PGA Tour to reduce fields and cut lines at designated events
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[March 02, 2023]
By Frank Pingue
(Reuters) - The PGA Tour has approved changes for 2024 that will see
reduced fields and no cuts at the designated events it created last
year in response to the threat posed by the Saudi-backed LIV Golf
circuit, according to a memo obtained by Reuters on Wednesday.
The sweeping changes, which were outlined in a letter sent to PGA
Tour members by Commissioner Jay Monahan, do not apply to all
elevated events as the four majors, The Players Championship and
three FedExCup playoff events will be unaffected.
"These smaller, designated event fields will not only deliver
substantial, can't-miss tournaments to our fans at important
intervals throughout the season, but they will also enhance the
quality of full-field events," wrote Monahan.
"Together, this approach provides a schedule that is cohesive,
compelling, consequential and with clarity for fans, players and
sponsors alike."
According to the memo, select designated events in 2024 will feature
limited fields of between 70 to 80 players with no cuts taking place
after 36 holes and with opportunities for in-form players from
full-field events to qualify and compete.
By comparison, last month's Phoenix Open, which was the PGA Tour's
first fully-fledged designated event, had a field of 136 golfers
that was cut to 66 after the second round.
Designated events were announced by the PGA Tour last August to get
the best players competing against each other more often. The move
came amid the threat posed by LIV Golf, which features
limited-field, 54-hole events with no cuts and guaranteed prize
money for each golfer.
"Imitation is the greatest form of flattery. Congratulations PGA
Tour. Welcome to the future," read a message posted on LIV Golf's
Twitter account on Wednesday as news of the PGA Tour's designated
event changes circulated online.
'FAIR SHAKE'
Starting next year, designated events will include the top 50
players from the previous year's FedExCup regular season list along
with the top 10 players not otherwise eligible from the current
points list.
Other qualification criteria include performance in non-designated
events, consideration of the world rankings and sponsor exemptions
for some PGA Tour members.
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Aug 28, 2022; Atlanta, Georgia, USA;
Rory McIlroy tees off on the 1st hole during the final round of the
TOUR Championship golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: Adam Hagy-USA
TODAY Sports
World number three Rory McIlroy, speaking to
reporters ahead of this week's Arnold Palmer Invitational, said the
changes will make the PGA Tour more competitive.
"I'm all about rewarding good play. ... I want to give everyone a
fair shake at this. Which I think this structure has done. There's
ways to play into it," McIlroy, who also holds a position on the PGA
Tour's Player Advisory Council, said at Bay Hill in Orlando,
Florida.
"It's trying to get the top guys versus the hot guys, right? I think
that creates a really compelling product. But a way that you don't
have to wait an entire year for your good play to then get the
opportunity. That opportunity presents itself straight away."
Max Homa, ranked eighth in the world and also a member of the Player
Advisory Council, acknowledged the emergence of LIV Golf, which has
lured many big names from the PGA Tour, may have forced the
U.S.-based circuit to rethink things.
"One of the things that they have that's great that this will
provide now is a guaranteed product. You know who is going to be at
each event," said Homa.
"I don't think we would be here this soon without LIV, but I would
hope at some point we would have looked at this and said, Hey, there
might be a better way to do it."
(Reporting by Frank Pingue in Toronto, editing by Ed Osmond)
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