The PGA TOUR published a Golfbet Roundtable with a full betting and fantasy breakdown ahead of the Memorial Tournament presented by Workday, rolling out the league’s new Expert Picks evolution ahead of this week’s event.
The page lays out how the updated Expert Picks will operate in 2026 and explains what fans need to set a roster and follow the betting angle: each PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf lineup is built from four starters, including a captain, plus two bench players; bench players may be rotated after each round; and every golfer can be used only three times per each of the three segments. The roundtable also notes Golfbet experts will share betting picks that have caught their eye and that users can submit their rosters via PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf.
Names attached to this week’s coverage include Will Gray and Chris Breece among the PGA TOUR experts, while Golfbet’s Fantasy Insider Rob Bolton breaks down the field in this week’s edition of the Power Rankings. Those elements are presented as the core of the preview material: format, expert commentary and a betting lens meant to steer fantasy managers and bettors as the Memorial approaches.
That structure is the point of the page: it’s a how-to and who’s-on-the-discussion-panel guide for the week. It also carries the tour’s responsible-gambling language — a standard disclaimer about gambling problems and the National Council on Problem Gambling hotline, 1-800-522-4700, appears alongside the analysis.
The practical value for readers is concrete. Fantasy players get the roster rules they must follow before lock, and bettors receive a curated snapshot of which angles Golfbet’s analysts consider noteworthy. The Power Rankings and the promise that experts “will offer picks and analysis for the fantasy game each week” give readers a predictable place to look for reasoning and context as the tournament starts.
Yet the page stops short of a detail many readers will expect: it does not identify the actual player selections on the Expert Picks page itself. The roundtable documents the format and names the analysts, and it promises betting picks that have caught experts’ eyes — but the specific golfers chosen by those experts are not listed in the material provided.
For anyone setting a lineup or sizing a wager, that is the single operational gap: you have the rules, the analysis framework and the people offering picks, but not the picks themselves in the posted overview. The immediate work for readers is therefore twofold — use the roster rules now to finalize your PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf lineup and watch the Golfbet Roundtable and Power Rankings for the actual betting calls and player-by-player notes the experts say they will publish.
The most consequential unanswered question heading into the Memorial Tournament presented by Workday is simple and specific: which golfers did the experts actually pick? Until those selections are visible, the page serves as a primer rather than a playbook — useful for planning, incomplete for execution. Fans and bettors who want to act will need to follow the Tour’s published roundtable and the linked Power Rankings for the moment the experts put names on the lists.






