How to watch the Monday finish at the 2023 PGA Tour Q-School

Golf Channel and Peacock will have live final-round coverage.

It’s going to be a Monday finish at the 2023 PGA Tour Q-School.

The field in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, started with 165 golfers. After 16 withdrawals, there are now 149 remaining fighting for a 2024 PGA Tour card.

Only the top five and ties will earn those precious rewards.

More than four inches of rain pounded the area Saturday night into Sunday morning and left Dye’s Valley at TPC Sawgrass and Sawgrass Country Club, the two host courses, unplayable.

The top 10 on the leaderboard after three rounds:

  • 1. Harrison Endycott, -12
  • 2. Blaine Hale, Jr., -10
  • T-3. Spencer Levin, -8
  • T-3. Trace Crowe, -8
  • T5. Raul Pereda, -7
  • T5. Hayden Springer, -7
  • T-7 Chris Petefish, -6
  • T-7. Danny Walker, -6
  • T-7. Kyle Westmoreland, -6
  • T-10. Julian Suri, -5
  • T-10. Isaiah Salinda, -5
  • T-10. Wesley Bryan, -5

How to watch

The final round will finally start at 8:45 a.m. ET on Monday.

The viewing options are Golf Channel (TV) and Peacock (streaming) starting at 12:30 p.m. ET.

What else is at stake

After the top five and ties is determined, the next 40 finishers and ties are exempt for multiple reshuffles of the 2024 Korn Ferry Tour season, guaranteeing them between eight to 12 starts depending on their finish. The next 20 finishers and ties earn exempt status for the Latin America Swing of the 2024 PGA Tour Americas season in addition to conditional Korn Ferry Tour status. All remaining finishers outside the aforementioned categories earn conditional Korn Ferry Tour and PGA Tour Americas membership for 2024.

Golfweek’s Adam Schupak contributed to this article.

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From cocky kid to grizzled vet, Spencer Levin keeps chasing a return ticket to the PGA Tour

In 2021, he “took a break” from alcohol. One week turned into two, and two weeks turned into more than two years.

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — Spencer Levin planned on sleeping on a college buddy’s couch for one night ahead of the Monday qualifier for the Korn Ferry Tour’s Veritex Bank Championship in April, and if he didn’t make it, he’d fly home. He ended up sleeping on the couch all week, not only qualifying by sinking a decisive birdie putt on the final hole but winning the tournament six days later for his first victory in a PGA Tour-sanctioned event after 17 years and 10 months of trying.

It might be the most under-appreciated victory of 2023 – his first since 2008 on the Canadian Tour, not long after Tiger Woods won the U.S. Open at Torrey Pines on one leg and back when Katy Perry’s “I Kissed a Girl” was the No. 1 song on the charts and Swede sensation Ludvig Aberg was all of eight years old.

Levin, 39, began the final round in Dallas trailing leader Brett Drewitt by six shots. He caught the Aussie on the 71st hole, then birdied the last for a 63 at Texas Rangers Golf Club – and a four-round total of 20-under par.

“I didn’t think I was going to win the tournament until I did,” Levin said.

Spencer Levin had a decorated amateur career and finally won a PGA Tour-sanctioned event on the Korn Ferry Tour in 2023 after nearly 18 years of trying.

What a long, strange trip it had been to the winner’s circle. Levin already was the definition of cocky growing up in Sacramento and his confidence grew during the summer of 2004, when he finished second in the Pacific Coast Amateur (losing in a playoff); tied for 13th place at the U.S. Open (the best finish by an amateur in 33 years) at Shinnecock Hills; reached the third round of the U.S. Amateur at Winged Foot; and won the California Amateur, Scratch Players Amateur, and Porter Cup. Greatness was predicted for him.

