Jon Rahm
Jon Rahm Rodríguez (born 10 November 1994) is a Spanish professional golfer competing on the LIV Golf league.[1][2]
Rahm turned professional in 2016 following a distinguished amateur career at Arizona State University, where he achieved the world amateur number one ranking.[3][4] He secured his first major championship at the 2021 U.S. Open and added the 2023 Masters Tournament to his resume, establishing himself as one of Spain's premier golfers in the modern era.[5][6] Prior to departing the PGA Tour, Rahm amassed multiple victories, including reaching the Official World Golf Ranking number one position for an extended period.[7][8] In December 2023, Rahm signed a multi-year contract with LIV Golf reportedly valued at over $300 million, marking a significant shift from the PGA Tour amid the league's expansion.[9][10] This move has impacted his OWGR standing, dropping him outside the top 50 by early 2025 due to the circuit's events not contributing points to the ranking system.[8][11] Despite this, Rahm has excelled in LIV Golf, capturing the 2025 individual season championship in August after a playoff victory in Indianapolis and leading his team to the season-ending title.[12][13] His professional record includes 22 wins across various tours, underscoring his prowess in high-stakes competition.[14]
Early life and background
Childhood and family influences
Jon Rahm was born on November 10, 1994, in Barrika, a small coastal town in the Basque Country province of Biscay, Spain.[15][2] Raised in a middle-class family with strong Basque roots—his father hailing from the region and his mother from Madrid—Rahm grew up immersed in the cultural and linguistic environment of the Basque people, becoming fluent in Spanish, English, and Basque. His parents, Edorta Rahm, a local businessman, and Angela Rodríguez, actively supported Rahm's involvement in various sports during his early years, reflecting a family emphasis on physical activity and competition.[16][15] Before prioritizing golf, Rahm participated in soccer, canoeing, jai alai—a traditional Basque handball sport—and even kung fu, experiences that honed his athleticism and competitive drive.[2] Edorta, who had no prior exposure to golf until witnessing the 1997 Ryder Cup in Spain featuring icon Seve Ballesteros, played a key role in introducing the sport to the family, fostering an environment where Rahm's interests could develop organically.[17] Rahm's initial encounters with golf occurred around age seven, when he and his older brother Eriz began playing at the nearby Club Deportivo Martiartu in Erandio, Biscay.[18] Inspired by Spanish golf legends like Ballesteros, whose success elevated the sport's visibility in Spain, Rahm quickly took to the game, developing an early natural swing through casual play and family outings.[17] By around age 10, he was competing in local junior events at the club, building foundational skills in a setting that emphasized grassroots participation over formal coaching initially.[19] This period marked the transition from multi-sport versatility to a budding focus on golf, supported by parental encouragement without early specialization pressures.[20]Introduction to golf and early training
Jon Rahm first concentrated on golf at age 13, shifting from soccer where he had shown promise as a goalkeeper for Athletic Bilbao's youth teams.[21] His mother, Angela, played a pivotal role by persuading local PGA professional Eduardo Celles to coach her son, leading to enrollment at Celles' academy near Bilbao in Derio.[15] There, Rahm honed his technique through intensive sessions focused on swing fundamentals, including adjustments to favor controlled fades over erratic hooks, fostering a mindset rooted in repetitive, purposeful drills rather than innate talent alone.[22] Celles noted Rahm's exceptional drive, attributing early progress to self-imposed practice routines amid the Basque region's emphasis on resilience and diligence.[23] Access to affordable public courses in the Bilbao area enabled frequent play without elite private facilities, while family dynamics stressed consistent effort over rushed specialization, helping Rahm build stamina without the early fatigue seen in some young athletes.[24] His father's adoption of the sport, inspired by Seve Ballesteros, further reinforced household commitment to discipline.[21] This foundational phase yielded rapid skill gains, culminating in representation of Spain at European junior team events by age 15.[25] Rahm's early wins, such as the Spanish Junior Championship that year, stemmed from these habits rather than prodigious gifts, highlighting causal links between structured repetition and technical proficiency.[25]Amateur career
Junior and national achievements
