Mike Clayton has had his say on the legitimacy of the Official World Golf Ranking, arguing that it should be scrapped.
The Australian, who had eight professional wins during the 1980s and 1990s including one European Tour win, responded to suggestions that the world rankings are losing their importance in part because changes to the OWGR system have left it harder for non-PGA Tour players to enter the top 50, and the emergence of LIV Golf, of course.
That can have a negative impact on those players’ chances of qualifying for certain Majors and Clayton has said it’s time to scrap the OWGR altogether. Responding to a Golf Monthly article on the issue, he said: “Get rid of them. They matter in tennis because they determine who plays who but are completely irrelevant in golf. It wouldn’t be so hard to come up with a better criteria for selecting Major fields.”
Later, Clayton elaborated on why he thinks it’s time to for an overhaul. He told Golf Monthly: “I’m playing Devil’s Advocate a bit but the rankings began in 1986 – I think that’s right – as a marketing exercise/venture between IMG and Sony. The vast majority of players’ careers and lives are controlled by the money list – not the ranking. Obviously top 50 is important for Majors, but it’d be easy to come up with other criteria for picking Major fields.”
Clayton’s remarks come after an insider told Golf Monthly: “The one thing that everybody has overlooked is the fact that the European Tour and the rest of the world have been absolutely shafted by the PGA Tour on world ranking points. That’s the one thing that’s never been mentioned, it’s been overlooked, and what the PGA Tour have done to the rest of the world is absolutely outrageous.”
There are other issues affecting the perceived importance of the OWGR. For example, the emergence of LIV Golf has led to some of the world’s best players defecting to the Saudi-backed organisation, even though it is currently ineligible for OWGR points.
As to how Clayton would shake up the qualifying criteria for Majors, he offered several…
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