
'I like him. I like him a lot' - Rory McIlroy excited as new PGA Tour CEO gets to work
Rolapp wasted no time in showing that the new boss is welcome to new ideas. His first official act as chief was to announce the formation a nine-member Future Competition Committee to be chaired by Tiger Woods and populated by a range of stakeholders in the game.
'The purpose of this committee is pretty simple – we're going to design the best professional golf competitive model in the world for the benefit of PGA Tour fans, players and their partners,' Rolapp said.
'It is aimed at a holistic relook of how we compete on the tour. That is inclusive of regular season, postseason and off-season.
"We're going to focus on the evolution of our competitive model and the corresponding media products and sponsorship elements and model of the entire sport. The goal is not incremental change. The goal is significant change.'
The committee will be made up of six players – Woods, Patrick Cantlay, Adam Scott, Camilo Villegas, Maverick McNealy and Keith Mitchell – and three business advisors: Joe Gorder, the chairman of the PGA Tour and PGA Tour Enterprises boards; John Henry, manager of tour investor Strategic Sports Group; and Theo Epstein, former Boston Red Sox and Chicago Cubs general manager and senior advisor to Fenway Sports Group.
The PGA Tour already announced its 2026 schedule on Tuesday, but that doesn't mean Rolapp isn't willing to make changes before the 2027 season.
'I don't think I'm going to commit to a specific time,' Rolapp said. 'I think the right answer to that is we will take as much time is to get it right, at least the initial time out, but we're going to aggressively move.
"I would like to put in the right competitive model as soon as we can, but we want to do it right. So however long it takes, we'll do, while moving aggressively.'
Rolapp – who comes to golf via being second man on the totem pole in the NFL, the most popular sports league in America – said he's given the committee three 'guiding principles' to strive for in its recommendations.
'These principles are key characteristics of what I think will be a successful competitive model going forward,' Rolapp said.
'The first one of those characteristics is competitive parity. All sports, all sports chase competitive parity. The PGA Tour has incredible competitive parity and balance among its players today. We're going to lean into this while also maintaining another key characteristic of the PGA Tour, meritocracy....
'The second key characteristic is scarcity. A focus on the tour's top players to compete together more often in events that feel special for fans and feel special for the players.
'Finally, the third principle will be simplicity. Competition should be easy to follow. The regular season and postseason should be connected in a way that builds towards a Tour Championship in a way that all sports fans can understand.'
On the job for only three weeks, Rolapp is still getting up to speed with all of the tour's shareholders.
Rory McIlroy is one of the 20 or so players Rolapp has sat down with to get to know during his whirlwind on-boarding process, and the reigning Masters champ came away impressed.
'I hadn't met him up until last week, and I was able to spend a good 90 minutes with him just talking through everything to do with the tour and the whole thing over the past three or four years and what the future looks like,' McIlroy said.
'I like him. I like him a lot. I like that he doesn't come from golf. I like that he doesn't have any preconceived ideas of what golf should look like or what the tour should look like. I think he's going to bring a fresh perspective to everything, and I think he wants to move pretty quick, so I'm excited.'
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Irish Times
4 hours ago
- Irish Times
Tiger Woods takes up PGA role but unification in golf is as distant as ever
Tiger Woods will chair a newly created PGA Tour committee aimed at reshaping golf's competitive landscape in the United States. But comments made by Brian Rolapp, the Tour's newly appointed chief executive, showed that unification between the sport's traditional ecosystem and the Saudi Arabian‑backed LIV circuit is as distant as ever. Woods, who has not competed since the 2024 Open Championship because of injury, was the headline name when Rolapp addressed the media in Atlanta on the eve of the Tour Championship. After just three weeks in office, the chief executive has formed a future competition committee that will also feature Patrick Cantlay and Adam Scott. Rolapp seems clear that the tournament landscape has to change. 'The purpose of this committee is pretty simple,' Rolapp said. 'We're going to design the best professional golf competitive model in the world for the benefit of PGA Tour fans, players and their partners. It is aimed at a holistic relook of how we compete. That is inclusive of regular season, postseason and off-season. 'We're going to focus on the evolution of our competitive model and the corresponding media products and sponsorship elements and model of the entire sport. The goal is not incremental change. The goal is significant change.' READ MORE Creation of a meaningful break between PGA Tour seasons and guarantees that the most high-profile players will play in top events seem logical starting points for Woods. Press conferences such as this once tended to focus on progress on a deal between the PGA Tour and Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund. A framework agreement was signed between the parties in summer 2023 with the supposed aim of uniting elite golf. Progress, though, has been slow: the PGA Tour rejected various concession requests made by the PIF in late March, in exchange for $1.5 billion of investment. Key figures in this sport such as Jon Rahm , Bryson DeChambeau and Brooks Koepka play under the LIV banner and are therefore key absentees from the PGA Tour. Jon Rahm is one of the biggest names to have switched allegiance to the LIV Golf tour. Photograph:Rolapp admitted he has not held discussions with the PIF. 