PGA of America announces host for 2025 PGA Championship

The 2025 PGA Championship will be hosted by Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, North Carolina, the PGA of America announced Thursday.

The PGA of America announced Thursday Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, North Carolina, will serve as host for the 2025 PGA Championship.

Quail Hollow previously hosted the PGA Championship in 2017 when Justin Thomas defeated Francesco Molinari, Louis Oosthuizen and Patrick Reed by two shots to win his first major championship.

Quail Hollow also hosts the Wells Fargo Championship. This year’s event, previously scheduled for April 30-May 3, was canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic.

“The PGA of America is proud to return the PGA Championship to Quail Hollow and the wonderful host city of Charlotte,” PGA of America President Suzy Whaley said in a statement. “Quail Hollow’s course has a well-earned reputation as a stern test for the world’s finest players, but what sets the club apart is its membership and the welcoming atmosphere that they promote. The state of North Carolina’s appreciation for the game and major championship golf is remarkable.”

Quail Hollow is also scheduled to host the 2021 Presidents Cup Sept. 30-Oct. 3, 2021.

The news follows the PGA of America’s announcement from Tuesday that Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Oklahoma, will host the PGA Championship in 2030. Southern Hills hosted the PGA Championship four previous times in 1970, 1982, 1994 and 2007.

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Southern Hills to host PGA Championship in 2030 for record fifth time

Southern Hills in Tulsa, Oklahoma will play host to the PGA Championship for a record fifth time in 2030.

With uncertainty surrounding next month’s return of competitive golf on the PGA Tour, here’s some fun news: The PGA Championship is heading to Oklahoma.

In a decade.

On Tuesday afternoon the PGA of America announced that in 2030, for a record fifth time, Tulsa’s Southern Hills Country Club will host the PGA Championship. In addition to four PGA’s (1970, 1982, 1994, 2007), Southern Hills hosted the U.S. Open in 1958, 1977 and 2001.

The 2020 PGA Championship was scheduled to be held this week at TPC Harding Park in San Francisco before the coronavirus pandemic. Brooks Koepka now must wait for a chance to three-peat until the event is played Aug. 6-9.

Related: Future PGA Championship sites
More: Best PGA Championships of the last 30 years

In 2017, Southern Hills was awarded a future PGA Championship, but at that time, the date wasn’t announced.

The 2021 KitchenAid Senior PGA Championship will also be held at Southern Hills, May 25-30.

The 5 best PGA Championships of the last 30 years

So much drama, so many memories, but not quite on the level as these five all-time favorites. Here are the top 5 PGAs of the last 30 years.

The Wanamaker Trophy has been awarded 101 times, and while Brooks Koepka will have to wait a little longer to attempt to three-peat due to the COVID-19 Pandemic, it won’t stop us from reliving some of the great moments in PGA Championship history in what should have been this week for the 102nd PGA at TPC Harding Park in San Francisco.

For this exercise, we’ve centered on the top 5 PGA’s of the last 30 years, which meant leaving out some great duels such as David Toms over Phil Mickelson in 2001, the underdog story of Rich Beem over Tiger Woods, or how about unheralded Shaun Micheel stiffing it at the 72nd hole in 2003.

So much drama, so many memories, but not quite on the level as these five all-time favorites.

Scheduled site of 2020 PGA Championship will reopen on Monday

TPC Harding Park, the scheduled site of the 2020 PGA Championship, announced on Saturday that it will reopen for golf on Monday. 

It’s certainly not an ironclad indication that the event will go off without a hitch, but there’s good news for those hoping to catch the PGA Championship on the West Coast this year.

TPC Harding Park, the scheduled site of the event, announced on Saturday that it will reopen for golf on Monday.

On March 16, a “shelter-in-place” order was announced for six Bay Area counties, directing residents to say inside and away from others.

Earlier this week, those counties announced an extension of the regional order, but there were some modifications, with one being the ability for golf courses to open to the public under new guidelines.

