KAPALUA, Hawaii — The cream-colored envelope arrived at the Puerto Rico home of Rafael Campos on Dec. 23, and there was no mistaking who it was from — Augusta National — or what it contained. That's why he waited a few days to open it and find his invitation to the Masters.
''I wanted that to be my Christmas present,'' Campos said. ''And it was surreal. Just trying to understand, ‘This is really happening, right?' And it was so cool.''
Six weeks after the 36-year-old Campos delivered one of those feel-good moments in golf by winning the Bermuda Championship, he still has a hard time fathoming what happened.
He feared he would have to miss the Bermuda Championship because his wife was due with their first child. He brought their daughter home and arrived in Bermuda some two hours before his tee time. And then he won.
No wonder he can't stop smiling.
''At least one night of the week for the last month-and-a-half, my wife have made a statement like, ‘It really happened,''' Campos said.
But for how much longer?
The PGA Tour has a long history of such moments, and they might happen a lot less often under the new structure for 2026. Only the top 100 players — down from 125 — keep full cards. Field sizes are shrinking. Monday qualifying spots are being reduced. This is more cut throat.