Aaron Rai’s long grind to The Wanamaker
ET CONTRIBUTORS May 19, 2026 07:19 AM
Synopsis

Aaron Rai secured the 2026 PGA Championship title with a remarkable final round. His victory at Aronimink Golf Club marked a significant achievement. Rai's win is historic, being the first Englishman to claim the PGA Championship since 1919. The triumph highlights his dedication and hard work. Rai's journey from humble beginnings to major champion is inspiring.

Aaron Rai, of England, holds the Wanamaker Trophy after winning the PGA Championship golf tournament at Aronimink Golf Club, Sunday
A week earlier, Aaron Rai had been grinding towards a top-five finish in an alternate-event field at Myrtle Beach, his name absent from the elite Signature Event at Charlotte. On Sunday at Aronimink Golf Club in Newtown Square, Pennsylvania, that narrative flipped dramatically. The unflappable 31-year-old Englishman delivered a masterclass in composure, firing a final-round 65 to capture the 2026 PGA Championship at 9-under 271, three shots clear of Jon Rahm and overnight leader Alex Smalley.

Sunday's victory was Rai's reward for a quiet grind that began well before he turned pro in 2012, inspired by working-class values, driven by his parents' sacrifices, and fuelled by an insatiable appetite for the hard yards.

Rai’s epochal march on Sunday was punctuated by moments of pure theatre. A 40-foot eagle putt on the par-5 ninth ignited his charge. After sliding into the shadows, at one over through eight holes, Rai poured in the long eagle putt, marking an inflection point in his Sunday charge. That moment changed the course of his round and career. He joined the leaders at 6-under with a birdie on the 11th and seized sole possession after holing a seven-footer at the 13th.


The Wanamaker was in his grasp, and the workhorse never let it go. Every major champion leaves their signature in the moist heat accompanying their tryst with destiny. Rai found his signature through a sensational birdie from downtown: a staggering 68-foot putt on the par-3 17th, sending the galleries into delirium and effectively securing the title.

That putt effectively put the championship on ice. Rahm and Smalley still had holes to play, but the psychological pivot was undeniable: Rai had turned a delicate lead into a commanding cushion with a single audacious stroke. A composed par at the last was all that remained, a quiet exclamation point on a loud back nine.

The broadcast crews scrambled to find a narrative to accompany the masterclass from a surging Rai. CBS reportedly sought out his agent and his wife, Indian professional golfer Gaurika Bishnoi, while the Englishman methodically dismantled one of the most tightly bunched final-round leaderboards in recent major history. Stars lurked everywhere - Rory McIlroy, Xander Schauffele, Cameron Smith, Ludvig Åberg, and Justin Thomas all mounted challenges or held early momentum - but Rai refused to yield. Thomas took refuge in the clubhouse, securing the lead at 5-under with a 65. The Englishman, though, was a picture of composure.

Born in Wombourne to parents of Indian heritage and raised in Wolverhampton, England, Rai embodies grounded resilience. His father, Amrik, cleaned club grooves with baby oil after rounds to preserve precious equipment. That ethos lingers. Even as a PGA Tour winner (the 2024 Wyndham Championship) and now a major champion, Rai covers his irons and wears weather-resistant gloves on both hands - a habit forged in chilly English winters. These quirks are not affectations; they are reminders of sacrifice and humility.

Rai did not arrive at Aronimink as a prodigy anointed from junior golf; he arrived as a craftsman forged on the DP World Tour and hardened by years of steady progress. After turning professional in 2012, he cut his teeth on Europe’s developmental circuits before graduating to the main tour, where he collected multiple wins and built a reputation as an unflashy but formidable ball-striker. His move to the PGA Tour came via the standard route—earning status, reshuffling, and playing his way into better fields rather than being handed them.

His first PGA Tour win, at the 2024 Wyndham Championship, was a clinic in patience and poise on a 36-hole Sunday: a bogey-free closing 64, a nerveless birdie from inside seven feet on the 18th at Sedgefield, and a final total of 18-under 262 that underlined his ability to stand firm while everything was swirling around him. That victory opened doors to marquee events and majors, including entries into the Masters and the PGA Championship, but it did not fundamentally change his habits; he remained the player more likely to be spotted on the practice green at dusk than in a hospitality tent.

His relentless work ethic proved decisive. Peers like Schauffele and McIlroy have long noticed Rai’s relentless preparation: late-night putting sessions and gym time when others had long departed. At previous majors, while cameras followed contenders, Rai honed his craft on practice greens. That discipline shone through on Sunday. Rai produced pinpoint accuracy, tidy up-and-downs, and clutch putting. He clocked an incredible 182 feet of made putts in the final round alone.

Rai’s triumph carries historic weight. He became the first Englishman to win the PGA Championship since Jim Barnes in 1919, ending a 107-year drought for players from his nation. It snapped a decade-long streak of American winners and, paired with McIlroy’s Masters victory, marked the first year in the modern major era (since 1934) where Europeans claimed the opening two slams. As only the second golfer of Indian origin to win a men’s major (after Fiji’s Vijay Singh), his story resonates deeply in India and its diaspora. Social media lit up with pride, with users hailing him as “one of our own” while celebrating the Indian flavour in a global triumph.

On a tough layout, testing the best men in golf, Rai found improvements with each round - 70, 69, 67, and 65 - not an easy feat in major golf. Along the way, Rai also won the hearts of an increasing number of people. In his celebratory chat with CBS, Rai declared the Eagles his favourite NFL team, even leading an “E-A-G-L-E-S” chant for delighted Philadelphia fans. Beyond the records, Rai’s perspective cuts through the glamour. “Golf teaches you so many things, humility, discipline, absolute hard work,” he reflected. “Nothing is ever given.” His journey from aspiring Formula 1 driver to turning pro in 2012, navigating DP World Tour success before earning PGA Tour status in 2022, epitomises perseverance. Injuries had hampered his 2026 season early on, but a healthy run into Myrtle Beach signalled the turnaround.

Playing alongside rising star Ludvig Åberg (T4 at 5-under), Rai outshone the chasers with quiet authority. Rahm closed strongly for a share of second, but the pack - including McIlroy (T7), Schauffele, and Smith - could not match the Englishman’s closing burst. Kurt Kitayama’s record-tying 63 in the morning wave added drama but fell short.

The rewards are substantial: $3.69 million, a lifetime PGA exemption, and five-year invites to the other majors and The Players. Yet those closest to Rai expect the man himself to remain unchanged, feet on the ground, eyes on the next fairway. His star power will undoubtedly rise, opening doors beyond alternate events and into golf’s elite stages.

In an era of superstars and sky-high expectations, Aaron Rai’s victory at Aronimink feels refreshingly authentic. It is the triumph of unseen hours, familial values, and an icy putter under pressure. The Wanamaker Trophy now bears his name, a fitting crown for a champion who never forgot where he came from and used it as fuel to reach the summit.
(Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this column are that of the writer. The facts and opinions expressed here do not reflect the views of www.economictimes.com.)
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