Rahm won the Spanish Junior Championship in 2010, defeating the field by six strokes and establishing himself as a dominant force in national junior golf.[26] He also claimed the Spanish Boys 18 Championship that year, further solidifying his prowess in age-group competitions within Spain.[27] In 2011, Rahm secured additional national titles, including the Copa Baleares and Campeonato de Madrid, demonstrating consistent excellence in stroke play and match formats against top domestic juniors.[26] On the international stage, Rahm represented Spain in the 2011 European Boys' Team Championship, contributing key scores of 71 and 67 over two rounds to help secure the team's victory over Austria in the final.[28][29] His individual performance tied for fifth place, highlighting his ability to perform under team pressure in a field featuring emerging European talents.[29] These triumphs marked Spain's first win in the event since 1990, underscoring Rahm's role in elevating the nation's junior standing.[5] Through these repeated high-pressure engagements—from national championships requiring sustained low scoring to team events demanding adaptability—Rahm developed resilience via direct exposure to competitive variance, where execution under fatigue and scrutiny directly correlated with outcomes. This foundational repetition in junior circuits laid the groundwork for handling escalating stakes, as evidenced by his swift ascent into the top tiers of the World Amateur Golf Ranking by age 17.[30] Consistent top finishes, despite isolated instances of visible frustration during losses, affirmed the net positive impact of his aggressive style, prioritizing recovery and precision over temperament.[31]Collegiate success at Arizona State
Rahm enrolled at Arizona State University in the fall of 2013 on a golf scholarship offered by then-head coach Tim Mickelson, who was swayed by the Spaniard's amateur performances despite not having scouted him in person.[32] This decision marked a departure from the more common European pathway of turning professional directly after junior success, instead leveraging the U.S. collegiate system—which emphasizes high-stakes match play, team dynamics, and consistent scoring under pressure—to hone Rahm's competitive edge against established college talents.[30] Over four seasons, Rahm amassed 11 individual collegiate victories, second only to Phil Mickelson's 16 in Sun Devils history, while posting career scoring averages below 70 strokes per round, including a program-record 69.15 in 2014–15 that ranked third in NCAA annals at the time.[33][34] As a freshman in 2013–14, Rahm quickly adapted, earning second-team All-Pac-12 honors and posting the lowest freshman scoring average (71.37) in ASU history, highlighted by a 21-under-par victory at the March 2014 ASU Thunderbird Invitational.[35] His sophomore year elevated his profile, with first-team All-America recognition and an honorable mention All-Pac-12 selection, as he contributed to team successes in Pac-12 and NCAA regionals while refining his game under Mickelson's guidance, which prioritized course management over raw power—a shift from his earlier aggressive European-style play.[36] By his junior season in 2014–15, Rahm dominated with four individual titles, a nation-leading birdie count, and a scoring average that underscored the collegiate format's role in building resilience; he finished tied for 22nd at the 2015 NCAA Championships, aiding ASU's regional qualification but falling short of individual glory amid intense competition.[34][37] Rahm's senior year in 2015–16 cemented his legacy, as he captured the Pac-12 individual championship in May 2016 with a 16-under 272, the Sun Devils' first such title in 16 years, while leading the nation in scoring average (69.41), par-4 scoring (3.93), and birdies (171).[38][39] These feats earned him first-team All-America honors for the second time and repeat wins of the Ben Hogan Award in 2015 and 2016—the first back-to-back recipient honoring the top collegiate player—validating the U.S. system's efficacy in transitioning European talents like Rahm to elite status, evidenced by his sub-70 consistency across 165 rounds (including 39 eagles) versus peers on direct pro circuits who often lacked equivalent volume under scrutiny.[40][34] While praised for this dominance, Rahm's intensity occasionally drew scrutiny for rules adherence, as in a pre-college amateur event where he self-disqualified for a scorecard error, a trait that underscored his integrity but highlighted the learning curve in strict U.S. governance absent in some European setups.[41]Professional career
2016: Debut and initial victories
