2026 RBC Canadian Open: 6 Bets for TPC Toronto
The PGA TOUR heads north to TPC Toronto for the RBC Canadian Open, where a long par-70 layout and a looming U.S. Open create an interesting week on the betting board. While some stars are already looking ahead to next week's major, plenty of proven contenders remain, including Brooks Koepka, Tommy Fleetwood, and defending champion Ryan Fox.
TPC Toronto rewards players who can combine power, sharp iron play, and timely scrambling, making it a great spot for both favorites and long shots to contend. These six bets target the golfers best equipped to survive the cut and make a run at the trophy north of the border.
All odds are from DraftKings Sportsbook and are subject to change. DraftKings does not sponsor this content.
Michael Brennan First-Round Leader (+5200)
Brennan feels like the first-round leader play for anyone who enjoys a little chaos with their coffee on Thursday morning. The rookie finally broke through with a T6 at Colonial, and now he gets a course that actually fits his game. Brennan can absolutely launch driver, which is a handy skill on a long, scoreable layout like TPC Toronto. He may not be ready to string together four perfect rounds just yet, but that's the beauty of the FRL market. One hot day, a bunch of birdies, and a few bombs off the tee are all you need.
Alex Fitzpatrick Top-20 Finish (+152)
Fitzpatrick has reached the point where betting against him feels more stressful than betting on him. Ever since the Zurich Classic win alongside brother Matt Fitzpatrick, he's been collecting top-10 finishes like souvenirs, and the ball-striking has been ridiculously consistent. The Englishman has six top-10s in his last seven starts worldwide and ranks among the best in this field tee-to-green. He may still be searching for that first solo PGA TOUR title, but a top-20 ticket feels like asking a machine to keep doing machine things for another week.
Eric Cole Top-10 Finish (+360)
Cole is making it really difficult to stop betting on him. Every time it feels like this heater should cool off, he goes out and posts another strong finish. Cole has been eighth or better in four of his last five starts, and the combination of elite putting and sharp iron play has turned him into a birdie-making machine. He followed a playoff heartbreak at Colonial with a career-best finish at the Memorial, which tells you plenty about his mindset. At some point, this run ends. I'm just not convinced it's happening this week.
Wyndham Clark Top-5 Finish (+445)
Clark looks like a player who has rediscovered the version of himself that spent 2023 collecting trophies. The putter is rolling again, the irons are sharp, and the confidence is sky-high after a win at THE CJ CUP Byron Nelson and a third-place finish at the Memorial. When Clark gets hot, birdies tend to arrive in bunches, and that's a dangerous combination on a course built for scoring. With his game firing on all cylinders, a top-five finish feels well within reach this week.
Brooks Koepka to Win (+2700)
Koepka feels like a sleeping giant just waiting for the putter to stop causing problems. The ball-striking has been outstanding, the driver is behaving, and he's quietly stacked six top-20 finishes in his last eight starts. TPC Toronto should be right in his wheelhouse, too, with wide fairways that allow him to swing freely and overpower the course. The scary part? He hasn't even needed a good putting week to stay competitive. If the flatstick decides to cooperate for once, Koepka has the talent to turn this tournament into a personal highlight reel before heading to the U.S. Open.
Max Greyserman to Win (+8800)
Greyserman feels like a golfer who's one good Sunday away from finally breaking through. The guy has already collected five runner-up finishes in less than two years, so it's not a matter of if he can contend - it's whether he can finish the job. TPC Toronto should give him plenty of opportunities. Greyserman thrives when birdies are flying, and his ball-striking can get downright silly when he heats up. Fresh off qualifying for the U.S. Open, confidence should be sky-high. At long odds, this is exactly the kind of ticket that can make a weekend a lot more fun.
One-and-Done Play of the Week
If you play in a One-and-Done league, the idea is simple: You get to use each golfer once all season, so picking the right spot matters.
Sam Burns feels like the One-and-Done pick for anyone tired of watching him come close. The pieces are all there. He nearly won this tournament last year before losing a playoff, arrives fresh off a T4 at the Memorial, and continues to roll one of the hottest putters on the planet. More importantly, the ball-striking has started catching up to the flat stick, which is usually when Burns becomes a serious problem for the rest of the field. This also isn't a Signature Event loaded with every superstar on TOUR, giving him a much clearer path to contention. If Burns is finally going to turn all those close calls into a trophy, this feels like a pretty ideal spot to make it happen.
Last Week's Result
Memorial: Cantlay - T17: $319,000
Season Total: $5,971,558
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This story was originally published June 10, 2026 at 8:38 AM.