'My primary focus is going to be on strengthening the Tour. Blank sheet of paper means blank sheet of paper. Whatever does that, I'll pursue aggressively. That's how I view it.' At the Players Championship five months ago the PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan revealed that 70 per cent of fans surveyed wanted unification with LIV. Rolapp echoed that sentiment in June. Pressed on whether he agreed golf spectators want to see the best in the game compete against each other more often, Rolapp appeared to backtrack. He said: 'Yeah, golf fans want to see the best competition possible in the sport that they love in a competitive model that makes sense.' Subsequently challenged on whether or not unification should be a priority, the chief executive seemed to rail against 'a LIV question'. He added: 'I'm going to focus on what I can control. I would offer to you that the best collection of golfers in the world are on the PGA Tour. I think there's a bunch of metrics that demonstrate that, from rankings to viewership to whatever you want to pick. I'm going to lean into that and strengthen that. 'I will also say that to the extent we can do anything that's going to further strengthen the PGA Tour, we'll do that. I'm interested in exploring whatever strengthens the PGA Tour.' As he seeks to complete a sensational season with victory at the Tour Championship and FedEx Cup, Scottie Scheffler dismissed parallels with the once imperious Woods. The world No 1 has won five times in 2025, including at two Majors, to separate himself as the dominant figure in golf. 'It's very silly to be compared to Tiger Woods,' Scheffler said. 'Tiger is a guy that stands alone in the game of golf and I think he always will. Tiger inspired a whole generation of golfers. You've grown up watching that guy do what he did week-in, week-out, it was pretty amazing to see.' Scheffler did credit Woods with a role in his development after being in the 15-time Major winner's company at the 2020 Masters. 'I've only played one round of tournament golf with Tiger Woods and it completely changed the way I look at how I play tournaments,' Scheffler said. 'I can't tell you the look on his face when we got to the first green. I look over, and we're in 20th place, kind of playing, yada, yada, yada, and I look over and this guy is just locked in. I was taken aback. I was like, holy smokes. Then we got to the second hole, and he had this chip shot and he looked at it like it was an up-and-down to win the tournament. I'm like: 'This is incredible. I've never seen anything like this before in my life.'' – Guardian


Irish Examiner
5 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
'I like him. I like him a lot' - Rory McIlroy excited as new PGA Tour CEO gets to work
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RTÉ News
5 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Tiger Woods' intensity fuelled Scottie Scheffler's consistency
World number one Scottie Scheffler credits Tiger Woods for inspiring the crucial change to his game which has made him arguably the best golfer since the 15-time major winner's pomp. Scheffler won the US PGA and Open Championship this year, with three of his four majors coming in the last eight events, and also has three other PGA Tour victories in 2025. He is the last player since Woods to win five tournaments in back-to-back seasons and while he continues to play down comparisons, he does admit the influence of golf's modern great sparked a turning point in his own career. "Tiger was just different, in the sense of the way he approached each shot, it was like the last shot he was ever going to hit," said Scheffler, who is attempting to become the first player to successfully defend a FedEx Cup title in the season-ending Tour Championship at East Lake in Atlanta. "I've only played with Tiger once in a tournament, in the 2020 Masters and I think he made a 10 on the 12th hole and then he birdied, I think, five of the last six. "It was like 'What's this guy still playing for? He's won the Masters five times. Best finish he's going to have is like 20th place at this point'. "I just admired the intensity that he brought to each round. That was something that I just thought about for a long time. "I felt like a change I needed to make was bringing that same intensity to each round and each shot. "I don't hit the ball the furthest, the things that I do on the golf course other people can do, so I think it's just the amount of consistency and the intensity that I bring to each round of golf – not taking shots off, not taking rounds off, not taking tournaments off. "When I show up at a tournament, I'm here for a purpose and that's to compete hard and you compete hard on every shot." Those are ominous words from a player who is currently top of the FedEx standings, with almost twice as many points as second-placed Rory McIlroy. However, unlike previous years, when there were shots advantages to be earned from your place in the 30-man standings, every player now starts level par and the winner over four rounds wins not only the Tour Championship but the FedEx Cup and a $10m bonus. "I'm maybe part of the minority. I didn't hate the starting strokes," said McIlroy. "I thought that the player that played the best during the course of the season should have had an advantage coming in here but the majority of people just didn't like the starting strokes. "But you could also argue if it was starting strokes this week, Scottie, with a two-shot lead, probably isn't enough considering what he's done this year and the lead that he has in the FedExCup going into this week."