logo
Players approve of Tour Championship change, and everyone can expect more in the future

Players approve of Tour Championship change, and everyone can expect more in the future

NBC Sports4 days ago

DUBLIN, Ohio – While consensus is a victim of today's polarized world, the PGA Tour's much-anticipated overhaul of the Tour Championship was met with near-unanimous approval from players this week at the Memorial.
Starting in August at this year's season finale at East Lake in Atlanta, the circuit has scraped the starting-strokes format that began in 2019 for a more-traditional 72 holes of stroke play with everyone starting at even par.
The starting-strokes format was envisioned as a way to reward season-long performance while also maintaining the shell and volatility of a playoff, with the top-ranked player at the Tour Championship starting the week at 10 under followed by No. 2 on the points list at 8 under and down to No. 30 who began the finale at even par.
'The best way to identify the best player over the course of a tournament is 72-hole stroke play on a really good golf course. I think when you look at a good test of golf and you got to compete over four days, I think that's the best way to crown the best winner for that week,' said world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler. 'Looking at the Tour Championship, I didn't love the previous format of starting strokes, and I really like the direction where we're going. I think the Tour Championship's going to be difficult to qualify for.
'Making the Tour Championship is truly going to be the result from a great body of work over the course of a season, and then you have an opportunity to win the Tour Championship and the FedExCup.'
Scheffler had been an outspoken critic of the starting-strokes format, dubbing it 'silly' on multiple occasions, and he appears to have been a leading proponent of moving away from the staggered start, which was confusing to fans and largely panned by players.
There is some irony that Scheffler was so outspoken against the starting-strokes format given that he won last year's Tour Championship, and the $25 million FedExCup bonus, because of his built-in advantage. Collin Morikawa actually shot the week's lowest score last year at East Lake without starting strokes but finished second to Scheffler because of the handicapped start.
Scheffler's buy-in was likely key for other players to get on board with the changes since he would have the most to lose under the new format.
'It's obviously something different and something new, which I think a lot of us players felt was needed. And we want to, all of us want to have the excitement. We want you guys to have the excitement, and the fans, and us players to have the opportunity to go to the Tour Championship and win the FedExCup,' Justin Thomas said. 'If you're at the Tour Championship and you're at that final event, then you have all the right in the world to walk away with the FedExCup.'
Tuesday's announcement did come with a clear caveat that the 2025 Tour Championship is a bridge year to what the Tour plans to do with the finale.
In a memo sent to players, the Tour said the Player Advisory Council will continue to study the qualification to 'raise the stakes on the entire FedExCup season and reinforce the Tour Championship as the hardest tournament to qualify for.' Many believed this to be a sign that field size for East Lake would likely be adjusted after this year and commissioner Jay Monahan didn't dismiss that idea.
'If you look at the future of the Tour Championship I would say that everything is on the table when you're trying to create the best version of the PGA Tour, when you're trying to create the best conclusion to the season,' Monahan said. 'At this point we're playing with 30 players [at East Lake]. I wouldn't expect us to stand still.'
Monahan also conceded that there 'will be changes' to the season-long bonus structure as well. Scheffler's $25 million haul for winning the FedExCup last year was far from the $8 million awarded for the Comcast Business Top 10, which was given to the top performer during the regular season (also Scheffler). That split will likely be adjusted now that the Tour has gone to, essentially, a winner-take-all mentality for the finale with less influence from a player's season-long performance.
'That's how it needs to be done [equally splitting the total bonus funds between the regular season and playoffs],' Lucas Glover said. 'That's how it should be. You reward Scottie [Scheffler] for the season he had last year — it's 34 weeks, or whatever we had [in the regular season] and then three weeks for the playoffs. The regular season is more of a test and it should be rewarded more.'
The Tour is not finished tinkering with the Tour Championship or the playoffs. Whether these changes, which follow nearly two decades of nips and tucks, are the correct path remains to be seen.
Jay Monahan tells Rex Hoggard about the "exhaustive process" that led to the Tour Championship format changes, defending the mid-season timing of the announcement and emphasizing the increased playoff competitiveness.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Winner's Bag: Scottie Scheffler's golf equipment at the 2025 Memorial Tournament
Winner's Bag: Scottie Scheffler's golf equipment at the 2025 Memorial Tournament

USA Today

time4 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Winner's Bag: Scottie Scheffler's golf equipment at the 2025 Memorial Tournament

Winner's Bag: Scottie Scheffler's golf equipment at the 2025 Memorial Tournament A complete list of the golf equipment Scottie Scheffler used to win the 2025 Memorial Tournament. Show Caption Hide Caption TaylorMade Spider ZT putters TaylorMade's new Spider ZT putter emphasizes consistent face control and alignment. A complete list of the golf equipment Scottie Scheffler used to win the 2025 Memorial Tournament: DRIVER: TaylorMade Qi10 (8 degrees), with Fujikura Ventus Black 7X shaft FAIRWAY WOODS: TaylorMade Qi10 (15 degrees), with Fujikura Ventus Black 8X shaft, TaylorMade Qi35 (21 degrees), with Fujikura Ventus Black 9X shaft. IRONS: Srixon ZU85 (4), with True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue X100 shaft, TaylorMade P-7TW (5-PW), with True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue X100 shafts. WEDGES: Titleist Vokey Design SM8 (50, 56), SM9 (60 degrees), with True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400 shafts PUTTER: TaylorMade Spider Tour X L-Neck BALL: Titleist Pro V1 GRIPS: Golf Pride Tour Velvet (full swing) / Golf Pride Pistol (putter)