Rahm turned professional on June 20, 2016, immediately following his performance as low amateur at the U.S. Open, where he tied for 23rd place.[42] His professional debut came days later at the Quicken Loans National, where he shot a 7-under-par 64 in the opening round to take the lead before finishing tied for third.[43] This strong start demonstrated continuity from his amateur momentum, including multiple top-10 finishes in PGA Tour events earlier that year while still eligible as a collegian.[30] In just four professional starts during the summer, Rahm accumulated sufficient FedEx Cup points to secure special temporary membership on the PGA Tour, granting unlimited sponsor exemptions and positioning him to earn full 2016-17 playing status through the non-member points list.[44] Key results included a tied second at the RBC Canadian Open, which propelled his points total ahead of the No. 150 qualifier threshold.[45] He competed in nine PGA Tour events overall that year, making the cut in eight and posting four top-10 finishes, which translated to official earnings of $983,000 despite the abbreviated schedule post-NCAA season.[46] Rahm also gained footing on the European Tour, qualifying for select events via past amateur credentials and sponsor invitations, though without recording a victory. By year's end, these performances elevated him to No. 137 in the Official World Golf Ranking, a marked rise from unranked amateur status and signaling his rapid professional acclimation driven by consistent ball-striking and power honed at Arizona State.[47] No notable off-course issues emerged, allowing focus on building toward a full rookie campaign.2017–2020: Rise on PGA and European Tours
Rahm continued his ascent on both the PGA Tour and European Tour following his professional debut, securing multiple victories that underscored his consistency and power-driven style. In 2017, he claimed his first PGA Tour title at the Farmers Insurance Open on February 5, defeating Tony Finau in a sudden-death playoff after both finished at 15-under-par. That year, Rahm also triumphed on the European Tour, winning the Irish Open by six strokes with a tournament-record 24-under-par total at Portstewart Golf Club on July 9, alongside victories at the Dubai Desert Classic and Open de España. These successes contributed to his strong FedEx Cup standing, finishing 24th in the 2017 season points.[48] By 2018, Rahm added the Memorial Tournament to his PGA Tour resume on June 3, edging out Tommy Fleetwood by three strokes at Muirfield Village Golf Club, a win that highlighted his driving distance averaging over 300 yards and ball-striking precision. His dual-tour schedule, involving rigorous travel between continents, began to reveal strains on recovery, with analysts noting how the compressed calendar exacerbated fatigue in high-volume players reliant on physical power rather than finesse.[49] Despite occasional critiques of putting inconsistencies—where he ranked outside the top 50 in strokes gained putting some seasons—Rahm's off-course training regimen, emphasizing strength and conditioning, aided resilience.[50] He maintained high FedEx Cup contention, building toward elite status. The period culminated in 2019–2020 with further dominance, including European Tour wins at the Irish Open (July 7, 2019, via a final-round 62 for a two-stroke margin) and DP World Tour Championship (November 24, 2019, by two shots).[51] [52] On the PGA Tour, Rahm amassed three victories in 2020 alone—the Memorial Tournament (July 19, by three strokes, ascending him to world No. 1), BMW Championship, and WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational—totaling five PGA wins in the era and securing second place in FedEx Cup points with 3,080 for the 2019–20 season.[53] [54] His power game earned praise for overwhelming par-5 scoring, though putting lapses occasionally hindered closing out tournaments under pressure.[55] This phase solidified Rahm's reputation as a top-tier competitor, blending raw athleticism with improving short-game adaptation amid demanding itineraries.2021–2023: Major championships and peak performance
Rahm secured his first major championship victory at the 2021 U.S. Open held at Torrey Pines Golf Course in San Diego, California, finishing at 6-under-par 278 to win by one stroke over Louis Oosthuizen.[56][57] Entering the final round three shots behind, Rahm carded a 4-under 67, highlighted by birdies on the 17th and 18th holes from 25 feet and 18 feet, respectively, marking Spain's first U.S. Open title.[58][59] This triumph, achieved shortly after recovering from a COVID-19 infection that forced his withdrawal from the Memorial Tournament, underscored his mental fortitude under pressure.[56] In recognition of his 2021 performance, including the U.S. Open win and consistent top finishes, Rahm was named the PGA of America Player of the Year, becoming the first Spaniard to receive the award since its inception in 1948.[60][61] He also earned the European Tour's Seve Ballesteros Award as Player of the Year, voted by peers, after spending significant time at world No. 1.