Cauley went 5 under in Sunday’s final round to prevail and enter the winner’s circle for the first time
Amid a career that has spanned 239 PGA Tour starts and a fair share of hurdles, Bud Cauley has finally claimed his first victory. Entering the week at the 2026 RBC Canadian Open winless in his 238 prior tournaments, the 36-year-old was simply sensational Sunday at TPC Toronto, usurping 54-hole leader Jackson Suber and ultimately finishing two shots clear of a talented field.
Cauley signed for a final-round 65 to reach 17 under for the tournament, good for a two-stroke victory over Matt Fitzpatrick, whose 64 tied for the lowest round of the day. Before his emotional triumph, Cauley had ranked fifth among active players for most starts on the PGA Tour without a win.
By raising a trophy in the Great White North, however, Cauley will seize the riches. He climbs to No. 28 in the FedEx Cup standings, giving him the inside track to qualify for the season finale at the Tour Championship. Cauley also earns an invitation to the 2027 Masters, which will mark his first appearance at Augusta National Golf Club.
More immediately, Cauley climbs inside the top 60 of the Official World Golf Rankings. Ranked No. 68 at the onset of the tournament, his move earns him an exemption into next week’s U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills. The start will be Cauley’s second straight at the U.S. Open and fourth of his career. He will also be in the field at the 2026 Open Championship in July.
Cauley’s journey to the winner’s circle has been just that, a journey. In 2018, Cauley was involved in a car crash the week of the Memorial Tournament in Dublin, Ohio, where he suffered broken ribs, a broken leg and a collapsed lung. He underwent surgery that same year, which came with its own set of complications.
He returned briefly that fall, played the 2020 season and then stepped away. In 2024, he made his first start on the PGA Tour since the 2020 Safeway Open. The next year, Cauley earned his PGA Tour card through a medical extension highlighted by a T6 finish at The Players Championship.
His position on this leaderboard at the Canadian Open through 54 holes was the first time since that Players that he had been inside the top five with 18 holes to play. This time, he capitalized on the opportunity.
Starting the day one stroke off Suber’s 54-hole pace, Cauley looked cool, calm and collected from the jump. He turned in 2 under to pull even with Suber by the time the final threesome made the turn, and only then did Cauley turn on another gear with three straight birdies from Nos. 11-13 and another for good measure on No. 15 to put the tournament on ice.
THE BIGGEST SHOT OF BUD CAULEY’S CAREER!
He takes the lead at 16 under par 👏 pic.twitter.com/nvhf1t2NiG
— Golf on CBS ⛳ (@GolfonCBS) June 14, 2026
In the blink of an eye, Cauley went from being a co-leader to commanding a four-stroke lead with only a few holes to play. While Fitzpatrick found a big bird on the last to post the clubhouse lead at 15 under, Cauley’s tournament was firmly in his hands, and he never let go. Grade: A+
Here are the rest of the notable names on the leaderboard at the 2026 RBC Canadian Open.
2. Matt Fitzpatrick (-15): Looked to become the third European to win four times in a single PGA Tour season but will instead have to settle for his first top-10 finish since the Zurich Classic. Fitzpatrick leaned on both his iron play and putting amid a week where his driver continued to handcuff him ever so slightly. If that club had been under full control, the former U.S. Open winner may have had a more legitimate claim at the title. Alas, he instead garners some momentum ahead of his trip to Southampton, New York.
“It’s a good week,” Fitzpatrick said. “I would have taken it at the start of the week. I felt like there was a lot of good stuff in there, just needed to sort of have it come out. I was just saying that my putting was a little bit of a struggle last week, and I feel like I got a bit of a better process for what I’m working on this week, and that showed today, I putted really solid. On a golf course like this, where there’s a lot of opportunities, you got to take advantage.” Grade: A
3. Viktor Hovland (-14): Signs of life! Without a top-10 finish on the PGA Tour since the WM Phoenix Open, Hovland hovered, hovered and hovered some more for his best finish of 2026. Unsurprisingly, his effort came courtesy of elite iron play that was enough to overcome shortcomings elsewhere in the bag. In an odd trend, the Norwegian continues to bleed distance to his counterpart off the tee, but at least this week, his accuracy was sublime. Remember, it was the driver at last year’s U.S. Open that frustrated him during his contention run. Grade: A
T11. Wyndham Clark (-11): Was the presence in the final threesome that many believed would make a move. Unfortunately for Clark, early in the final round, that move was in the wrong direction as he hit just one fairway on the front nine and turned in over-par fashion, no thanks to three bogeys from Nos. 2-6. Clark picked it up from there, but by then, it was too little too late for the man who has rediscovered his game across his last four events. On the week, Clark topped the field in terms of strokes gained around the green as his short game made up for a loose long-game performance. Grade: B
T29. Collin Morikawa (-8): A lot is going on in the world of Morikawa as he welcomed his first child and returned to competitive action for the first time since the PGA Championship. Admitting he is still less than 100% ever since his withdrawal from The Players Championship in March, the two-time major champion played like it. He was field-average with his irons and short game, sneaking into the top 30 thanks to a decent putting performance. Grade: C
MC. Justin Rose: The Englishman entered the Canadian Open with two straight top-15 finishes to his credit before the momentum halted in the form of an early exit. Rose continues to get up for the biggest events of the calendar and will be among the contenders next week at the U.S. Open, but consistency in this stage of his career continues to evade him. He was never able to get anything going as he put nine bogeys on his scorecard in just 36 holes. Grade: F
239 starts later, the payout is finally here.
Bud Cauley secures his first career win @RBCCanadianOpen 🏆 pic.twitter.com/gVdrm0dJKm
— Golfbet (@Golfbet) June 14, 2026
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