While his pro career never reached those lofty heights, he’s earned close to $10 million over 17 seasons and climbed to 60th in the Official World Golf Ranking in early 2012. He came close to winning a handful of times, most notably losing a playoff against Johnson Wagner at the 2011 Mayakoba Golf Classic. Levin averaged 28 starts a year, making 139 cuts, but when he lost his card after the 2016-17 season, he took the demotion hard. He made only five cuts in 22 starts and lost his exempt status. His playing opportunities were few and far between over the ensuing four seasons, dwindling to zero Korn Ferry starts in 2021 and ’22.

By his own count, Levin fell one shot short in at least five KFT Monday qualifiers in 2022, as well as a spot in the U.S. Open by a single stroke. A bogey on the 72nd hole at Final Stage of the KFT Qualifying Tournament deprived him of guaranteed starts in the first eight events this year.

Yet he never wavered in his belief that he could still compete with the best in the world even if his reality had become “Just trying to find a place to play and get into tournaments,” he said.

“He never, ever thought it (pro golf career) was done,” Don Levin, Spencer’s father, swing coach, and confidante told NCGA Golf Magazine in its fall 2023 issue. “He never entertained the thought of that.”

Levin’s victory in April secured him a KFT card for 2024. However, he was unable to remain in the top 30 on the season-long money list and earn an automatic promotion to the PGA Tour, so he’s back at the final stage of Q-School this week chasing a top-5 finish (and ties), which is what it will take to be awarded a Tour card.

“Once you’ve had a taste of it, you want to keep doing it,” he said of playing on the PGA Tour again.

But Levin isn’t the same cocky kid with the visor, popped collar and dangling cigarette who first took the golf world by storm. He crushed out his last cigarette in 2017, the day after his paternal grandfather died of emphysema. In February of 2021, he “took a break” from alcohol. One week turned into two, and two weeks has turned into more than two years.

Spencer Levin watches his drive on the second hole during the final round of the 2017 Quicken Loans National at TPC Potomac at Avenel Farm. (Peter Casey-USA TODAY Sports)

“It was just something I did to improve my life,” he said. “I was at home, I didn’t really have a tour to play on, and I thought, well, how can I just try to at least improve myself.”

He’s filled the void by hitting the gym regularly, which he had never done before. He’s also prioritized family – he’s the father of three. He’d like to earn his card this week – he’ll play two rounds each at TPC Sawgrass Dye’s Valley and Sawgrass Country Club – and have another shot at the big time and some unfinished business trying to win. He’s planning to putt conventionally at Q-School with an old Odyssey putter, a grip he began practicing with last month after his wacky Happy Gilmore style of holding the putter much like one would grip a hockey stick cooled off.

Levin’s got nothing to lose and everything to gain and the perspective of a grizzled veteran.

“When I was 23-24, my whole career and life hinged on this week,” Levin said. “I still want to make it, don’t get me wrong, but it’s no longer life or death.”

The return of five cards at PGA Tour Q-School has ‘everyone and his brother here to give it a try’

“If you screw up it’s like, oh my gosh, I’ve got to wait a whole ‘nother year.”

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – Ever since his grandfather Arnold Palmer died in 2016, Sam Saunders hasn’t found a replacement to be his swing coach. But anytime his game does go a bit haywire, his first call is to his pal Eric Cole, who had a breakthrough season on the PGA Tour in 2022-23 and has climbed to No. 41 in the Official World Golf Ranking.

“He still likes me to reach out to him and I do,” Saunders said. “He gets me back on track.”

Saunders had Cole as a caddie on the PGA Tour when he played in the big leagues previously and Cole was still battling to find his game on the mini-tours. It’s a role that Cole likely would have reprised this week as Saunders attempts to earn a promotion to the promised land via PGA Tour Qualifying School.

“If he wasn’t on his honeymoon he would’ve done it,” Saunders said. “I was like, ‘Dude, you can’t get divorced two days after you get married.’ He told me at his wedding, ‘Go get one of the five cards this week. My life will be so much better if you are out there with me. Just get it done.’ And, yeah, it would be a dream come true for the two of us to play on the PGA Tour together.”