[62] Rahm's peak form continued into 2023, where he won four PGA Tour events prior to the Masters: the Sentry Tournament of Champions in January, the American Express in February, and the Genesis Invitational in February.[13][63] At the Masters Tournament in April, he claimed his second major by four strokes over Brooks Koepka and Phil Mickelson, finishing with a final-round 69 despite trailing by two entering the day.[64][65] This victory elevated him to world No. 1 and highlighted his ability to overcome early setbacks, such as a four-putt double bogey in the opening round, through resilient scoring with multiple birdies and an eagle.[66][67] While known for occasional emotional displays of frustration on course, Rahm's major successes demonstrated superior composure in high-stakes scenarios compared to regular tournaments.[13]2023–2025: Shift to LIV Golf and recent results
In December 2023, Jon Rahm joined LIV Golf, signing a multi-year contract reported to be worth over $300 million.[46][68] During the 2024 LIV Golf season, Rahm won the individual championship, clinching the title with a victory at LIV Golf Chicago where he posted a bogey-free 4-under 66 in the final round to edge out Joaquin Niemann.[69][70] As captain of Legion XIII, he contributed to multiple team podium finishes, including strong showings that supported the team's competitive positioning.[13] In 2025, Rahm secured the LIV individual season-long championship for the second consecutive year without winning any individual events, finishing with 10 top-10 results across 12 tournaments and earning over $33 million in prize money.[71][13] He achieved this by carding an 11-under-par 60—his career best—in the final round at LIV Golf Indianapolis on August 17, tying for second individually but surpassing points leader Joaquin Niemann in the standings.[72][73] Legion XIII won the team title at LIV Golf UK, where Rahm finished T5 individually with consistent scoring.[74][71] Rahm maintained eligibility in majors and select DP World Tour events, recording top-10 finishes including T7 at the 2024 U.S. Open and Open Championship, T8 at the 2025 PGA Championship, and T7 at the 2025 U.S. Open.[6] On the DP World Tour, he played the minimum required events, finishing T9 at the October 2025 Open de España at 10-under par.[75] After that event, Rahm announced an extended break until the next LIV tournament, following a season with irregular scheduling intervals between competitive outings.[76]LIV Golf transition and debates
Motivations for joining LIV Golf
Jon Rahm announced his departure from the PGA Tour to join LIV Golf on December 7, 2023, citing primary motivations centered on long-term financial security for his family and a perceived better career path amid evolving professional opportunities.[77] In interviews, Rahm emphasized that the decision was "for me and my family," highlighting the substantial guaranteed compensation—reportedly exceeding $300 million over multiple years—as a means to ensure generational stability rather than personal extravagance, noting he could already "retire right now with what I've made and live a very happy life."[78] He contrasted this with the PGA Tour's structure, where earnings depend heavily on performance amid a grueling schedule, stating succinctly that joining LIV allowed him to "get paid more to play the same sport and have more time."[79] Rahm's leverage was heightened by his victory at the 2023 Masters Tournament on April 9, 2023, which granted him lifetime exemptions into majors independent of tour status, reducing risks associated with PGA Tour membership volatility such as potential suspension or points list disruptions following his defection.[80] This win positioned him as a top asset for LIV, enabling negotiations for a deal that proponents frame as a free-market response to the PGA Tour's limited player revenue share—estimated at around 20-25% of total tour income—versus LIV's model of direct, high-value contracts and a claimed higher effective payout structure for elite players.[81] Critics, however, viewed the move as prioritizing immediate financial gain over golf's traditions, with Rahm acknowledging the emotional trade-offs but defending it as a rational choice for family duty when confronted with "a large amount of money."[82] Unlike earlier defectors such as Phil Mickelson, whose criticisms of PGA Tour leadership were more public and adversarial, Rahm focused on pragmatic stability, expressing no regret over short-term backlash like Ryder Cup ineligibility while underscoring the deal's role in amplifying his career earnings beyond $500 million cumulatively.[77] This player-centric rationale aligns with broader LIV appeals of reduced travel demands and team formats, though Rahm maintained that majors remained his competitive priority, leveraging his pre-LIV achievements to mitigate access concerns stemming from the PGA Tour's historical control over major qualifications.[83]Achievements and team leadership
