Chris Tank is the most decorated active player in the league. Three Green Jackets. Three Match Play titles. Six championship trophies on the mantel and counting — more hardware than anyone else in the ETGL's modern era. He has won in 2010, 2014, 2018, 2023, and twice in 2023–2025 in net. If a 30-year tribute book gets written, he gets a chapter, and so do the people who finished second to him.
At Maplewood in April, he matched Jon Hayenga at 70 for co-net honors and immediately moved into striking range of his fourth Green Jacket. Asked about it afterwards, he reportedly said something about par being a perfectly good score. Multiple witnesses confirm he was already calculating the FedEx-style points implications.
Steady around the greens, ruthless from inside 12 feet, and the only player in the league who treats the back nine of a match-play final like it's a leisurely Sunday walk. His swing has not changed materially in 15 years, which appears to be the point.
Strongest part of his game: closing speed. Weakest part: pretending the trophies don't matter.
"You don't have to make birdies. You just have to wait long enough for the other guy to stop making them." — Tank, on match play
The Clogston conversation cuts both ways. Tank holds the head-to-head edge in Match Play finals (2010, 2014), Clogston now holds the gross trophy two years running. Neither has the matchup the way they want it. Whichever of them outlasts the other in 2026 likely defines the closing decade of the league's history.
"I'm not trying to beat anybody. I'm just trying to stay out of double bogeys for four hours. Whatever the leaderboard does after that is its problem." — Tank, on his approach
Players in the same conversation, on the same boards, chasing the same trophies.