Sony Open starts the race for fewer
PGA Tour players to keep their jobs
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[January 09, 2025]
By DOUG FERGUSON
HONOLULU (AP) — The royal palms on a Waialae course that runs along
the Pacific Ocean give a peaceful ambiance to the Sony Open, the
ideal place for the full PGA Tour membership to start the year.
But a new season has brought a small degree of stress in paradise.
The Sony Open effectively starts the chase for a PGA Tour card —
only 100 from the FedEx Cup this year, down from 125, marking the
most significant change in eligibility in some 40 years.
Camilo Villegas described it as an important year for him, and it's
only January.
“There is a sense of urgency,” Villegas said Wednesday. “You've got
to play when you get in (tournaments) and you have to perform. It's
going to be very compact. It's going to be a dogfight out there,
which is cool.”
Players warming up in the morning darkness — floodlights on the
driving range but not the putting green — was another reminder of
some of the changes. Along with a reduction in cards, the field
sizes will be shrinking starting in 2026 to make sure anyone with a
card gets into a fair amount of tournaments and rounds have a better
chance of finishing on time with a smaller number of players on the
course.
Optimism, of course, is as great as ever. Villegas won in Bermuda
toward the end of 2023 to earn a two-year exemption, and last year
was among his best. He knows he has to play well to keep his job,
and he was unwilling to even address the possibility he won't finish
in the top 100.
“I am going to keep my card,” he said with a smile.
Hideki Matsuyama has no such issues as the No. 5 player in the world
who is coming off a record scoring performance to win last week at
Kapalua. Now the Japanese star tries to become the third player to
sweep the Hawaii swing, joining Justin Thomas (2017) and Ernie Els
(2003).
For everyone else, veterans and rookies alike, it's only the
beginning.
“I would say I'm more excited this year because I felt like I got a
lot better last year at playing golf, and I felt like I improved
last year,” said Keith Mitchell, who is starting his eighth year.
“And every year you have a card, you have a blank slate to prove
your improvement.”
Mitchell missed out on the FedEx Cup playoffs last year by an
estimated three shots — had he been three shots better in the final
round of the regular season, it would have been enough. He also can
look back at 18 other tournaments where he could have picked up a
shot or two. Every player can do that.
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Hideki Matsuyama, of Japan, watches his shot on the 17th green
during the pro-am round of the Sony Open golf event, Wednesday, Jan.
8, 2025, at Waialae Country Club in Honolulu. (AP Photo/Matt York)
Even with a seven-month season to keep the card, Mitchell has been
around long enough to realize that getting off to a good start can
ease the real pressure that comes later.
“Everybody is at zero,” Mitchell said. “Each week doesn't feel as
monumental as it does the last three or four weeks. The beginning of
the season, people play a little more free or relaxed because it
doesn't feel as urgent.”
Mitchell said the putts he makes, the scores he posts, are just as
valuable now as they are in the final regular-season tournaments in
the summer.
“Theoretically it is,” he said. “But emotionally it's not.”
The Sony Open is the start of a three-tournament stretch in which
the leading five players become eligible for $20 million signature
events in California. Getting in the big events can go a long way
for someone trying to keep his job.
Ryder Cup captain Keegan Bradley has even more experience with the
optimism and nerves that come with a new season. He made his debut
as a PGA Tour member in the Sony Open in 2011. Bradley went on to
win the Byron Nelson and the PGA Championship that year, but he also
has strong memories of the start.
“It's a scary feeling,” he said. “I got here my first event, Ernie
Els was on the putting green, and that was like a ‘Holy cow’ moment
for me. But it’s a real daunting feeling because you worked your
whole life to get here, and now you have to play the best golf of
your life in order to keep your card.
“I look at the rookies, and part of me is so jealous that they have
all of this in front of them,” he said. “And another part of me is
like, ‘Man, they’ve got a lot of pressure on them, starting right
out of the gate.’ I wish them all the best. It’s a really tough
business to be successful in.”
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