Ludvig Aberg cleans up his game and
leads at Hilton Head with a 63
[April 17, 2026]
By DOUG FERGUSON
HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. (AP) — Ludvig Aberg swapped out some sloppy
mistakes at the Masters with pure iron play at Harbour Town in warm,
swirling wind that produced an 8-under 63 for a one-shot lead
Thursday in the RBC Heritage.
Aberg moved ahead of Harris English and Viktor Hovland with an
8-iron to about 15 feet on the back corner of the green on the par-3
17th and made the birdie. He closed with a par, pleasing because he
felt that 8-iron confirmed how well he was swinging the club.
Houston Open champion Gary Woodland, Matt Fitzpatrick and Rickie
Fowler were in the group of players at 65.
Masters champion Rory McIlroy skipped this $20 million signature
event for the second straight year, having said Harbour Town doesn’t
suit him.
Scottie Scheffler, the runner-up last week at Augusta after a 65-68
finish, had a shocking start. His first tee shot was out-of-bounds
on the right. He didn't know out-of-bounds was over there.
“It was looking like it was going to hit those trees and I guess it
flew right through them and then hit path and went out-of-bounds,”
Scheffler said. “Thumbs up for the start. It was a good bogey.”
That it was, a 12-foot putt to limit the damage, followed by a par
save on the next hole and then it was business as usual in the
tougher afternoon conditions for a 68.
Aberg had a disappointing week at Augusta National by his standards
— a tie for 21st, his first time out of the top 10 in three
appearances at the Masters.

“I felt like I was playing well but made some silly mistakes that
prevented me from having a real chance,” Aberg said. “But I also
felt like in the grand scheme of things, I was swinging it nice, I
was moving it nice, so I didn’t have to prepare that much in terms
of my golf swing on Monday through Wednesday, and I felt like good
golf was in there.”
The challenge for Aberg and the other 52 players who were in the
Masters was to stay sharp inside the ropes on an island that makes
this tournament feel like a working vacation.
Hovland is feeling less stressful more because of his swing, instead
of the week at the Masters when he made a big run up the leaderboard
on Sunday only to catch the wrong gust at the wrong time that led to
double bogey on the 15th hole. He still shot 67.
Hovland doesn't feel he's all the way back with his swing, but he
found enough signs of progress to believe he is getting close. He
played bogey-free for a 64 that featured no birdies on the three par
5s.
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Viktor Hovland, of Norway, lines up a putt on the second green
during the first round at the RBC Heritage golf tournament,
Thursday, April 16, 2026, in Hilton Head Island, S.C. (AP Photo/Mike
Stewart)

“The whole year I've been working really hard, and I think now that
I’m seeing my game progress and get closer to where I want it to be,
I can start to relax a little bit more and focus on kind of the
recovery aspect of things,” Hovland said.
English also played bogey-free for his 64, finishing with a birdie
to a front pin over the bunker.
Davis Love III refurbished the fabled course to restore greens to
their original design, but players felt it looked the same. And it
played the same — opportunity from the fairway, trouble otherwise as
Scheffler and others discovered.
Justin Thomas and Tommy Fleetwood each opened with a 76.
The toughest day belonged to someone who didn't even play. Brooks
Koepka was the first alternate and showed up at Hilton Head in case
someone withdrew. That typically means a two-hour wait in the
morning, taking a break, and waiting some two hours during the
afternoon wave.
Bad news for Brooks — this signature event has players in twosomes
off the first tee, one right after the other. He was at the course
about 6:45 a.m. (the first tee time was 7 a.m.) and could not leave
until the last group teed off at 2:10 p.m.
There were three alternates on property — Keith Mitchell and Taylor
Moore — because if Koepka got in, the stipulation for his return
from LIV Golf was two additional players added to the field.
Morikawa seemed to be the best hope with his back that first went
bad at The Players Championship. But he played the Masters with some
trepidation and tied for seventh, and he played bogey-free at
Harbour Town for a 66.
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