HILTON HEAD, S.C. — The board is loaded, the favorites are clear, and the margins at Harbour Town Golf Links remain razor thin heading into Thursday’s opening round of the RBC Heritage.
The PGA Tour’s Signature Event arrives at a course that rewards precision over power, and oddsmakers have responded with a tightly packed betting market led by world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler.
According to DraftKings Sportsbook, Scheffler opens as the outright favorite at +345, followed by Xander Schauffele at +1450 and a cluster of contenders including Cameron Young and Tommy Fleetwood at +1700 each.
Below the top tier, the board quickly compresses, with Matt Fitzpatrick (+1950), Ludvig Åberg (+2050), Russell Henley (+2100) and Patrick Cantlay (+2150) all sitting within striking distance of the leaders.
Defending champion Justin Thomas is further down the board at +3700, a reflection of both field depth and the unpredictable nature of Harbour Town, where accuracy and short-game control often outweigh form and reputation.
The course itself sets the tone for the market. Harbour Town is a Par 71 measuring just over 7,200 yards, with narrow fairways, small greens and water hazards on nearly every hole — a layout that consistently levels the playing field and creates volatility in outright betting.
That volatility is reflected in the numbers.
While Scheffler remains a clear favorite, the gap between the top 10 players is significantly tighter than a typical PGA Tour stop, with multiple contenders priced between +1700 and +2500, signaling a wide-open week beneath the top line.
Players like Collin Morikawa (+2350) and Sam Burns (+2450) also sit just a few swings away from contention, reinforcing the idea that Thursday’s opening round could quickly reshape the leaderboard and the betting landscape.
For bettors, the strategy is familiar at Hilton Head: target elite iron players, lean on course history, and expect leaderboard churn across all four days.
For the field, the assignment is simpler.
Survive Harbour Town.
And stay within striking distance long enough for the odds — and the leaderboard — to matter on Sunday.
The RBC Heritage begins Thursday, and the board says what the course always proves.
Nobody is safe.








