Who Is Ludvig Åberg? Everything to Know About the Leader at TPC Sawgrass
If you're watching the leaderboard at TPC Sawgrass this week and wondering who the 26-year-old Swede at the top of it is, here's everything you need to know.
Ludvig Åberg was born on October 31, 1999, in Eslöv, a small town in southern Sweden with a population of roughly 20,000. His father Johan, who sells parts for construction vehicles, was the family's resident golf obsessive and introduced his son to the game at age eight at the local Eslöv Golf Club — a course he still returns to every time he's back home. His mother Mia, a paralegal, spotted something more serious early on: while other kids at junior clinics were goofing off, Ludvig was locked in, frustrated that his peers weren't trying to improve.
Venturing Into Golf
Golf wasn't even his first sport. Åberg played soccer through his early teens as a central midfielder — a position he loved for the sense of control it gave him — before switching his focus entirely to golf at 13.
In 2019 he moved to Lubbock, Texas, on an athletic scholarship to Texas Tech University after being recruited by coach Greg Sands, who traveled to Europe specifically to watch him play. What followed was one of the most dominant college golf careers in recent memory. Åberg won a program-record eight times, became the first player to win back-to-back Big 12 Conference Championship titles, and finished No. 1 on the PGA Tour University Ranking, making him the first player ever to earn direct PGA Tour access through collegiate merit. He also won back-to-back Ben Hogan Awards, joining Jon Rahm as the only players to ever accomplish that feat.
Becoming a Pro Golfer
He turned professional in June 2023 and wasted no time. Just 75 days later he won his first professional title at the Omega European Masters in Switzerland, birdieing four of the last five holes to win by two. By November he had added his first PGA Tour title at the RSM Classic, shooting back-to-back 61s on the weekend to win by four, tying Justin Thomas's PGA Tour scoring record of 253 in the process.
His Ryder Cup debut that same year is already the stuff of legend. Selected as a wildcard by European captain Luke Donald — making him the first player in Ryder Cup history to debut without ever having played in a major — Åberg paired with Viktor Hovland to dismantle world number one Scottie Scheffler and Brooks Koepka 9&7, the widest margin of victory in Ryder Cup history. Europe won, and Åberg was one of its brightest stars.
Åberg also lives in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, which makes TPC Sawgrass essentially his home course. Winning here this week wouldn't just be a career milestone. It would be a hometown victory.