Scheffler wins again at Memorial. Stark takes U.S. Women's Open
Scheffler wins again at Memorial. Stark takes U.S. Women's Open

Hamilton Spectator

time10 minutes ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

Scheffler wins again at Memorial. Stark takes U.S. Women's Open

DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) — Scottie Scheffler never lost the lead and never gave anyone much of a chance down the stretch Sunday in another relentless performance, closing with a 2-under 70 for a four-shot victory to join Tiger Woods as the only repeat winners of the Memorial. Slowed by hand surgery at the start of the year from a freak accident, Scheffler appears to be in full stride with one major already in the bag and another around the corner at the U.S. Open. On one of the tougher PGA Tour tests of the year, Scheffler made one bogey over the final 40 holes at Muirfield Village. He finished at 10-under 278. Ben Griffin tried to make it interesting at the end with a 12-foot eagle on the par-5 15th and a 25-foot birdie putt on the par-3 16th to close within two shots with two to play. Scheffler, however, doesn't make mistakes. Griffin made double bogey on the 17th. Griffin made a 4-foot par on the 18th for a 73 to finish alone in second, worth $2.2 million, more than what he earned when he won at Colonial last week. Sepp Straka (70) finished another shot back. Scheffler now has won three times in his last four starts — the exception was Colonial, a tie for fourth the week after winning the PGA Championship — and expanded his margin at No. 1 in the world to levels not seen since Woods in his peak years. Woods is a five-time winner at Memorial who won three straight from 1999 through 2001. No one had repeated at Muirfield Village since then until Scheffler. United States Golf Association ERIN, Wis. (AP) — Maja Stark of Sweden continued the steady play she demonstrated all week to win the U.S. Women's Open at Erin Hills for her first major championship. Stark shot an even-par 72 to finish at 7-under 281, two strokes ahead of top-ranked Nelly Korda and Japan's Rio Takeda. Stark earned $2.4 million in the biggest event of the women's golf season. The 25-year-old Stark became the sixth Swede to win a women's major, and the first since Anna Nordqvist in the 2021 Women's British Open. The former Oklahoma State player is the first Swede to win a U.S. Women's Open since Annika Sorenstam in 2006. Stark won her second second LPGA Tour title. She also won the 2022 ISPS Handa World Invitational in Northern Ireland, an event co-sanctioned by Ladies European Tour. Korda closed with a 71, and Takeda had a 72. Hye-Jin Choi (68), Ruoning Yin (70) and Mao Saigo (73) tied for fourth at 4 under. Hailee Cooper (70) and Hinako Shibuno (74) were 3 under. European Tour SALZBERG, Austria (AP) — Nicolai von Dellingshausen of Germany closed with a 5-under 65 to win the Austrian Alpine Open by two shots and capture his first title on the European tour. Von Dellingshausen began the final round one shot behind fellow German Marcel Schneider and quickly seized control with three birdies and an eagle on the opening nine. After another birdie to start the back nine, he closed with eight straight pars. Von Dellingshausen finished at 19-under 261, two ahead of Schneider (68) and Kristoffer Reitan, who was coming off a victory in Belgium last week at the Soudal Open. Reitan shot a 60, missing an eagle putt on the final hole in his bid for only the second 59 in European tour history. PGA Tour Champions DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Miguel Angel Jimenez won the Principal Charity Classic at Wakonda Club for his third PGA Tour Champions victory of the year, beating Soren Kjeldsen and Cameron Percy with a birdie on the first hole of a playoff. Jimenez closed with a birdie on the 311-yard, par-4 18th for a 2-under 70, then made a 4-footer for another birdie on the extra hole. The 61-year-old Spanish star led wire-to-wire, opening with rounds of 63 and 66. Jimenez has 16 career PGA Tour Champions victories, also winning the Trophy Hassan II in February in Morocco and the Hoag Classic in March in Newport Beach, California. Kjeldsen finished with a 63, and Percy shot 67 to match Jimenez at 17-under 199. Kevin Sutherland was a stroke back after a 68. Korn Ferry Tour RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Trace Crowe made five birdies on the front nine to build a comfortable lead, and then survived a few nervous moment before pulling away with a 5-under 65 to win the UNC Health Championship for his second career Korn Ferry Tour title. Crowe had a one-shot lead over Martin Laird going into the final round and was four ahead heading to the back nine. Laird stayed in the game, and a two-shot swing on the 14th — Laird made birdie, Crowe his first bogey of the day — trimmed Crowe's lead to one. Crowe birdied the 15th for a two-shot swing in his favor, and Laird bogeyed the next two. Crowe finished at 21-under 259 for a five-shot win over Laird (69), Davis Chatfield (68) and Hank Lebioda (61). Other tours Mikiya Akutsu closed with a 1-under 71 to win the Mizuno Open by four shots over Young-Han Song and Riki Kawamoto on the Japan Golf Tour. All three players earned a spot in the British Open as part of Open Qualifying Series. ... Rocco Repetto Taylor won his first Challenge Tour title on home soil when he closed with a 4-under 68 for a one-shot victory in the Challenge de Cadiz in Spain. ... Malcolm Mitchell closed with a 1-under 71 and defeated Jonathan Broomhead in a playoff to win the Gary & Vivienne Player Challenge on the Sunshine Tour in South Africa. ... Nanako Inagaki held on with a 1-over 73 for a one-shot victory in the Resort Trust Ladies on the Japan LPGA. ... Yunji Jeong shot a 1-under 70 and for a one-shot win in the Suhyup Bank MBN Ladies Open on the Korea LPGA. ___ AP golf:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store