After a decade of solely awarding varying levels of Korn Ferry Tour membership, final stage of PGA Tour Q-School marks the first time since 2012 that there are PGA Tour cards on the line. Upon conclusion of the 72-hole tournament, which begins on Thursday and will see the field play two 18-hole rounds – at both Dye’s Valley Course at TPC Sawgrass and Sawgrass Country Club – the top five finishers and ties will earn PGA Tour membership for 2024. Once again, the opportunity exists for a player in the field of 165 to go from obscurity to passing “Go” and collecting way more than $200 on the PGA Tour.

“Everyone and his brother are here to give it a try,” said veteran pro Rob Oppenheim, who first played in Q-School in 2001.

“Even if there was one card you’d come because it’s such a cool opportunity,” said Saunders.

Heartache and jubilation will both make an appearance on Sunday. Paul Azinger, the 1984 medalist, once described Q-School as “climbing up a cactus backwards, naked.” Erik Compton, who is in the field this week, said, “It was no place for women or children,” and retired pro Joe Ogilvie may have said it best when he mused, “Shakespeare would have written one hell of a tragedy here.”

It’s a competitive field with 19 Tour winners, veterans trying to improve or regain status and newbies who need directions to the locker room and are excited to have some status for next season and trying to better it.

The next 40 finishers and ties are exempt for multiple reshuffles of the 2024 Korn Ferry Tour season, guaranteeing them between eight to 12 starts depending on their finish. The next 20 finishers and ties earn exempt status for the Latin America Swing of the 2024 PGA Tour Americas season in addition to conditional Korn Ferry Tour status. All remaining finishers outside the aforementioned categories earn conditional Korn Ferry Tour and PGA Tour Americas membership for 2024.

For Saunders, he already has secured full status on the Korn Ferry Tour for next season so he has nothing to lose.

“I’m playing with house money,” he said. “Finishing sixth place does nothing for me in terms of positioning. I can fire at pins, I can play more aggressively than some other guys.”

It’s been a long time since Patton Kizzire has needed to play Q-School. After the stark reality hit him at the RSM Classic last month that he had failed to finish in the top 125, he shed tears at the realization that he would no longer be fully exempt. At No. 129, he’ll still have conditional status playing out of the Nos. 126-150 category, but the chance to secure full status is too compelling to pass up.

“All it is is an opportunity for me to move up,” he said.

The purse this week is a modest $510,000, with $50,000 going to the medalist, but Saunders said a paycheck is the farthest thing from anyone’s mind.

“That’s what makes it so pure. You’re playing for your entire career or an entire year,” he said.

“It’s kind of like the Olympics. People work their tails off for four years and then they have their one event and if you screw up it’s like, oh my gosh, I’ve got to wait four more years. Obviously the wait in golf isn’t that long, but if you screw up at Q-School and leave with limited status you feel like, oh my gosh, I’ve got to wait a whole ‘nother year – if I can make it back to this point – so it’s incredibly difficult.”

The weather could be dicey: cold, wind and rain are in the forecast. If such conditions prevail, there will be no faking it.

“It’s about embracing the suck sometimes,” said Ryan Gerard, “because it’s going to suck for a few days out here.”

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2 pro golfers suspended for betting on PGA Tour events

Neither player placed a bet on tournaments in which they were participating.

The PGA Tour announced Friday two members of the Korn Ferry Tour were suspended for violating the PGA Tour’s Integrity Program.

Vince India and Jake Staiano were suspended for placing bets on PGA Tour competitions, the release stated. Neither player placed a bet on tournaments in which he was participating.

India is suspended from PGA Tour-sanctioned competition for six months, with the suspension beginning Sept. 18, 2023 and is through March 17, 2024.

Staiano is suspended from PGA Tour-sanctioned competition for three months. His suspension began Sept. 11, 2023 and is through Dec. 10, 2023.

The PGA Tour said it wouldn’t comment further on the suspensions.

India, 34, has played in 176 events during his career on the Korn Ferry Tour. This season, he made 22 starts and missed 11 cuts while withdrawing from one event. His best result was a pair of T-21 finishes.

