What It Takes to Win the John Deere Classic 2026

1st July 2026

The John Deere Classic returns to TPC Deere Run this week, and if history is any guide, we are in for a birdie-fest. This is one of the PGA Tour’s most reliable scoring events – a week where putting wizards and iron specialists separate themselves from the pack.

Here is what it takes to win in Silvis, Illinois – and which players in the 2026 field tick the right boxes.

TPC Deere Run – A Scoring Paradise

Designed by D.A. Weibring and Chris Gray and opened in 1998, TPC Deere Run plays as a par 71 at 7,289 yards with bentgrass greens. It is not a brute. There are no dramatic elevation changes, no brutally narrow fairways, and no greens complexes that leave players guessing. It rewards precision and touch over raw power.

The projected winning score for 2026 sits at -22, right in line with the historic average. The projected cut line is -5, which tells you everything about the scoring depth here. With 155 players in the field, those who cannot go low from the jump will be packing bags early.

The Course Demand Breakdown

The Statz model breaks TPC Deere Run’s demand profile into four key areas, and the hierarchy is clear. Putting commands 34.8% of the variance in scoring outcomes here. Approach play accounts for 30.8%. Off-the-tee contributes 19.0%, and around-the-green work makes up the remaining 15.4%.

In plain terms, this is a flat-stick and iron-play course. If you can roll it pure on bentgrass and pepper flags from the fairway, you have a massive edge. Length off the tee helps, but it is not the primary separator. Scrambling matters less than at most tour stops because the course gives players clean looks into greens – the premium is on converting those looks into birdies.

Recent Winners Tell the Story

Look at the last three champions and the pattern becomes obvious.

In 2023, Sepp Straka posted -21 and won by two shots. Brendon Todd and Alex Smalley shared second at -19, while a young Davis Thompson lurked further down the leaderboard. Straka’s week was built on relentless approach play and steady putting – exactly what TPC Deere Run demands.

Then in 2024, Davis Thompson turned in one of the most dominant wire-to-wire performances of the season. His -28 winning total – four shots clear of the field – was fuelled by elite iron play and a white-hot putter. Michael Thorbjornsen and Luke Clanton tied for second at -24.

The 2025 edition swung the other way in terms of margin. Brian Campbell needed a playoff to edge out Emiliano Grillo at -18, with Max Homa, Lucas Glover, and Matt Kuchar among those tied for fifth at -16. The winning score dipped, but the profile held – the guys who putted well and struck irons cleanly were the ones contending come Sunday.

The Winning SG Profile

Across those three years, the common thread is clear: elite putting and above-average approach play. Every winner gained strokes with the flat stick and gained strokes on approach. Around-the-green play and off-the-tee performance were nice bonuses but never the decisive factor.

The model’s course fit metric confirms this. Players who score highest on course fit at TPC Deere Run tend to be those with strong putting baselines and consistent iron striking. Names like J.T. Poston (0.88 course fit), Jacob Bridgeman (0.88), Max Homa (0.87), and Denny McCarthy (0.84) sit atop the course fit leaderboard – all renowned for their short-game touch and precision with irons.

Who Fits the Mould in 2026

So who in this week’s 155-player field matches the winning template? Several names stand out.

Eric Cole tops the Statz model projections at -22 with a 6.9% win probability. His last-24-round strokes gained profile reads +0.80 putting and +0.57 approach – a textbook Deere Run winner’s skillset. His course fit score of 0.75 and recent form rating of 0.78 make him the complete package this week.

Ben Griffin is another strong fit. He gains +0.78 strokes per round putting over his last 24 starts and has a projected finish of -20. His T5 at -23 in the 2024 edition proved he can go low here. Griffin has the flat-stick firepower to thrive on a course that hands 34.8% of its scoring variance to the putter.

Rickie Fowler carries a 0.71 course history score and a 0.70 course fit rating. His putting touch and iron play marry up nicely with TPC Deere Run’s demand profile. The model has him projected at -19 with a 3.1% win probability – the experience and the game are both there.

Kevin Yu is a fascinating case – projected at -20 with strong course history (0.71) and a balanced SG profile that gains strokes across approach (+0.30) and off the tee (+0.36). He does everything well enough to contend without a glaring weakness.

Keep an eye on Max Homa as well. His course fit score of 0.87 is among the highest in the field, and he is the week’s hottest mover with a +2.86 delta in strokes gained total between his recent and prior eight-round windows. When Homa is trending up, he is dangerous anywhere – but especially at a course that suits his game this perfectly.

The bottom line: if you want to win the John Deere Classic 2026, bring your putter and your irons. Everything else is a bonus.

Explore the full field, projections, and model data on the John Deere Classic tournament page at Statz.