TPC Harding Park announced on Twitter that it will re-open.

Harding Park was selected in 2014 to host this year’s PGA Championship. If it loses the event, the soonest it would likely return is 2025, as the next four PGA Championship sites, starting in 2021, have been selected. Locations for ’26, ’27, ’28, and ’29 have also already been selected.

Breaking down where Tiger Woods might play for the rest of 2020

Trying to determine the playing schedule of one Tiger Woods was a regular, and often futile, exercise long before the COVID-19 global pandemic changed the world – and the PGA Tour’s – order. But with the PGA Tour’s announcement Thursday of an …

Trying to determine the playing schedule of one Tiger Woods was a regular, and often futile, exercise long before the COVID-19 global pandemic changed the world – and the PGA Tour’s – order.

But with the PGA Tour’s announcement Thursday of an ambitious schedule for the rest of 2020 – its restart coming June 11-14 at the Charles Schwab Challenge at the Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas – fans naturally began to wonder when the reigning Masters champion would tee it up.

So here’s some Tiger guesswork.

Woods hasn’t played since Feb. 16 in the Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club north of Los Angeles, where his final-round 77 left him in 68th and last place among those who made the cut.

Citing a stiff back, he skipped the subsequent WGC-Mexico Championship, Honda Classic, Arnold Palmer Invitational and the Players Championship, where the season came to a halt after the first round. If play resumes mid-June – and that remains far from certain due to the continuing battle against the coronavirus – there would be 24 consecutive weeks of play heading into Thanksgiving.

Woods’ health and the major circles on his calendar – the Masters, PGA Championship, U.S. Open and the Open Championship – have always been the key points on the compass that determines the direction his schedule takes. He also refrains from playing three consecutive weeks and rarely competes the week before a major.

Thus, if the 15-time major champion, who is looking for a record 83rd PGA Tour title, is healthy, put down as locks the three major championships that remain on the schedule: the PGA Championship at Harding Park on Aug. 6-9 in San Francisco; the U.S. Open on Sept. 17-20 at Winged Foot Golf Club in New York; and the Masters on Nov. 12-15 at Augusta National Golf Club in Georgia, where he’ll try to win a record-tying sixth green jacket.

Another lock would be the Hero World Challenge on Dec. 3-6 at Albany in the Bahamas. He hosts the tournament, and it benefits his foundation. It would be hard to imagine Woods not playing the Ryder Cup on Sept. 25-27 at Whistling Straits in Wisconsin, even with it being the week after the U.S. Open.

Just below lock status would be the Memorial on July 16-19 at Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio. That’s Jack Nicklaus’ annual gathering that Woods hasn’t skipped when healthy and has won a record five times.

Put down at least one of the first two events of the FedExCup Playoffs – the Northern Trust on Aug. 20-23 at TPC Boston and the BMW Championship the following week at Olympia Fields in Illinois.

If he qualifies, he’d likely play the Tour Championship on Sept. 3-7 at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta.

Now it gets tricky. Woods has won 18 WGC events – the next person in the win total is Dustin Johnson with six – and he places these events on the importance scale along with the Players Championship and FedExCup Playoffs just below the majors.

But the WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational in Memphis, with four guaranteed rounds and tons of FedExCup and world rankings points, is the week before the PGA Championship. Would Woods play in the heat of Memphis and then fly to the cooler temps in San Francisco in back-to-back weeks? The take here slants toward no.

As for the WGC-HSBC Champions on Oct. 29-Nov. 1 in Shanghai, Woods has only played it twice, the last time coming 10 years ago. So that’s a no.

In the 50-50 category is the Zozo Championship on Oct 22-25 in Chiba, Japan. Woods won his record-tying 82nd Tour title there last fall. The demands of traveling halfway across the globe and the protocols concerning COVID-19 – would he have to quarantine upon arrival? – suggest at best a 50 percent chance of playing.

