AUGUSTA, Ga. — Aldrich Potgieter’s name surfaced late last year in the annual rumors of young players who might be negotiating with LIV Golf, but it doesn’t sound like the PGA Tour has to worry about one of its emerging stars bolting for the rival league any time soon.
Potgeiter, 21, was a PGA Tour winner before he was able to legally consume alcohol with his victory at the 2025 Rocket Classic in June. That earned the young South African a spot in the 2026 Masters Tournament, where his two-day total was better than only two players in the 91-player field. He finished with a 15-over 159.
Once he punched his ticket to Augusta, speculation ramped up that Potgieter was being courted by LIV when he withdrew from the Bank of Utah Championship in October. He quelled those rumors at the time by saying the withdrawal was due to food poisoning.
After missing the cut Friday at the Masters, Potgieter was asked about the status of South African players in the world of professional golf. There were only three competing at Augusta this week — Potgieter, Casey Jarvis and Charl Schwartzel, who was in the field as a past champion in 2011.
Schwartzel is one of several players who have signed lucrative deals with LIV Golf, which has an all-South African team in the Southern Guards GC. Captained by former major winner Louis Oosthuizen, the team also includes Schwartzel, Dean Burmester and Branden Grace.
“It was unfortunate to see some guys go to LIV, and obviously some South African players went that route, so … that’s why there’s not as many out here as it was five or six years ago,” Potgieter said after his second round.
The future remains extremely bright for Potgieter and several of his fellow young countrymen. He has been ranked as high as 49th in the Official World Golf Ranking and currently, at No. 77, Potgieter is the third-ranked South African in the world behind only Jayden Schaper at No. 63 and 70th-ranked Jarvis.
Schaper won consecutive events earlier this season on the DP World Tour, where Jarvis also competes. Garrick Higgo, 26, is already a two-time winner on the PGA Tour and is ranked 85th in the world with a high of 38th.
Potgieter was asked why he thinks South Africans rarely have been in contention late in majors over the past few years.
“These weeks are huge. I think there’s a level of experience like especially this week,” Potgieter said. “You’ve got to know this golf course inside and out, and I think that just plays a big advantage into the week as well.
“These moments are really big, and we’ve got to learn to kind of put ourselves in those big moments, and it helps putting yourself in contention on the PGA Tour or on the European Tour all the time and kind of — but this is just a big step up to that as well.
“It just comes down to preparation, and it’s all just mental as well. So, we’ve got the game and the players to be able to compete, I think. We’ve just got to put those small blocks together.”