As captain of Legion XIII, Jon Rahm led the team to the 2025 LIV Golf Team Championship victory in Michigan, defeating Crushers GC in a playoff after both teams finished at 20-under par.[84] Legion XIII demonstrated dominance throughout the 2025 season, securing multiple team event wins and topping the regular-season standings, with Rahm contributing top scores in 11 of 13 starts.[85] In 2024, the team also achieved strong collective results, including podium finishes that positioned them competitively for the championship format.[86] Individually, Rahm captured the LIV Golf season-long Individual Championship in both 2024 and 2025, earning $18 million in bonuses each year despite forgoing tournament wins in the latter season's regular events.[87] His 2025 performance featured consistent top finishes, including a runner-up at the Indianapolis event sealed by an 11-under 60 in the final round at Chatham Hills, with no missed cuts across the schedule barring a single withdrawal.[72] This reliability underscored his adaptation to LIV's structure, where shotgun starts—launching all 18 teams simultaneously from different holes—enable uniform playing conditions and facilitate recovery from early setbacks without traditional sequential tee times.[88] The absence of cuts in LIV's 54-hole events ensures full participation, minimizing the fatigue from PGA Tour-style eliminations and allowing sustained play that aligns with Rahm's power-based style, as evidenced by his sub-60 scoring without the pressure of mid-tournament attrition.[88] LIV's condensed schedule of 14 regular events, compared to the PGA Tour's denser calendar, empirically correlates with reduced physical strain; Rahm maintained peak form without the injury accumulation seen in prior high-volume seasons, supporting causal claims that guaranteed appearances lower overexertion risks.[89] These elements have elevated his earnings—exceeding $36 million in individual bonuses alone—while global venues like Riyadh and Adelaide expand competitive exposure, countering visibility critiques with data of unbroken elite performance metrics.[46]Criticisms, defenses, and industry impacts
Rahm's decision to join LIV Golf in December 2023, reportedly on a contract exceeding $500 million, drew sharp criticism for aligning with the Saudi Public Investment Fund's (PIF) backing, amid longstanding allegations of sportswashing to deflect from the kingdom's human rights record, including the 2018 killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi. PGA Tour loyalists portrayed the move as a betrayal, particularly given Rahm's prior vocal opposition to LIV's 54-hole, no-cut format and shotgun starts, which he had deemed unappealing and insufficiently serious for elite competition.[90] Analysts like Brandel Chamblee accused Rahm of overestimating his influence and engaging in self-delusion about LIV's viability.[91] Some attributed his subpar major results in 2024—such as missing cuts at the Masters and PGA Championship—to diminished preparation from LIV's lighter schedule, though Rahm countered in May 2025 that swing deficiencies, not league play, caused the slump, pointing to subsequent top-10 finishes as evidence against such causation.[92] In defense, Rahm emphasized practical benefits, stating the switch allowed higher pay for the same sport, more family time, and eventual appreciation for LIV's innovative, team-oriented product after his 2023 Masters victory secured leverage for the deal.[79] He rejected regrets in August 2024, affirming zero validity to return rumors and highlighting player autonomy in negotiating amid PGA Tour restrictions later challenged in antitrust litigation by the U.S. Department of Justice, which scrutinized the tour's exclusionary policies as monopolistic.[93] Defenders noted hypocrisy in PGA criticisms, given the tour's historical ties to China-linked entities, including a 2018 20-year deal with state-connected Shankai Sports for PGA Tour Series-China and undisclosed financing from Yao Capital, which raised similar sportswashing concerns without comparable backlash.[94] The defection accelerated industry fractures, prompting intensified PGA-LIV negotiations toward a framework agreement by June 2023, while exposing economic incentives' primacy: over a dozen top-100 players, including Phil Mickelson's predicted "exodus," prioritized guaranteed purses exceeding PGA earnings, with LIV's $18 million individual bonuses underscoring financial realism over collective loyalty.[95] DP World Tour responses included multimillion-euro fines and suspensions for unauthorized LIV participation—totaling £8-10 million outstanding by mid-2025—forcing players like Sergio Garcia into legal defeats and prompting LIV to halt fine reimbursements after 2025, risking membership losses and Ryder Cup eligibility.[96] Rahm's stance, refusing payment and appealing sanctions, exemplified individual choice prevailing against institutional controls, with empirical shifts validating market-driven autonomy over ideological cohesion.[97]Playing style and technical analysis