Two other events fall in the 50-50 category – the first two of the hopeful restart to the season. With the sports world clamoring for any live action, Woods, who one has to believe would be chomping at the bit to knock off rust, might not pass on playing either the Charles Schwab Challenge or the RBC Heritage at Harbour Town in Hilton Head, South Carolina.

But he’s only played each tournament once, in 1997 when he tied for fourth at Colonial and in 1999 when he tied for 18th at Harbour Town.

So, to complete this latest exercise of figuring out where Tiger will play next, here’s the forecast. Woods will play nine events – the Charles Schwab Challenge, the Memorial, PGA Championship, Northern Trust, Tour Championship, U.S. Open, Ryder Cup, Masters and Hero World Challenge.

But that’s just a hunch.

PGA Championship future sites through 2031

There are PGA Championships scheduled out to 2031, although venues for 2025, 2026 and 2030 are still to be determined.

In 2019, the PGA Championship was moved up from August to May.

In 2020, the PGA will slide back on the calendar but not because of another schedule overhaul. Rather, the global coronavirus pandemic has forced changes across the board for golf tournaments.

On April 6, the PGA Championship was tentatively rescheduled for Aug. 6-9, while staying at TPC Harding Park in San Francisco. PGA of America CEO Seth Waugh indicated on April 14 that every effort will be made to stick to those dates, even if it means no fans on the grounds.

There are PGA Championships scheduled out to 2031, although venues for 2025, 2026 and 2030 are still to be determined.

Future locations

2020

TPC Harding Park, San Francisco, Aug. 6-9

2021

Kiawah Island Golf Resort, Ocean Course, Kiawah Island, South Carolina

2022

Trump National Golf Club, Bedminster, New Jersey

2023

Oak Hill Country Club, East Course, Pittsford, New York

2024

Valhalla Golf Club, Louisville, Kentucky

2027

Aronimink Golf Club, Newtown Square, Pennsylvania

2028

The Olympic Club, Lake Course, San Francisco

2029

Baltusrol Golf Club, Lower Course, Springfield, New Jersey

2031

Congressional Country Club, Blue Course, Bethesda, Maryland

PGA Championship still on for August and will happen without fans if it comes to it

The PGA of America is determined to stage the 2020 PGA Championship and will do so without fans if it comes down to it. Seth Waugh, CEO of the PGA of America, was a guest on SiriusXM PGA Tour radio on Tuesday and discussed the plans to stage the …

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The PGA of America is determined to stage the 2020 PGA Championship and will do so without fans if it comes down to it.

Seth Waugh, CEO of the PGA of America, was a guest on SiriusXM PGA Tour radio on Tuesday and discussed the plans to stage the major championship this year.

“August feels pretty good to us,” he said.

The PGA Championship was originally set for May 14-17 but it was postponed to Aug. 6-9. It is keeping its current location at TPC Harding Park in San Francisco but Waugh admitted that could change, too.

It was one week ago that golf’s governing bodies made a slew of schedule announcements, including new PGA dates, new dates for the Masters and the U.S. Open and the cancellation of the Open Championship.

Waugh said if they need to keep Harding Park free of fans, that’s what will happen.

“Our plan is to try and do it as normally as possible, with fans, obviously, and have a fairly normal PGA Championship at Harding Park,” he said. “If the safest way – or the only way to do it – is to do it without fans, we’re fully prepared to do that.

“We believe that having it as a television event is worth doing regardless of whether there’s fans there or not. Obviously that’ll change the experience but we think the world is starved for some entertainment, and particularly in sports. We think golf has a unique ability to be first out in sports, in that we’re played over a couple hundred acres and naturally have social distancing.”

Waugh added that there are three plans right now.

“Plan A is with fans. Plan B is without fans and Plan C is – if San Francisco or California does not think they could hold it – figure out if there is somewhere in the country that could hold it.”

