Big changes are reportedly coming to the PGA Tour next year, with many of its designated events to feature far smaller fields of between 70 and 78 players, as well as the removal of the 36-hole cut.
Per Golfweek’s Eamon Lynch (opens in new tab), the PGA Tour board met on Tuesday night to ratify the move, with only the Majors, The Players Championship and season-ending FedEx Cup Playoffs of the designated events remaining as they are.
The move will likely draw comparisons with the model being employed by the PGA Tour’s bitter rival LIV Golf, which also has limited field, no-cut events. Indeed, the introduction of the designated events for 2023, which guarantees stronger fields and larger purses, came as a direct result of the threat posed by the Saudi-funded circuit.
As to who will automatically qualify for the events, the top 50 players who reach the second of the FedEx Cup Playoffs, the BMW Championship, will reportedly gain entry. Beyond that, the top 10 players ineligible on the current FedEx Cup points list would also qualify.
The change to the events will almost certainly raise questions over whether they will become a closed shop, with concerns that only the top players will be able to compete in them. However, a player who wished to remain anonymous told Golfweek that will not be the case, saying: “We want top players and hot players.”
According to the report, one way to ensure other players have a chance of participating in the events will be to distribute them more evenly through the year, with a pattern where three regular events are followed by two designated events and so on. Then, the five players players with the highest cumulative point totals from the three standard events would qualify for the next who designated events.
Meanwhile, it is also reported that any player who wins a PGA Tour event will qualify for each designated event that season.
Consideration will also reportedly be given to the top 30 of the Official World Golf Ranking in the hope that it will offer a reasonable chance for players returning from injury to qualify. Sponsor exemptions will also still be available, leaving a door open for 15-time Major winner Tiger Woods – who admits he can only play a limited number of tournaments due to his ongoing injury concerns – to participate.
Lee Westwood has already criticised the reported move, and appeared to suggest it’s the latest in a range of initiatives that makes the PGA Tour more dominant at the expense of the DP…
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