Quick Answer: Lee Hodges is an American PGA Tour pro from Ardmore, Alabama, whose biggest career moment so far is a wire-to-wire win at the 2023 3M Open. He just co-led the 2026 John Deere Classic through 54 holes before finishing T-3, and he’s back in action this week at the ISCO Championship in Louisville. He’s married to Savannah Hodges and co-owns his childhood home course, Canebrake Club.
Four days ago, Hodges was tied for the 54-hole lead at the John Deere Classic. That’s the kind of sentence that sends casual fans straight to Google, and most of what’s currently sitting on page one won’t tell you anything about it — you’ll find a stat widget, an outdated Wikipedia page, and an Instagram feed. None of it explains what actually happened last weekend, whether he’s playing again this week, or who this guy even is.
I’ll cover all of it here: the John Deere near-miss, his real career earnings, his wife, the golf course he co-owns back home, and exactly what’s in his bag.
Hodges Nearly Won the John Deere Classic
Here’s the part nobody else has written up yet. Hodges opened the 2026 John Deere Classic with a 7-under 64, then followed it with a 66 to sit solo second, two shots behind Lucas Glover through 36 holes. Saturday is where it got interesting: he made the turn even par, then ran off four birdies in a six-hole stretch on the back nine for a 67, pulling level with Glover at 16-under heading into the final round. That back-nine stretch was the best sustained golf anyone played at TPC Deere Run all week, full stop — Gotterup’s closing 62 grabbed the headline, but four birdies in six holes with a share of the lead on the line is the harder thing to pull off.
| Round | Score | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| R1 | 64 (-7) | Opening-round charge |
| R2 | 66 (-5) | Solo second, two back |
| R3 | 67 (-4) | Tied for the 54-hole lead |
| R4 | 69 (-2) | Finished T-3 at 18-under |
A final-round 69 wasn’t quite enough. Chris Gotterup closed with a bogey-free 62 to steal it, and Ben Kohles — who was tied for the lead standing on the 18th tee — found the water and made double bogey to fall back. He ended up tied for third at 18-under alongside Lucas Glover, who tied for third alongside him after leading through the first three rounds himself. Gotterup, who beat him by two strokes, picked up his third win of the season.
That result was worth $466,400 and it’s his first podium finish since he won the 2023 3M Open. More importantly for his season, it added 145 FedExCup points at a moment he badly needed them — after finishing 101st in the FedExCup last year, he’d opened 2026 on conditional status, and this single week gives him a real shot at climbing back inside the top 125 for a full card in 2027.
Before the final round, Hodges told reporters, “Tomorrow will be a little more fun.” He wasn’t wrong about the fun part, even if the trophy got away from him.
Is Lee Hodges Playing Golf This Weekend?
Yes. He’s in the field this week at the ISCO Championship, July 9–12 at Hurstbourne Country Club in Louisville, Kentucky. It’s an alternate-field FedExCup event that goes head-to-head against the Genesis Scottish Open, and it’s the same tournament — under its old Barbasol Championship name — where several past winners have used a T-3 finish the week before as a springboard.
Hurstbourne isn’t a birdiefest course. Last year’s winning score was just 10-under, more than a shot-per-round tougher than this event’s historical average, so anyone expecting him to go low the way he did at TPC Deere Run should adjust expectations. Tree-lined fairways and a demanding back nine reward precision over the raw speed that carried him through Illinois.
From Ardmore to the PGA Tour: Hodges’ PGA Tour Background
Hodges was born in Huntsville, Alabama, but grew up in Ardmore — a town split so evenly by the state line that Main Street doubles as the Alabama-Tennessee border. He won the Alabama 4A individual state title as a senior at Ardmore High School in 2014, then split his college career between two SEC-country programs: two years at UAB, where he was Conference USA’s Freshman of the Year, then a transfer to Alabama for his final two seasons. He made All-SEC first team alongside teammate Davis Riley as the Crimson Tide finished runner-up at the 2018 NCAA Championship.