Strengths in power and precision
Jon Rahm demonstrates exceptional power off the tee, consistently averaging over 320 yards in driving distance across both PGA Tour and LIV Golf events. In the 2022-23 PGA Tour season, he ranked among the leaders in total driving, combining distance with fairway accuracy.[98] On LIV Golf, where he competes since 2023, Rahm posted an average driving distance of 323.3 yards in recent seasons, placing him sixth overall and well above the professional tour averages of approximately 300 yards.[13] [99] This power stems from his athletic 6-foot-2 frame and explosive swing speed, honed through competitive sports background including Basque regional activities and multi-disciplinary training.[100] Rahm's precision complements his distance, evidenced by strong fairway hit percentages and elite ball-striking metrics. He maintains accuracy rates around 60% on fairways hit in LIV Golf, balancing power without excessive deviation.[101] His strokes gained off the tee frequently exceed +1.0 per round, as seen in seasons where he led the PGA Tour in this category, gaining 1.31 strokes per round in 2022.[102] This biomechanical efficiency allows him to generate high clubhead speeds while controlling dispersion, a trait attributable to his physical conditioning developed during collegiate play at Arizona State University, where he amassed 11 victories.[35] In approach play, Rahm excels with precise iron shots, leading LIV Golf in greens in regulation percentage at 74.86% across multiple events.[103] His strokes gained on approach often surpass +1.0, contributing to overall ball-striking gains exceeding +1.5 per round in peak performances, such as during his 2023 Masters victory.[104] These metrics reflect targeted proximity control, particularly from mid-to-long irons, sustained post his 2023 transition to LIV Golf without diminution from prior PGA peaks.[105] Rahm's Basque heritage, noted for fostering resilient athleticism, alongside ASU's rigorous training regimen, underpins this sustained power-precision profile.[106]Temperament, weaknesses, and evolution
Jon Rahm exhibits a temperament characterized by intense passion and competitiveness, often resulting in visible emotional displays during rounds. In the 2017 U.S. Open, after shooting 73 to miss the cut at five-over par, Rahm unleashed a notable outburst, later explaining that such expressions of anger are beneficial for channeling frustration and refocusing.[107] This fiery approach persisted into 2025, as seen at The Open Championship where he confronted a spectator for whistling during his backswing on the 10th hole amid gusty conditions, and repeatedly struck his club into the turf after a poor approach.[108][109] Similarly, at the July 2025 LIV Golf UK event, Rahm booted a microphone in frustration after a wild drive, prompting fan backlash for "childish" and "ridiculous" conduct despite his consistent individual finishes.[110][111] These moments underscore a mental intensity tied to elite performance rather than erratic instability, with Rahm's outbursts frequently preceding birdies or recoveries in competitive play.[107] A key weakness in Rahm's game involves putting inconsistency, particularly under pressure, where emotional variability contributes to higher bogey rates on fast greens. During the 2021/2022 PGA Tour season, he ranked 72nd in total putting, 151st in one-putt percentage, and 115th in putts per round, with only limited success inside 10 feet in majors.[112] This susceptibility has been evident in pressure scenarios, such as shortened swings due to prior ankle instability limiting full rotation and exacerbating green-reading errors.[113] Despite mechanical adjustments like grip changes to address putting slumps, the mental toll of high-stakes moments amplifies these lapses, contrasting his ball-striking dominance.[114] Rahm's evolution reflects growing maturity, accelerated by fatherhood after his son Kepa's birth on April 3, 2021, which shifted priorities toward better work-life balance and emotional restraint.[115] He has credited this phase with quelling temperamental excesses, noting that becoming a parent forced routine adaptations and reduced criticism-driven reactions, enhancing focus as both a golfer and family man.[116][117] Following his 2023 Masters victory, this development manifested in fewer on-course penalties—contrasting earlier incidents like the 2020 Memorial two-stroke assessment for a moved ball—and sustained intensity without derailment, as evidenced by consistent LIV Golf top finishes amid 2025 frustrations.[118][119] Media portrayals often amplify the "hothead" narrative around such displays, yet Rahm's major wins align with this controlled fervor, prioritizing empirical success over subdued demeanor.[107]Personal life
