinger into wind gain hidden edge.
04
Club-Down Acceptance
Players willing to hit less than driver repeatedly gain hidden EV here. Harbour Town often punishes ego more than distance deficiency. The course plays 7,243 yards but most winners hit 3-wood off half the tees.
05
Pete Dye Patience Index
Some players mentally fight Dye courses — the railroad ties, the odd angles, the conservative targets. Others accept the visual deception and play the course instead of the scorecard.
06
Post-Masters Emotional Reset
This event follows Augusta. Players arrive drained, flat, or overhyped. The market overpays for Masters contenders even though Harbour Town is a completely different test. The best RBC Heritage players reset fast.
07
Underreaction to Boring Profiles
This tournament quietly favors accurate, patient, control-first players whose upside looks lower on TV than it does in probability space. Restraint wins more often here than fireworks.
Live Leaderboard
Top 10
Leaderboard will populate when Round 1 begins — April 16