Staiano, 26, has played in 17 events on the Korn Ferry Tour in his career. This season, he made eight starts, making three cuts with his best finish being T-19 at the BMW Charity Pro-Am.

India’s pgatour.com bio page states his total career earnings are $662,823, while Staiano’s page indicates he has earned $30,910.

Korn Ferry Tour announces 2024 schedule featuring 26 tournaments

Here’s a look at the complete Korn Ferry Tour schedule for 2024.

The PGA Tour announced Tuesday the schedule for the 2024 Korn Ferry Tour season, which features 26 tournaments across six countries and 17 states, beginning in January and culminating in October at the Korn Ferry Tour Championship presented by United Leasing & Finance, where PGA Tour cards will be awarded to the top-30 finishers on the Korn Ferry Tour Points List.

The 2024 Korn Ferry Tour schedule, which marks the 34th season in the Tour’s history, will open with six consecutive international events, the most in a single season on the Tour since 2017.

The historic Visa Argentina Open presented by Macro will become a Korn Ferry Tour event next year, as well. The 117th playing of the tournament will be contested Feb. 29–March 3 in Buenos Aires, Argentina, at Olivos Golf Club, and the event will include coverage on ESPN Latin America. In partnership with The R&A, the Visa Argentina Open presented by Macro will continue its tradition of awarding its champion an exemption for The Open Championship.

Here’s a look at the complete Korn Ferry Tour schedule for 2024.

Date Tournament Location Course
Jan. 14-17 The Bahamas Great Exuma Classic at Sandals Emerald Bay Great Exuma, Bahamas
Sandals Emerald Bay
Golf Club
Jan. 21-24 The Bahamas Great Abaco Classic at The Abaco Club Great Abaco, Bahamas
The Abaco Club on
Winding Bay
Feb. 1-4 The Panama Championship Panama City, Panama
Club de Golf de Panama
Feb. 8-11 astara Golf Championship Bogota, Colombia
Country Club de Bogota – Pacos & Fabios y Fundadores
Feb. 29 – March 3 117 Visa Argentina Open presented by Macro Buenos Aires, Argentina Olivos Golf Club
March 7-10 astara Chile Classic presented by Scotiabank Santiago, Chile
Prince of Wales Country Club
April 4-7 Club Car Championship at The Landings Golf & Athletic Club Savannah, Georgia
The Landings Golf & Athletic Club – Deer Creek Course
April 18-21 Lecom Suncoast Classic Lakewood Ranch, Florida
Lakewood National Golf Club – Commander Course
April 25-28 Veritex Bank Championship Arlington, Texas
Texas Rangers Golf Club
May 16-19 AdventHealth Championship Kansas City, Missouri
Blue Hills Country Club
May 23-26 Visit Knoxville Open Knoxville, Tennessee
Holston Hills Country Club
May 30 – June 2 UNC Health Championship presented by Stitch Raleigh, North Carolina
Raleigh Country Club
June 6-9 BMW Charity Pro-Am presented by TD Synnex Greer, South Carolina
Thornblade Club & Carolina Country Club
June 13-16 Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas Wichita Open Benefitting KU Wichita Pediatrics Wichita, Kansas
Crestview Country Club
June 20-23 Compliance Solutions Championship Norman, Oklahoma
Jimmie Austin OU Golf Club
June 27-30 Memorial Health Championship presented by LRS Springfield, Illinois
Panther Creek Country Club
July 11-14 The Ascendant presented by Blue Berthoud, Colorado TPC Colorado
July 18-21 Price Cutter Charity Championship presented by Dr Pepper Springfield, Missouri
Highland Springs Country Club
July 25-28 NV5 Invitational presented by Old National Bank Glenview, Illinois The Glen Club
Aug. 1-4 Utah Championship presented by Zions Bank Farmington, Utah TBD
Aug. 8-11 Pinnacle Bank Championship Omaha, Nebraska
The Club at Indian Creek
Aug. 15-18 Magnit Championship Jackson Township, New Jersey
Metedeconk National Golf Club
Aug. 22-25 Albertsons Boise Open presented by Chevron Boise, Idaho
Hillcrest Country Club
Sept. 12-15 Simmons Bank Open for the Snedeker Foundation College Grove, Tennessee The Grove
Sept. 19-22 Nationwide Children’s Hospital Championship Columbus, Ohio
The Ohio State University Golf Club – Scarlet Course
Oct. 3-6 Korn Ferry Tour Championship presented by United Leasing & Finance French Lick, Indiana
French Lick Golf Resort – Pete Dye Course

