The players of the DeMartini Tour. One Major. Two Minors. Click any name to expand the card.
Two Santa Cruz Invitational wins and the pedigree to match. The most decorated Major player on Tour and a perennial favorite when the stakes are highest.
Two Major wins at Santa Cruz. Plays his best when the Pacific wind picks up. Shares the Tour's Major record and looks built to add to it.
One Santa Cruz Invitational title to his name. Has shown he can close on the biggest day of the season — and will be looking to double up.
One Santa Cruz title to his name. Steady when it counts, and never out of the Major conversation on Sunday.
One Santa Cruz Invitational title to his name. The first of the Legge contingent to lift the Major Cup — and likely not the last.
A Santa Cruz Major winner in his own right. Proof that the Legge name belongs on the Major Cup more than once.
Rounds out the Legge trio of Major winners. A Santa Cruz champion whose calm around the greens has already decided one Major.
One Santa Cruz Invitational win to his name. A big-moment player whose Major pedigree speaks for itself.
A Santa Cruz Invitational winner. Plays a low-ego, high-precision brand of golf that tends to show up on the weekend when it matters most.
Owns a Montclair Classic title. Knows the East Bay layout as well as anyone and is the player to beat whenever the Tour rolls through the hills.
Owns a Montclair Classic title from a prior season — a Minor win earned in the limited-club par-3 format where precision and touch matter most.
The high-water mark of the Amara camp so far — a runner-up finish that puts him a single good Sunday away from his first Tour trophy.
A runner-up finish and the kind of ball-striking that keeps him in the final group more often than not. The first Tour trophy feels like a matter of time.
A career-best third-place finish and a game built for the pressure of Sunday. The trophy has been close — and he knows it.
A third-place finish that proves he belongs in any final group. The Amara trio has real Tour firepower, and Andy is a big part of why.
A career-best fourth-place finish and a swing that travels well. Still hunting the first Tour win but firmly in the contender conversation.
Still chasing his first Tour win. A career-best fifth-place finish suggests the breakthrough is closer than the trophy cabinet lets on.
A sixth-place finish on Tour and the kind of quiet game that sneaks up on a leaderboard. Low-fuss, high-consistency — classic dark-horse material.
A reliable presence in the field. No wins yet, but quietly building a record of solid rounds across all three events.
Chasing his first trophy on Tour. Known for steady tee-to-green play — the breakthrough win feels overdue.
Part of the Collins contingent on Tour. Still looking for his first win, but always a factor when the brothers square off.
Rounds out the Collins trio. Hunting his first Tour victory and one of the players most likely to produce a breakout in 2026.
The third DeMartini in the field. No wins yet, but a persistent threat to spoil a brother's day and capture his own first title.
Bios and best-finish figures are lightly editorialized — swap in the real numbers whenever you're ready. Use the search box to filter by name, role, or tag.