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PGA Tour nixes starting strokes advantage for leaders at championship
PGA Tour nixes starting strokes advantage for leaders at championship

National Post

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • National Post

PGA Tour nixes starting strokes advantage for leaders at championship

Article content DUBLIN, Ohio — The PGA Tour voted to overhaul the season-ending Tour Championship so that all 30 players start from scratch and the low score on a tougher East Lake course wins the FedEx Cup. Article content The change is effective this year, with more tweaks still in the works. The announcement Tuesday evening followed a PGA Tour board vote and a meeting of the Player Advisory Council that has been trying for more than six months to find a solution. Article content The primary goal was to get rid of the staggered start that none of the players seemed to like. Article content Since 2019, the leader of the FedEx Cup going to East Lake started at 10-under par before the tournament even began. That gave him a two-shot lead over the No. 2 player, and a staggered from there until the last five players who qualified for the 30-man field were at even par. Article content Now it will effectively be a 72-hole shootout — everyone starts at even par, just like any other tournament — with FedEx Cup going to the winner. Article content 'We want the Tour Championship to be the hardest tournament to qualify for and the FedEx Cup trophy the most difficult to win,' said Scottie Scheffler, the No. 1 player in the world who won his first FedEx Cup title last year. He serves on the PAC. Article content 'Shifting the Tour Championship to a more straight-up format with a tougher course setup makes it easier for fans to follow and provides a more challenging test for players — which brings out the best competition.' Article content Article content Still to be announced is the prize fund. Scheffler received a $25 million bonus for winning the FedEx Cup last year. The tour indicated the bonus money would be distributed more evenly to account for all 30 players — regardless of their position in the standings — have the same chance of winning. Article content Scheffler won last year at 30-under par for a four-shot victory over Collin Morikawa. Scheffler, the No. 1 seed the last three years, had a raw total of 264. Morikawa shot 262, but he was the No. 7 seed and thus gave Scheffler a six-shot head start. Article content The tour said it leaned on feedback from its fans to help determine what would make the most compelling finale. Article content 'The Player Advisory Council led a thorough process to respond to what our fans are asking for: The most competitive golf in the world, played for the highest stakes, in the most straightforward and engaging format,' PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan said.

PGA Tour nixes starting strokes advantage for leaders at championship
PGA Tour nixes starting strokes advantage for leaders at championship