 

Meet the 30 Korn Ferry Tour golfers who earned PGA Tour cards for 2024 season

These 30 players are being promoted to the big leagues.

The Korn Ferry Tour Championship was the 26th and final event of the 2023 season, and the top 30 players on the Korn Ferry Tour Points List upon conclusion of Sunday’s final round earned their PGA Tour cards for the 2024 season.

The action at Victoria National Golf Club in Newburgh, Indiana, was intense as 16 cards had already been finalized heading into the week, leaving just 14 cards still up for grabs.

Paul Barjon won the season-ending event and that vaulted him into the top 30. He was among the five players who were not in the top 30 when the week started who played their way in. Shad Tuten was dinged with a two-shot penalty Sunday and that cost him a card, dropping from 29th to 32nd. Jorge Fernandez Valdes finished in the 31st spot, a third-round 77 likely the biggest culprit for him.

The top KFT finisher was Ben Kohles, who had two wins this season.

For those who fell short, all is not lost. Players who finished Nos. 31-60 on the KFT points list have earned exemptions to the Final Stage of PGA Tour Q-School, where the top five finishers and ties will earn their 2024 PGA Tour cards.

The final stage is Dec. 14-17 at TPC Sawgrass Dye’s Valley Course as well as Sawgrass Country Club in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida.

The 2024 PGA Tour season starts at The Sentry, Jan. 4-7 at the Plantation Course at Kapalua but that event is reserved for PGA Tour winners and the top 30 in the PGA Tour’s FedEx Cup standings from last season, so for these KFT grads, their 2024 PGA Tour season will start the next week at the Sony Open of Hawaii.

Here’s the complete list of 30 Korn Ferry Tour golfers who earned their 2024 PGA Tour cards.

Two-shot penalty costs this Korn Ferry Tour golfer a PGA Tour card for 2024

Tuten will get a chance to try to make up for the gaffe, but he’ll have to wait two months.

The season-ending Korn Ferry Tour Championship determines which 30 golfers will gain promotion to the PGA Tour for 2024. With 16 of those spots already locked up, that left everyone battling for the other 14.

Shad Tuten was in a good position to grab one of those spots, as he was sitting 29th on the Korn Ferry Tour Points List heading into the 72-hole, no-cut finale. He then posted scores of 69-73-69 over the first three days to sit just outside the top 10.

But on Sunday, Tuten signed for a 76, which included a two-shot penalty at the soggy Victoria National Golf Club in Newburgh, Indiana.

According to the Korn Ferry Tour: “Shad Tuten was assessed a two-stroke penalty on hole No. 15 under preferred lies local rule E-3, turning a 2-over 74 into a 4-over 76. Tuten also fell from projected No. 30 on the Korn Ferry Tour Points List to No. 32.”

Chief referee Jim Duncan provided context on the ruling.

When it was all said and done, Tuten slid back from the No. 29 to No. 32 on the outside looking in at the 2024 PGA Tour season.

Tuten will get a chance to try to make up for the gaffe, but he’ll have to wait two months. Players who finished Nos. 31-60 on the KFT points list have earned exemptions to the Final Stage of PGA Tour Q-School, where the top five finishers and ties will earn their 2024 PGA Tour cards. The final stage is Dec. 14-17 at TPC Sawgrass Dye’s Valley Course as well as Sawgrass Country Club in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida.

