Adam Schenk finally has his first PGA Tour win, and he earned it the hard way.
With wind gusts topping 30 miles per hour at Port Royal Golf Course, Schenk steadied himself for an even-par 71 on Sunday to edge Chandler Phillips by one stroke at the Butterfield Bermuda Championship in Southampton, Bermuda.
“Unbelievable,” Schenk said of his first PGA Tour win in start No. 243. “Was really hoping this day would come at some point in my life. Never really know if it is. That’s what makes the journey so amazing, interesting and it’s a surreal moment when it finally does.”
He arrived on the brink, sitting 134th in the FedEx Cup with one event remaining in the fall schedule. A finish outside the top 125 would have meant a Q-School return for Schenk to earn his tour card. Instead, he left with a two-year exemption, a spot in at least one 2026 signature event, and berths into The Players and the PGA Championship.
The card was plain, the nerves were not. Schenk made just one birdie and leaned on four gritty par saves as the wind turned routine shots into riddles.
The final hole was pure survival. Protecting a one-shot lead at 18, his approach stuck just over the green with a tight lie. Schenk putted through six feet of fringe, saw the gusts knock the ball dead to roughly five feet, then poured in the winner.
“That was just a massive putt for me to make, a massive putt to have go in,” Schenk said. “It’s somewhat life changing. It’s life changing I get two more years on the PGA Tour. I feel like I’m playing the best golf of my life that I ever played.”
Phillips matched Schenk’s 71 but couldn’t draw level. The runner-up finish vaulted him from 139th to 92nd in the FedEx Cup Fall, a massive leap toward securing full status.
“I’m happy just to be inside the top 100 now,” Phillips said after the round. “I know I’ve got one week left, but at least I’m not going into next week in the same position I was this week, looking at it like God, I’ve got to win to have a job out here. Hopefully I play pretty solid next week and see y’all next year.”
The win caps a year of turbulence and tinkering for Schenk. A mid-summer stretch of six straight missed cuts forced adjustments, including a one-handed putting drill to address his biggest weakness. The results had improved in recent months, and on Sunday, he finally put it all together.
Five players tied for third place at 10-under par. Of those, Alex Smalley shot the best round (68), but bogeyed two of the final three holes to miss out on an opportunity for his first career victory.







