💔 “WE NEVER WANTED TO SHARE THIS — BUT WE HAVE NO OTHER CHOICE.” Akshay Bhatia’s Wife Unexpectedly Made a Heartbreaking Announcement That Brought Fans Across the Country to Tears, a Deeply Moving Moment That Quickly Shook the Golf World as the True Gravity of the Situation Was Revealed and Left the Nation Speechless.

In the wake of Akshay Bhatia’s stunning playoff victory at the 2026 Arnold Palmer Invitational — his first Signature Event win and a career-defining $4 million triumph — the golf world expected celebrations, red cardigans, and champagne. Instead, the narrative shifted dramatically when Bhatia’s wife, Presleigh Schultz, stepped forward with an emotional plea that exposed the darker side of fame: relentless online abuse targeting her husband.
The announcement came not in a formal press conference, but through a tearful social media post and subsequent interviews in the days following Bhatia’s March 8, 2026, win at Bay Hill. Presleigh, visibly distraught, addressed the flood of hateful messages accusing Akshay of “cheating” with his broomstick putter. Her words — beginning with the now-viral phrase “We never wanted to share this — but we have no other choice” — captured the pain of a young couple thrust into the spotlight amid triumph and tragedy.
The Victory That Sparked the Storm

Bhatia, the 24-year-old left-hander known for his resilience and clutch playoff performances, outdueled Daniel Berger in a sudden-death playoff to claim the Arnold Palmer Invitational title. He holed key putts under pressure, celebrated with a hug and kiss from Presleigh on the 18th green, and donned the iconic red cardigan. It was a feel-good story: a rising star, recently married in the Bahamas, finally breaking through in a big way.
But almost immediately, controversy erupted. Bhatia uses a 50-inch Odyssey Jailbird 380 Broomstick putter — a long, anchored-style club he adopted in 2023 after struggling with conventional putting (ranking 183rd in Strokes Gained: Putting at the time). Videos of his stroke circulated online, with fans claiming he was illegally anchoring the butt end against his chest, violating Rule 10.1b of the Rules of Golf (anchoring is prohibited since 2016).
PGA Tour officials reviewed the footage and found no violation — Bhatia’s technique keeps the club free, with the grip end near but not pressed against his body. Pros like Michael Kim defended him publicly, and even Jordan Spieth weighed in during The Players Championship week, calling the accusations overblown armchair criticism. Yet the online mob persisted: comments flooded Instagram, X, and golf forums labeling him a “cheater,” questioning his integrity, and attacking his character.
Presleigh’s Heartbreaking Plea

Unable to watch her husband suffer in silence, Presleigh broke her usual low-profile stance. In a raw Instagram Story and follow-up post (later amplified by media outlets), she wrote:
“We never wanted to share this — but we have no other choice. Please stop, I beg you. The messages, the accusations, the hate… it’s breaking him. He’s fought so hard to get here, and now this? We’re asking for kindness, not more pain.”
The post included screenshots of vicious DMs and comments — some calling Akshay a fraud, others worse. Presleigh revealed the toll: sleepless nights, emotional distress, and a husband who felt compelled to defend himself constantly instead of savoring the win. Her tears were visible in a short video clip shared by supporters, where she pleaded directly to the camera: “He’s a good man. He plays fair. Please… just stop.”
The golf community reacted swiftly. Fans rallied with supportive hashtags like #StandWithAkshay and #StopTheHate, while pros expressed solidarity. Ludvig Åberg and others distanced themselves from any equipment controversy rumors, emphasizing Bhatia’s clean record. The PGA Tour issued a quiet statement reaffirming no rules were broken, but the damage was done — the victory’s joy had been overshadowed.
Layered Grief: The Deeper Family Tragedy
Compounding the online storm was a more profound heartbreak Bhatia had already carried into Bay Hill. During his on-course NBC interview with Cara Banks, he revealed — voice cracking — that his five-year-old niece, Mia, had passed away on the day of his December 2025 wedding to Presleigh.
Mia battled PDCD (Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Complex Deficiency), a rare genetic disease that typically limits life expectancy to infancy. Doctors never expected her to reach five, yet she defied odds to attend the wedding — traveling despite her fragile health. She passed peacefully the morning of the ceremony, surrounded by love. Presleigh posted a tribute that day: “It was heartbreaking, beautiful, and impossible to fully understand all at once… She was strong, joyful, and deeply loved.”
Bhatia dedicated the Arnold Palmer win to Mia, noting a rainbow on the 18th hole as a sign she was watching over him. “I knew she was looking over me this year,” he said, tears welling. “I made this win for her, for sure.”
Presleigh’s plea thus carried double weight: protecting her husband from cyberbullying while grieving a family loss that still felt raw. The couple’s wedding joy had been forever intertwined with sorrow — and now victory brought venom instead of unbridled celebration.
Impact on the Golf World and Beyond
The incident highlights broader issues in modern sports:
Toxicity of online fandom: Golf, often seen as genteel, is not immune to vicious trolling. Bhatia’s case echoes others where equipment choices (long putters, anchored styles) spark endless debate. Mental health toll: Pros increasingly speak about the psychological strain of social media scrutiny. Bhatia, already vulnerable after personal tragedy, faced amplified pressure. PGA Tour response: While no sanction occurred, the episode renewed calls for stronger protections against unfounded accusations and harassment.
Fans responded overwhelmingly positively to Presleigh’s words. Support poured in from across the sport — messages from fellow players, legends, and everyday enthusiasts urging kindness. Bhatia himself addressed the controversy lightly in later interviews, focusing on gratitude: “I play because I love it. The rest… we’ll get through it together.”
As Bhatia prepares for upcoming events like The Players and beyond, the golf world watches not just his game, but his resilience. Presleigh’s announcement — born of necessity, delivered in tears — reminded everyone that behind every champion is a human story, often far more fragile than the scoreboard shows.
In a sport defined by precision and poise, this moment revealed something deeper: the courage to say “enough” when the noise becomes unbearable. For Akshay and Presleigh Bhatia, the road ahead includes healing, competing, and — hopefully — reclaiming joy without the shadow of hate.
The nation — and the golf community — stands with them, speechless no longer, but united in empathy.