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Paul Barjon wins 2023 Korn Ferry Tour Championship, earns PGA Tour card for 2024

Barjon won the no-cut, 72-hole Korn Ferry Tour Championship and now he’s getting a promotion.

Paul Barjon won the no-cut, 72-hole Korn Ferry Tour Championship on Sunday and now he’s getting a promotion.

In fact, he’s one of 30 golfers who locked up a 2024 PGA Tour card after the conclusion of the final KFT event of 2023.

Barjon shot 72-70-64-68 at Victoria National Golf Club in Newburgh, Indiana, to finish at 14 under and win by three shots over Fabian Gomez. Joe Highsmith and Mac Meissner tied for third at 10 under.

The KFT Championship was the 26th and final event of the 2023 season. Heading into the finale, 16 cards had already been locked up but there was intense battle for the remaining 14.

Barjon was among those chasing one of those 14 spots, as he started the week at No. 45 but his victory vaulted him all the way to No. 8.

Shad Tuten was 29th heading into the week but a costly two-stroke penalty dropped him to 32nd and on the outside looking in for a PGA Tour card.

Players who finished Nos. 31-60 on the KFT points list have earned exemptions to Final Stage of PGA Tour Q-School, where the top five finishers and ties will earn their 2024 PGA Tour card.

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30 golfers will earn 2024 PGA Tour cards after this week’s Korn Ferry Tour Championship

Here’s some of the key things to know about this week’s 2023 Korn Ferry Tour Championship.

Changes are a comin’ to the PGA Tour but one thing that’s not new is that a new crop of golfers will earn promotion to the big stage following the conclusion of this week’s Korn Ferry Tour Championship.

There are 16 who have already clinched their cards for next season with another 14 to be handed out come Sunday night at Victoria National Golf Club in Newburgh, Indiana.

But between now and then is 72 holes of intensity, future status of playing privileges hanging in the balance.

The 2024 PGA Tour schedule features a return of the calendar-based schedule. The season starts in Maui at The Sentry in January.

Here’s some of the key things to know about this week’s 2023 Korn Ferry Tour Championship.

Chan Kim wins on Korn Ferry Tour; David Kocher records circuit’s 10th 59

Kocher drained a long birdie putt on the 18th hole for a 59, the third on the Korn Ferry Tour this season.

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Chan Kim went bogey-free for 72 holes at the 2023 Albertsons Boise Open and won on the Korn Ferry Tour for the second week in a row. Kim went 66-62-64-64 to get to 28 under after four days at Hillcrest Country Club and still left himself little room for error considering what David Kocher did Sunday.

Kocher drained a long birdie putt on the 18th hole for a 59, amazingly the third 59 on the Korn Ferry Tour this season.

Kocher had 10 birdies – including six straight on Nos. 2 through 7 – and an eagle to get to 12 under for the day and 26 under for the week.

Kocher joins Mac Meissner, who posted a 59 at the Lecom Suncoast Classic at Lakewood National’s Commander Course in Lakewood Ranch, Florida, in April. That was the eighth sub-60 round in Korn Ferry Tour history.

Michael Feagles had the circuit’s ninth 59 at the BMW Charity Pro-Am in Greer, South Carolina, in June.

Now there’s a 10th, and a third in four months, thanks for Kocher.

2023 Albertsons Boise Open
Chan Kim celebrates on the 18th green after winning the the 2023 Albertsons Boise Open at Hillcrest Country Club in Boise, Idaho. (Photo: Alex Goodlett/Getty Images)

As for Kim, he’s the first back-to-back winner in two years. Cameron Young and Mito Pereira each did it on the KFT in 2021.

His last seven holes a week ago were also bogey free, so Kim has actually played 79 consecutive holes without a bogey. He’s the first to win and go bogey-free at the Albertsons.

To the winner goes the spoils, as Kim, second on the Korn Ferry Tour Points List, has also earned his PGA Tour card for the 2024 season.

The Albertsons Boise Open is the first of four events in the season-ending Korn Ferry Tour Finals.

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