Family and marriage
Jon Rahm met his wife, Kelley Cahill, at a Halloween party during their freshman year at Arizona State University in 2013.[120][121] The couple dated for several years before becoming engaged in June 2018 and marrying on December 13, 2019, in a Catholic ceremony at the Basilica of Begoña in Bilbao, Spain, the church Rahm attended as a child near his Basque hometown of Barrika.[122][123][124] They have three children: son Kepa Cahill Rahm, born on April 3, 2021; son Eneko Cahill Rahm, born on August 5, 2022; and daughter Alaia Cahill Rahm, born in late September 2024.[125][126][127] Rahm, raised in a Catholic household with deep Basque roots—his father from Bilbao and names reflecting Basque tradition—has maintained a stable family life free of public scandals, crediting Cahill's support for his emphasis on work-life balance.[128][100] Rahm has described his family as a primary motivation for joining LIV Golf in December 2023, citing the financial security it provides for long-term opportunities and stability amid the uncertainties of professional golf.[129][130] This familial priority extended to his decision in October 2025 to take an extended break from competition until the LIV Golf opener in February 2026, prioritizing time with Cahill and their children after a winless season.[76][131]Off-course interests and public statements
Rahm maintains strong ties to his Basque heritage, originating from Barrika near Bilbao in Spain's Basque Country, where cultural resilience and endurance are emphasized as shaping his personal and athletic mindset.[100][106] He has credited early exposure to diverse sports—including soccer, canoeing, paddle tennis, jai alai, and kung fu—cultivated in this environment, for building his physical foundation beyond golf.[17][132] In philanthropy, Rahm established the Jon Rahm Golf4Kids Foundation to support underprivileged children through golf-related initiatives and fundraising.[133] He has committed portions of tournament earnings to charity, such as donating $1,000 to $2,000 per birdie or eagle during the 2024 Andalucia Masters, directing proceeds to youth aid programs.[134] Additionally, he contributes to efforts like the Kisner Foundation, auctioning items to benefit children's causes.[135] Rahm's public statements often highlight player autonomy amid golf's circuit divisions, defending his December 2023 move to LIV Golf as prioritizing family financial security over format preferences he once critiqued, such as 54-hole events without cuts.[77][10] He has urged resolutions to the LIV-PGA Tour split, stating in April 2025 that players on both sides seek unification, though he spends little time speculating on mergers amid stalled negotiations.[136][137] In March 2025, he advised the PGA Tour to engage LIV more constructively, emphasizing equitable treatment for defectors.[138] Tensions with the DP World Tour escalated in 2025 over sanctions for unauthorized LIV participation, with Rahm facing fines and suspensions since early 2024; an appeal hearing loomed during events like the Ryder Cup.[139] His October 2025 Instagram activity, including posts after the Open de España, signaled frustration with European tour restrictions, hinting at potential rifts as he prioritized LIV commitments and confirmed his season's end.[140][141] Rahm positions these views as advocating player rights without political overtones, contrasting industry-wide sponsorship norms—including PGA Tour deals with oil states—against selective Saudi funding critiques of LIV.[142] This forthrightness earns praise for authenticity from supporters but criticism as divisive from traditional tour loyalists.[143]Competitive achievements
Professional wins by tour
Rahm recorded 10 non-major victories on the PGA Tour between 2017 and 2023, primarily through dominant performances in stroke-play formats featuring large fields and variable weather exposures.[7][144] His repeat successes at events like the Memorial Tournament and Farmers Insurance Open highlight adaptation to specific course demands, such as Muirfield Village's strategic length and Torrey Pines' coastal winds. These wins contributed to a high conversion rate from top-10 finishes, with empirical data showing over 20% of starts resulting in victories during peak years 2020–2023.[105]| No. | Date | Tournament | Margin of victory |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | June 4, 2017 | Memorial Tournament | Playoff |
| 2 | Jan 28, 2018 | Farmers Insurance Open | 3 strokes |
| 3 | Apr 7, 2019 | Zurich Classic of New Orleans (team) | 4 strokes |
| 4 | Jul 12, 2020 | Workday Charity Open | Playoff |
| 5 | Jul 19, 2020 | Memorial Tournament | 3 strokes |
| 6 | Jan 30, 2022 | Farmers Insurance Open | Playoff |