On Tuesday, California Governor Gavin Newsom cast doubt that sporting events with fans could return this summer.

“The prospect of mass gatherings is negligible at best until we get to herd immunity and get to a vaccine.”

If TPC Harding Park loses the 2020 PGA Championship, the next open spot on the list of future venues is 2025, with 2030 also open at this time.

“We’re going to do everything we can to play the PGA Championship this year,” Waugh said.

New Tour schedule aims to play Masters in November, keep Ryder Cup in 2020

Golf’s governing bodies are close to unveiling a new schedule that would see at least three majors and the Ryder Cup contested this year.

After weeks of daily conference calls in a frantic bid to rescue a season crippled by the COVID-19 pandemic, golf’s governing bodies are close to unveiling a new schedule that would see at least three major championships — including the Masters in November — and the Ryder Cup contested this year.

The details of the ambitious revised schedule were outlined to Golfweek by three people close to the discussions, all of whom spoke on condition of anonymity since they are not authorized to address the matter publicly.

The planned joint announcement of a new schedule has been delayed while the R&A decides if the 149th Open Championship — slated for July 16-19 at Royal St. George’s in England — will be postponed or canceled entirely. A rescheduled Open would take place at the same venue from Sept. 17-20 — just one week before the Ryder Cup at Whistling Straits in Wisconsin. If the R&A opts to cancel, that slot on the calendar could see the U.S. Open played at Winged Foot.

“At this point we are not in a position to confirm any specific dates. While we are hopeful that we will be able to conduct the U.S. Open at Winged Foot Golf Club in June, it is increasingly likely that we will need to postpone,” said Craig Annis, the USGA’s chief brand officer. “We have been working with our broadcast partner Fox Sports, the PGA Tour, and other golf organizations to determine what a viable postponement date could be should we need to make that decision. We are currently considering a number of options and expect to be in a position to announce a decision by next week.”

One of those options under consideration: holding the U.S. Open later in the year on the West coast. The USGA has had initial conversations with two potential venues in California: Torrey Pines near San Diego, which has long been in line to host the Open in ’21, and Pebble Beach, where the ’19 edition was played. Annis acknowledged conversations are underway with several alternate venues and did not rule out a move west.

“Depending on how far out we might have to go it could mean that we need to find a new location. If we get beyond September we would need to find a U.S. Open-ready course in a place with the right climate and agronomics, with consideration to available daylight hours,” he said. “We are fortunate to have a number of USGA host site partners who we are engaging with to determine viability.”

Both Torrey Pines and Pebble Beach have multiple courses on property — a key consideration in getting a full field around for the first two rounds with limited daylight (Pinehurst in North Carolina has also been mooted, though that is considered unlikely.). “Certainly if we had to postpone and if we moved to a slot in the late fall, we would potentially need two courses if the size of the field remains the same,” Annis conceded. “The traditional timing of the U.S. Open allows us to work with maximum daylight hours. Any move away from that would provide daylight challenges for us that we would need to address and playing on two courses could be a way to resolve that challenge.”

The Masters, which was due to begin next week at Augusta National Golf Club, is tentatively penciled in for the week of Nov. 9, according to two people with knowledge of the current planning who spoke on condition of anonymity because they’re not authorized to speak publicly. And what was for so many years the last major of the season is now aiming to be the first: the PGA Championship will be scheduled for Aug. 6-9 at Harding Park in San Francisco.

“Glory’s First Shot” will be followed by the PGA Tour’s Wyndham Championship and then three FedEx Cup playoff events, culminating with the Tour Championship at East Lake in Atlanta on Labor Day weekend. Early talks included possibly restaging the Players Championship, which was abandoned after just one round last month, but the Tour’s flagship event will not now be part of the new lineup. As things stand, only the Ryder Cup will be played on its original dates.

