Keith Mitchell

Keith Mitchell

34-Year-Old Golfer
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2026 Fantasy Outlook
Mitchell looked to be playing some of the best golf of his career in the spring, as he went through a five-event stretch with five top-20s, including a shared runner-up and a top-10 in a Signature Event. He struggled to maintain that level, however, failing to post a top-25 finish across his next eight starts and missed out on the playoffs. Mitchell's strength has always been his driving play, where he ranked in the top 15 in both distance and SG: Off-the-Tee. The short game continues to lag behind, but on the rare weeks where he finds some form there, he often finds himself on the first or second page of the leaderboard. Read Past Outlooks
Eighth in SG: Putting at WMPO
February 10, 2026
Mitchell carded an even-par 71 on Sunday at the WM Phoenix Open to finish five-under and tied for 41st.
ANALYSIS
Mitchell ranked eighth among the field in SG: Putting and 14th in SG: Off-the-Tee at TPC Scottsdale, but he posted his worst SG: Approach performance (-5.24) since the 2023 Sanderson Farms Championship. Nonetheless, he's now fifth on Tour in SG: OTT through 13 measured rounds this season, and Mitchell will be in attendance again this week at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.
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Past Fantasy Outlooks
2025
2024
2023
2022
2020
2019
2018
2017
Mitchell joined the PGA Tour in 2018 and since then, he's missed the top-70 just twice, in 2020 and 2024. Mitchell was a hit-or-miss guy early in his career, but he's shown more consistency over the past three years. His production in 2024 saw a steep drop from the previous year, however, as he failed to capture a top-5 until the fall portion of the season. Though Mitchell struggled to close the 2024 season, his salary cap number leaves him in a good spot for the upcoming season. Mitchell is still in his early-30s and should have plenty of prime years left. He posted a career-high in top-25s this past season and if he can continue that consistency and mix in some high-end finishes, he should have little problem improving his number from 2024.
Elevated events help nearly everyone on the PGA Tour this past year, but Mitchell really took advantage of the higher purses as his play this past season was worse than the prior year, yet his earnings were about the same. Mitchell recorded only five top-10s in 30 starts and zero top-3s. Mitchell seems to have a lot of potential, but he rarely taps into it. Mitchell has just three top-3s in the past five seasons, so unless he figures out how to play at his peak level for more than a couple weeks per season, he'll likely remain in the same area on the money list.
When Mitchell won during his sophomore season on the PGA Tour in 2019, it appeared as though he was about to take off. That didn't happen however and he spent much of the following two season trying to recapture the magic. Although he failed to win this past season, he more than recaptured the magic as he posted a career highs in top-10s and top-25s on his way to a career best earnings number. Mitchell is not a straightforward case however as he's been quite erratic during his time on the PGA Tour. He's one of a handful of players with really high ceilings and really low floors. Since he's had just one sub-$1 million season out of five though, he's probably more likely to get better as the years go on instead of regressing. With that in mind, Mitchell deserves some consideration in salary cap leagues this season, even at this inflated price.
Mitchell was able to salvage what was mostly a disappointing campaign with a couple top-5s late in the season to make the FedEx Cup Playoffs. He continues to be one of the most dominant drivers on tour (ninth in strokes-gained off-the-tee this season) but the rest of his game leaves much to be desired. Mitchell's game certainly has upside, but unless he makes strides with his iron play, an inconsistent season is expected.
Mitchell had a break out 2019 season, but he failed to do much of anything this past season to back that up. Now the question is, was this past season simply a hangover from picking up his first win the year prior and having no pressure to retain his card? Considering Mitchell has two solid seasons under his belt vs. one poor season, a bounce-back would seem to be in order this year. At his current number, he deserves a lot of consideration in salary cap formats this season.
It took Mitchell some time to finally make it on the PGA Tour, but since joining two seasons ago, he's wasted no time in showing everyone what he's capable of. Mitchell earned over $1.6 million in his rookie season and finished 68th on the FedEx list. This past season, Mitchell took his game to the next level by winning the Honda Classic and taking in over $2.3 million in earnings. Mitchell set the bar pretty high last season, but he appears to have the game to go even higher on the money list this season. As such, he's coin-flip for the upcoming season. There are safer picks at this price, but Mitchell might have more upside than most in this range.
Mitchell finished runner-up at the Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship and 3rd at the AT&T Byron Nelson, but he probably earned more air time for crashing the top-70 while playing at the Dell Technologies Championship in early September. Lost in all of that perhaps was that Mitchell was a rookie this season...who finished inside the top-70 on the FedEx points list. Not a bad start to one's career. In addition to the runner up and 3rd-place finish, he posted two additional top-10s throughout the season and made 21 of 29 cuts. Mitchell is just 26 and he could be an elite player someday, but the fact remains that there's a lot unknown about him at this stage. As such, the bar is simply set too high to take him in a salary cap league this season.
After missing out on the top-25 on the Web.com Tour and automatic PGA Tour exemption by just one slot, Mitchell forged through the Web.com Tour Finals with a strong showing to earn his PGA Tour card for the first time. On the Web.com last year Mitchell posted six top-10s including his best finish, a third at the News Sentinel Open. Mitchell's clear strength is his immense length off the tee that affords him plenty of birdies or better on par-5s, but the rest of his game has room for improvement. Mitchell could surprise at some weaker-fielded events where length is advantageous, but otherwise shouldn't be on your radar this season.
More Fantasy News
Finishes T11 at Farmers Insurance
February 1, 2026
Mitchell fired a three-under 69 during the final round of the Farmers Insurance Open to finish tied for 11th.
ANALYSIS
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T44 at The American Express
January 26, 2026
Mitchell carded a three-under 69 on Sunday at The American Express to finish 15-under and tied for 44th.
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T66 at Sony Open in Hawaii
January 20, 2026
Mitchell fired a three-under 67 on Sunday at the Sony Open in Hawaii to finish one-under and tied for 66th.
ANALYSIS
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Ties for 10th in Japan
October 14, 2025
Mitchell fired an eight-under 63 on Sunday at the Baycurrent Classic to finish 11-under and tied for 10th.
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Falls to 72nd in FEC standings
July 28, 2025
Mitchell recorded a 36-hole score of three-under-par to miss the cut at last week's 3M Open by two shots.
ANALYSIS
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