Turning pro in 2018 meant grinding through PGA Tour Canada and the Korn Ferry Tour for two full years before he broke through. A win at the 2020 WinCo Foods Portland Open got him to the big tour for the 2021-22 season, and he needed three more years of PGA Tour starts before his breakthrough: the 2023 3M Open, where he led wire-to-wire and won by seven shots at 24-under par. “This has been a dream week,” he said afterward — and for a guy who’d made just 20 of 24 cuts to that point, it genuinely was.
Lee Hodges Net Worth 2026

I’m not going to hand you a made-up net worth figure, because nobody outside his camp has published one and most of the numbers floating around online are just guesses, not facts. What’s actually verifiable: through mid-2026, he has earned north of $9.9 million in official PGA Tour prize money across his career. One check did most of the heavy lifting — the $1.404 million 3M Open payday — and he’s added to it with this year’s T-3 at the John Deere Classic and a long string of top-25 finishes.
Endorsement income sits on top of that, but Titleist doesn’t publish player contract values, and neither does anyone else. If a site quotes you an exact “net worth” number for him down to the dollar, be skeptical of it — that figure isn’t coming from anywhere official.
Lee Hodges Wife: Meet Savannah Hodges

Hodges married his high school sweetheart, Savannah, on June 19, 2021, after nine years together. She’s worked as a real estate agent since 2019 and holds an MBA from the University of Alabama. The two don’t have children yet, and Savannah travels to most events with him — she was there in Blaine, Minnesota when he won the 3M Open, and by his own account she’s planning to caddie in the Par-3 Contest whenever his Masters invitation comes back around.
Does Hodges Own a Golf Course?
Yes — and this is one spot where the existing information online actively contradicts itself. Some lower-quality golf blogs claim he doesn’t own a course at all. That’s wrong. According to his own PGA Tour and PGA Championship bios, he became a co-owner of Canebrake Club in Athens, Alabama in August 2024 — the same course where he grew up playing and won the club championship at age 14, back in 2012.
Buying into the course that actually made you as a player, instead of some generic real estate deal, is exactly the kind of investment more Tour pros should be making with their FedExCup checks. It’s a small, private club — not a resort or a tournament venue — but it’s the one piece of “what he actually owns” that’s both true and genuinely well-sourced, unlike some of what’s currently ranking on this question.
Lee Hodges WITB: What’s In His Bag

Hodges plays a Titleist-heavy bag with one notable outlier. Here’s the most recent setup GolfWRX has documented:
| Club | Model | Loft |
|---|---|---|
| Driver | Titleist TSR2 | 8° |
| 3-wood | Titleist TSR3 | 15° |
| Hybrid | Callaway Apex UW | 21° |
| Irons (3) | Titleist T200 | — |
| Irons (4-6) | Titleist T100 | — |
| Irons (7-9) | Titleist 620 CB | — |
| Wedges | Titleist Vokey SM10 | 46°, 52°, 56° |
| Wedge | Vokey WedgeWorks | 60° |
| Putter | Scotty Cameron GOLO 6.5 prototype | — |
The Callaway hybrid is the one club that breaks the all-Titleist pattern, and it’s stayed in the bag for multiple seasons now — a sign he’s not chasing every new release the way some Tour pros do. If you’re curious how those lofts compare to an amateur bag, an 8-degree driver and a 21-degree hybrid are both stronger lofts than most weekend players should ever put in play; Tour swing speed changes the math entirely.
Frequently Asked Questions
What golf course does Lee Hodges own?
Hodges became a co-owner of Canebrake Club in Athens, Alabama in August 2024 — the private club where he grew up playing and won his first club championship at age 14.
Who is Lee Hodges’ wife?
Savannah Hodges, his high school sweetheart. They married on June 19, 2021, after nine years together. She’s a real estate agent with an MBA from the University of Alabama.
What is Lee Hodges known for?
His wire-to-wire, seven-shot win at the 2023 3M Open, and — as of this month — nearly winning the 2026 John Deere Classic after co-leading through 54 holes before finishing T-3.
Which golfer’s wife was crushed by a car?
This one isn’t about Hodges — it’s a different, well-known story from golf’s past. Stuart Appleby’s first wife, Renay, died in a 1998 accident in London. Appleby has spoken publicly about that loss several times over the years, including in a PGA Tour retrospective. If you landed here searching that question, you’re likely thinking of Appleby, not him.
The Bottom Line
Hodges spent most of the last few years as a name you’d only recognize from a FedExCup standings page, and last weekend changed that overnight. Whether the ISCO Championship turns into a second act or a quiet follow-up week, the FedExCup math already looks a lot better for him than it did two weeks ago. For more on the players he was chasing at TPC Deere Run, check out our breakdown of Lucas Glover’s 2026 season.