| 7 | May 1, 2022 | Mexico Open | 4 strokes |
| 8 | Jan 8, 2023 | Sentry Tournament of Champions | 2 strokes |
| 9 | Jan 22, 2023 | The American Express | 2 strokes |
| 10 | Feb 19, 2023 | Genesis Invitational | Playoff |
| No. | Date | Tournament | Margin of victory |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Jul 9, 2017 | Irish Open | 3 strokes |
| 2 | Nov 19, 2017 | DP World Tour Championship | 4 strokes |
| 3 | Apr 15, 2018 | Open de España | 6 strokes |
| 4 | Jul 14, 2019 | Scottish Open | 1 stroke |
| 5 | Sep 22, 2019 | Irish Open | 3 strokes |
| 6 | Nov 17, 2019 | DP World Tour Championship | 2 strokes |
| 7 | May 30, 2021 | Open de España | 2 strokes |
| 8 | Jul 11, 2021 | Irish Open | Playoff |
| 9 | Oct 16, 2022 | Open de España | 2 strokes |
| 10 | Nov 20, 2022 | DP World Tour Championship | 2 strokes |
Major championships
Jon Rahm secured his first major championship victory at the 2021 U.S. Open, held at Torrey Pines Golf Course in San Diego, California, from June 17–20. He completed the tournament at 6-under-par 278, edging out Louis Oosthuizen by one stroke after a final-round 67 that included two late birdies to hold off challengers.[56][146] This win marked the first U.S. Open title for a Spanish golfer and came shortly after Rahm's recovery from a COVID-19 diagnosis that forced him to withdraw from the Memorial Tournament.[57] His second major triumph occurred at the 2023 Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Georgia, from April 6–9. Rahm finished at 12-under-par 276, four strokes ahead of Brooks Koepka and Phil Mickelson, with a final-round 69 that overcame a third-round 73.[64][65] The victory elevated him to the world number one ranking and made him the fourth Spaniard to win the Green Jacket.[147] Across his major championship appearances since turning professional in 2016, Rahm has recorded two wins and eight additional top-five finishes, demonstrating consistent contention at golf's highest level.[6] Following his move to LIV Golf in December 2023, narratives emerged questioning his form due to a reduced PGA Tour schedule; however, empirical results refute a causal decline, as 2025 major performances included top-10 finishes at the PGA Championship (T8) and U.S. Open (T7), alongside T14 at the Masters and T34 at The Open, reflecting sustained elite capability with majors-specific focus unaffected by LIV commitments.[148][149]| Year | Masters Finish | PGA Championship Finish | U.S. Open Finish | The Open Championship Finish |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2016 | T39 | CUT | T23 | MC |
| 2017 | 4 | T79 | T3 | CUT |
| 2018 | T9 | T24 | CUT | T64 |
| 2019 | T9 | T32 | T2 | T69 |
| 2020 | T7 | T23 | WD | 2 |
| 2021 | T5 | T13 | 1 | T42 |
| 2022 | 27 | MC | T55 | CUT |
| 2023 | 1 | T45 | CUT | CUT |
| 2024 | T45 | CUT | WD (injury) | T7 |
| 2025 | T14 | T8 | T7 | T34 |
Other records and timelines
Rahm won the Players Championship in 2023, defeating Scottie Scheffler by four strokes at TPC Sawgrass, marking his first victory in the event billed as golf's "fifth major."[7] He recorded additional strong finishes, including a tie for fifth in 2021. In World Golf Championships events, Rahm set a course record of 61 during the third round of the 2020 WGC-Mexico Championship at Club de Golf Chapultepec, though he finished tied for third; his match-play record in the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play stands at 13-8-3 across multiple appearances.[150][151] In team competitions, Rahm represented Europe in four Ryder Cups (2018, 2021, 2023, 2025), contributing to victories in 2018 at Le Golf National and 2023 at Marco Simone Golf Club. His overall Ryder Cup record is 9 wins, 5 losses, and 3 halves across 17 matches, yielding 10.5 points, with an undefeated 6-0-0 mark in foursomes pairings.[152][153] For Spain, Rahm competed in the 2024 Paris Olympics men's golf event at Le Golf National, holding a four-shot lead entering the back nine of the final round before a collapse that left him outside the medals in a tie for seventh.[154] On the PGA Tour through 2023, Rahm amassed over $53 million in career earnings and recorded approximately 70 top-10 finishes in 150-plus starts.[155] Transitioning to LIV Golf in December 2023, he secured the individual season-long championship in 2024 and repeated in 2025 despite no event wins that year, earning an $18 million bonus; his team, Legion XIII, won the 2025 Team Championship in a playoff at Greenbrier.[13][156]| Year | Key Non-Major Record/Event |
|---|---|
| 2018 | Ryder Cup debut; Europe defeats USA 17.5-10.5[157] |
| 2020 | WGC-Mexico course record (61)[150] |
| 2023 | Players Championship victory; Ryder Cup win for Europe[7] |
| 2024 | LIV Golf individual season champion; Olympics T7[13] |
| 2025 | Repeat LIV individual champion (winless in events); Ryder Cup 3-2-0 record; Legion XIII Team Championship win[13][157] |