Toronto Sun

time2 days ago

  • Sport
  • Toronto Sun

PGA Tour nixes starting strokes advantage for leaders at championship

The primary goal was to get rid of the staggered start that none of the players seemed to like Published May 29, 2025 • 3 minute read Scottie Scheffler watches his tee shot on the ninth hole during the final round of the Charles Schwab Challenge golf tournament at Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas, Sunday, May 25, 2025. Photo by LM Otero / AP DUBLIN, Ohio — The PGA Tour voted to overhaul the season-ending Tour Championship so that all 30 players start from scratch and the low score on a tougher East Lake course wins the FedEx Cup. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account The change is effective this year, with more tweaks still in the works. The announcement Tuesday evening followed a PGA Tour board vote and a meeting of the Player Advisory Council that has been trying for more than six months to find a solution. The primary goal was to get rid of the staggered start that none of the players seemed to like. Since 2019, the leader of the FedEx Cup going to East Lake started at 10-under par before the tournament even began. That gave him a two-shot lead over the No. 2 player, and a staggered from there until the last five players who qualified for the 30-man field were at even par. Now it will effectively be a 72-hole shootout — everyone starts at even par, just like any other tournament — with FedEx Cup going to the winner. Jon McCarthy has something for every golfer, with a notably Canadian slant. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. Please try again This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. 'We want the Tour Championship to be the hardest tournament to qualify for and the FedEx Cup trophy the most difficult to win,' said Scottie Scheffler, the No. 1 player in the world who won his first FedEx Cup title last year. He serves on the PAC. 'Shifting the Tour Championship to a more straight-up format with a tougher course setup makes it easier for fans to follow and provides a more challenging test for players — which brings out the best competition.' Still to be announced is the prize fund. Scheffler received a $25 million bonus for winning the FedEx Cup last year. The tour indicated the bonus money would be distributed more evenly to account for all 30 players — regardless of their position in the standings — have the same chance of winning. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Scheffler won last year at 30-under par for a four-shot victory over Collin Morikawa. Scheffler, the No. 1 seed the last three years, had a raw total of 264. Morikawa shot 262, but he was the No. 7 seed and thus gave Scheffler a six-shot head start. The tour said it leaned on feedback from its fans to help determine what would make the most compelling finale. 'The Player Advisory Council led a thorough process to respond to what our fans are asking for: The most competitive golf in the world, played for the highest stakes, in the most straightforward and engaging format,' PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan said. The format revealed Tuesday is similar to the LPGA's season finale, which features a 60-player field and offers $4 million to the winner over 72 holes. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Key components of the Tour Championship change is eliminating the starting strokes. That should make Xander Schauffele happy. Twice he had the low score over 72 holes (one time a tie) and watched someone else leave with the trophy. More difficult to define is setting up East Lake as difficult as possible. The tour said fans wanted to see scores closer to par, and the rules officials will be in charge of adjusting the setup to encourage more risk-and-reward moments. Most curious about the announcement was the objective to make the Tour Championship the hardest to reach. It already is difficult to finish among the top 30, and that will be the field size this year when it is held on Aug. 21-24. The PAC is studying qualifications for future years that could include a smaller field and a greater reward for how players perform from the season opener in Hawaii through the BMW Championship, which precedes East Lake. Tour official since last August had been kicking around the idea of match play, which rarely performs well on television and in person with only two players competing at the end. They also were trying to create brackets to mimic other sports. Ultimately, they settled on 72 holes of stroke player on a tougher golf course with everyone knowing what's at stake. Sunshine Girls Toronto & GTA Sunshine Girls Columnists Tennis

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 Sports

time3 days ago

  • Sport
  • NBC Sports

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

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.

Handicap system for Tour Championship is revoked
Handicap system for Tour Championship is revoked

RTÉ News​

time3 days ago

  • Sport
  • RTÉ News​

Handicap system for Tour Championship is revoked

The PGA Tour has scrapped the controversial handicap system used for the season-ending Tour Championship. Under the much-criticised format first adopted in 2019, the player with the most FedEx Cup points from the regular season started the Tour Championship on 10 under par, with the second-ranked player on eight under and so-on, on a sliding scale. Last year that meant Scottie Scheffler teeing off at East Lake on 10 under and US PGA and Open Championship winner Xander Schauffele eight under, a format Scheffler called "silly". Shane Lowry, who began his Tour Championship debut on three under, also joked: "I give shots to my friends every day at home, but my friends are not Scottie Scheffler and Rory McIlroy and Xander Schauffele." The tournament will revert to a standard 72-hole strokeplay event and the field size will remain at 30, but the PGA Tour's Player Advisory Council will continue to study the qualification system. "We want the Tour Championship to be the hardest tournament to qualify for and the FedEx Cup trophy the most difficult to win," reigning FedEx Cup champion Scheffler said in a statement released by the Tour. "Shifting the Tour Championship to a more straight-up format with a tougher course set-up makes it easier for fans to follow and provides a more challenging test for players, which brings out the best competition."

FedEx Cup finale at East Lake goes to a 72-hole shootout where everyone starts from scratch
FedEx Cup finale at East Lake goes to a 72-hole shootout where everyone starts from scratch

Toronto Star

time3 days ago

  • Sport
  • Toronto Star

FedEx Cup finale at East Lake goes to a 72-hole shootout where everyone starts from scratch

DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) — The PGA Tour voted to overhaul the season-ending Tour Championship so that all 30 players start from scratch and the low score on a tougher East Lake course wins the FedEx Cup. The change is effective this year, with more tweaks still in the works. The announcement Tuesday evening followed a PGA Tour board vote and a meeting of the Player Advisory Council that has been trying for more than six months to find a solution.

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