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Bay Hill has a way of breaking players before the back nine even begins. But on March 8, Akshay Bhatia survived it all, outlasting Daniel Berger in a playoff to claim the biggest win of his career at the Arnold Palmer Invitational. And when the moment finally came, the 24-year-old wasn’t just celebrating a $4M check. He was thinking about a five-year-old girl who never got to see it.

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“Everyone knows when you show up to Bay Hill, it’s going to be a test. To play one of the hardest golf courses and to succeed is really cool. I can’t thank the tournament enough, can’t thank Callaway enough. My niece passed away in December, and I knew she was looking over me this year. I made this win for her, for sure. She’d be proud,” he said.

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Mia was six years old when she passed away. She had been living with PDCD, an extremely rare mitochondrial disease that attacks the body’s ability to produce energy at a cellular level. Doctors never expected her to live past her first birthday, but she defied every prognosis and made it to her sixth birthday.

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What made the story even harder to process was the timing. Mia passed away on the morning of Akshay Bhatia’s wedding day, December 19, 2025, at The Abaco Club in the Bahamas. She had traveled to be there, which itself was no small feat given her condition.

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The house she stayed in at the resort was named “Heaven on Earth.” Bhatia’s wife posted on Instagram two days later, writing that Mia “defied every expectation,” and that they carry her always.

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However, it wasn’t the first time Akshay Bhatia channeled something bigger than himself on a golf course.

His previous two wins, the 2023 Barracuda Championship and the 2024 Valero Texas Open, both came in playoffs. This one did too, making him three-for-three in playoff wins on Tour.

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Well, on the course, he shot 70-66-68-69 across four rounds for a 15-under total. The tournament turned at the par-5 16th in the final round, where Bhatia striped a 6-iron to a few feet for eagle while Daniel Berger was scrambling for bogey at 13. That three-shot swing pulled them level and forced a playoff, the first at Bay Hill since 1999. Eventually, Akshay Bhatia closed it.

With the win, he not only secured an entry into THE PLAYERS Championship, which will be held from March 10-15 at the TPC Sawgrass, but he also made his name in history.

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Akshay Bhatia joins Tiger Woods: A week where history was rewritten

Akshay Bhatia’s putter didn’t just win him the Arnold Palmer Invitational. It rewrote history. His combined short-game strokes gained of +16.3 for the week is the highest by any PGA Tour winner since ShotLink data began in 2004, breaking Patrick Reed’s previous record of +15.0 set in 2020.

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Well, that kind of putting under playoff pressure at Bay Hill, a course that historically punishes any weakness around the green, makes the number even harder to ignore. He also led the entire field in both strokes gained around the green and strokes gained putting. The last man to do that here was Tiger Woods in 2009.

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Notably, the putting wasn’t just historically good by Tour standards. It was the best Bay Hill has seen in over a decade. Bhatia gained more than 11 strokes with the putter across the week, a figure no player at this tournament had touched since Kiradech Aphibarnrat’s +12.7 back in 2015.

Of course, the win was a dedication. Three records, one playoff, one promise kept. Can he keep that momentum going next week at Ponte Vedra Beach?

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Written by

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Vishnupriya Agrawal

1,237 Articles

Vishnupriya Agrawal is a beat reporter at EssentiallySports on the Golf Desk, specializing in breaking news around tour developments, player movement, ranking shifts, and evolving competitive narratives across the PGA and LPGA circuits. She excels at analyzing the ripple effects of major moments, such as headline-grabbing wins or schedule changes, highlighting their impact on player momentum, course strategy, and long-term career trajectories. With a foundation in research-driven writing and a passion for storytelling, Vishnupriya has built a track record of delivering timely and insightful golf coverage. She has also contributed as a freelance sports writer, creating audience-focused content that connects fans to the finer details of the game. Her sharp research abilities and disciplined publishing workflow enable her to craft stories that go beyond the leaderboard, bringing context and clarity to the fast-moving world of professional golf.

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Deepali Verma

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