Why the week's most relatable golfer was not a club-throwing Charles Barkley

Most weeks, televised golf looks like an unfamiliar sport.

The shots fly higher, stop quicker and bend in ways the rest of us can only dream of emulating. We may play by the same rules, but we get nowhere near the same results.

Every now and then, though, the universe rips open, parallel worlds collide and the game broadcast into our homes becomes almost … recognizable.

This weekend was one of those times.

Across the Atlantic, World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler approximated a mere mortal at the Genesis Scottish Open by missing the cut for the first time in 78 starts. At the Evian Championship in France, meanwhile, Nelly Korda put up the putting numbers of a mid-handicapper — she took 64 of them over two days — to wind up with a rare weekend off herself. Last but not least, along the shores of Lake Tahoe, Charles Barkley, the world’s most famously improved bad golfer, reverted to his old ways, piling up bogeys before punctuating a miserable hole with a club-flinging fit after a chunked chip.

Talk about kindred spirits.

But the week’s most relatable story didn’t belong to Scheffler, Korda or Sir Charles.

It belonged to Aaron Wise.

Not because he played poorly. The opposite, in fact. Wise got it around quite nicely, firing his way into Sunday’s final pairing with Lucas Glover at the ISCO Championship in Louisville and fighting to the finish, falling shy of a playoff by a single shot.

It wasn’t the near miss that resonated, though. It was everything that came before it: the openness and introspection of a player who has spent the past few years confronting challenges that had nothing to do with his swing.

What would it mean to him, he was asked late Saturday afternoon, if he could get back in the winner’s circle for the first time in more than eight years?

“I feel a long ways from there but it would mean the world,” Wise said. “That’s the dream when I was going through what I was going through. That’s the end goal and the dream. There was a lot of times I never knew if I would even be able to play out here again, so to have that opportunity’s amazing.”

What a long and arduous trip it’s been.

After winning the NCAA individual title in 2016, Wise turned professional and wasted little time making good on his promise. He captured the 2018 Byron Nelson in just his 26th PGA Tour start, earned Rookie of the Year honors that season and climbed as high as No. 33 in the Official World Golf Ranking.

Then the trajectory changed.

Just days before the 2023 Masters, Wise announced that he was withdrawing from Augusta National to focus on his mental health, acknowledging that the game had become an overwhelming psychological strain. He made only a handful of starts over the next two seasons as he stepped away from full-time competition to focus on getting well.

His return has been gradual.

This week marked only his eighth PGA Tour start of the 2026 season, and his second made cut of the year. But the encouraging signs extended beyond the leaderboard.

Through his comeback, Wise has spoken of a journey that has taken far longer than he expected. There was a point, he noted, when competing had become “harmful,” when he no longer recognized himself or enjoyed playing. Time away, along with the help of people he met during his break, allowed him to develop healthier ways of managing the pressures that come with playing for a living.

The work, he said, helped him rediscover something he’d lost: the simple enjoyment of the game.

“I look at tomorrow morning as whatever happens, it’s just going to be a learning experience,” Wise said on Saturday. “I’m going to stick to my process, do what I’ve been doing and then look at it after tomorrow ends and chips fall where they do and try to learn from it for the future.”

On Sunday, Wise stepped onto the first tee of the HCC Championship Course with the same caddie he has leaned on for much of the season: his wife, Reagan.

“It’s really just a comfort thing for me,” he said before the round. “It’s someone I feel like I can trust and just enjoy spending my time out there with.”

Sunday unfolded the way golf often does. There were mistakes, recoveries and opportunities. Wise hung around all afternoon, needing birdie on the last to make a playoff that was ultimately won by Steven Fisk, who edged Taylor Penrith on the third extra hole.

Wise walked off with a tie for third. Not a win, but a victory of a different kind.

In a week when some of golf’s biggest names did their best impressions of the rest of us with wayward irons, three-putts, chunked chips and club-tosses, Wise came off as something even more familiar: a golfer on the course astride a close companion, wrestling with ordinary human questions, trying to do his best but also understanding that there’s more to the game than what you shoot.

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