

No one expected to see him there, yet Wesley Bryan appeared inside the ropes of the WM Phoenix Open. The former PGA Tour winner is serving an indefinite suspension for teeing off at the LIV Golf Duel, a 9-hole scramble of content creators. But that suspension didn’t deter him from entering TPC Scottsdale.
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Bryan Bros Golf shared an Instagram post from the famous 16th hole with a short, subtle caption. What followed was a flood of reactions that say as much about modern golf culture as they do about the player at the center of it. “We’re back inside the ropes!” Bryan Bros Golf wrote as the caption to the post.
The image features Wesley and George Bryan standing at TPC Scottsdale alongside fellow content creator Grant Horvat. No, Wesley Bryan, who won the RBC Heritage in 2017, was not there to play competitive golf. It appeared that he was there as a caddie.
The 35-year-old was wearing a caddie bib, and Horvat was in the Wednesday Pro-Am field. While there was no official confirmation, from the multiple on-site images shared on social media, it appeared Bryan was on the bag for Horvat.
The WMPO moment also stood out because of the broader context. Bryan Bros Golf and Grant Horvat have collaborated multiple times. The three have appeared together at the PGA Tour Creator Classic at TPC Sawgrass in 2025.
They were also together at The Duels: Miami, the event that got Wesley Bryan suspended. While The Duels was not an official event of the Saudi-backed league, the PGA Tour considered it a promotion of the rival tour.
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Horvat was allowed to tee off in the WMPO Pro-Am as a content creator. Bryan last played a PGA Tour event in March 2025. His latest competitive outing came at the 2025 International Series Philippines, an Asian Tour event co-hosted with LIV Golf.
However, the visual of a banned player walking a tournament course during a marquee event created a gray area that invited interpretation. It was not an official comeback, but it still got mixed reactions from fans.
Fans read between the lines
The comment section filled up almost instantly, and the tone swung from defiant support to dry skepticism. For a large segment of fans, seeing Wesley Bryan back on a PGA Tour course felt like a small win in a fight that had dragged on for months.
“Free Wesley,” one user wrote.
Many fans, especially YouTube golf fans, feel that the PGA Tour shouldn’t have suspended the American pro. In fact, when Brooks Koepka was given an easy path back on the PGA Tour after exiting LIV Golf, many fans called for the reinstatement of Wesley Bryan, too. A group of them even started a Change.org petition for the same.
Others saw the post as a subtle signal, one writing, “One step closer👀.”
The comment frames the moment as progress rather than protest. Bryan himself took a subtle jab at the PGA Tour after Koepka’s reinstatement. He shared an X post suggesting a second category for the Returning Member Program, which included “anyone who is suspended for playing in 9-hole scramble events.”
Grant Horvat’s presence also mattered. “Shoutout to @granthorvat for looking out for the homies! @wesleybryangolf,” reflected the idea that Horvat has continued to keep Bryan visible during his suspension. That loyalty carries extra weight given that Horvat’s channel hosted the LIV-backed event that triggered the ban in the first place.
While most reactions were supportive, some leaned into irony.
“Don’t call it a comeback,” one X user said. The comment seemingly nodded to Bryan’s growing popularity as a creator, suggesting that his relevance never disappeared.
Not everyone bought into the sentimentality. One comment cut straight to Bryan’s on-course record.
“Crazy how many people think Wesley Bryan would do anything other than go back to missing cuts. Even if he gets his card back he has it for 1 year tops,” the comment read.
That take reflects a colder assessment rooted in numbers. Before the suspension, Bryan was a bubble player with conditional status, limited starts, and a history of missed cuts. In 2024, he had 18 starts and made the cut in only 8 of them. In these 8, he was in the top-10s only twice.
Together, the reactions capture the split at the center of Wesley Bryan’s story. To some, he is a symbol of outdated rules colliding with modern creator culture. To others, he is still judged primarily on scorecards and FedEx Cup standings. Notably, the TPC Scottsdale photo didn’t settle that debate; it just made it louder.