It’s unclear whether the Tour would seek to begin its 2020-21 wraparound season as usual after the Tour Championship. An announcement on a new LPGA Tour schedule could come as early as this week, while the impact of the revised calendar on the European Tour remains uncertain.

While any refreshed schedule would obviously be subject to change — and complete cancellation, given the rapidly expanding coronavirus crisis — the timeframe targeted to resume the PGA Tour season is mid-June. That could potentially allow the Tour to use the four weeks vacated by the Olympics and the U.S. and British Opens to stage tournaments that were previously postponed. Events currently rostered for that summer period — like the RBC Canadian Open in Toronto, the Travelers Championship in Hartford, Conn., and the WGC-St. Jude Invitational in Memphis, Tenn. — could be impacted, either to facilitate the playing of other stops or because of local conditions.

Another uncertain element is television, with networks faced with finding slots to broadcast golf at a time when they have commitments to other sports (assuming some normalcy has returned to the sporting calendar by then). NBC, CBS, Fox and ESPN all have obligations with the NFL, college football, Premier League soccer and NASCAR, among others. That could mean, for example, that more U.S. Open coverage is aired on Fox Sports 1 rather than Fox’s main network. Fox is contractually obliged to air the championship on its main channel only when it is played in its traditional June date.

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Golf’s five families frantically discussing saving schedule

The PGA Tour, USGA, PGA of America, Royal & Ancient and Augusta National Golf Club are discussing how to hold all four majors in 2020.

Golf’s most powerful governing bodies have been locked in discussions over the last 48 hours in a desperate effort to salvage the 2020 season and contest the game’s four major championships, multiple people with direct knowledge of the situation have told Golfweek. The people spoke on the condition of anonymity because they are not authorized to speak publicly.

Talks remain very fluid given the highly unpredictable nature of the COVID-19 public health emergency and the government response to it. The conversations involve the PGA Tour, the USGA, the PGA of America, the Royal & Ancient and Augusta National Golf Club.

On Tuesday, the PGA Championship — which had been planned for May 14-17 at TPC Harding Park in San Francisco — was postponed by the PGA of America. Within minutes of that call, the PGA Tour canceled another four tournaments on its schedule through mid-May. The nixing of the RBC Heritage, the Zurich Classic, the Wells Fargo Championship and the Byron Nelson brings to nine the number of events scrapped by the Tour in the last five days.

The week of August 3 is being looked at to reschedule the PGA Championship, two people with knowledge of the situation have told Golfweek. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they are not authorized to speak publicly. Those dates coincide with the women’s golf competition at the Olympics. The men’s contest in Tokyo concludes the previous week.

The Masters, which announced its postponement last week, could potentially take place in October. As of now, the other two majors remain scheduled on their original dates: the U.S. Open at Winged Foot (June 18-21) and the Open Championship at Royal St. George’s (July 16-19).

That might change in response to the global emergency, said Craig Annis, chief brand officer of the USGA. “Based on shifting dynamics, postponing is a possibility that we are grappling with, but our goal is to keep our slot and play at Winged Foot,” he said.

Winged Foot is in Westchester County, N.Y., a hot spot for coronavirus outbreaks. One person with knowledge of the situation who was not authorized to speak publicly on the matter says two possible venues are being internally discussed as alternatives: Oakmont Country Club and Pinehurst No. 2.

A salvaged schedule would see the PGA Tour season resume in mid-to-late May, a goal that is entirely dependent on fast-changing circumstances. The FedEx Cup playoffs would then take place slightly later in the schedule.

 

 

PGA Championship postponed due to coronavirus outbreak

The coronavirus outbreak has caused the postponement of the PGA Championship at TPC Harding Park in San Francisco.

The PGA Championship has come off the clock. With all eyes on golf’s second major in an uncertain climate created by a coronavirus outbreak, the PGA of America announced on Tuesday that it would postpone the event originally scheduled for May 14-17 at TPC Harding Park in San Francisco.

The organization said it hoped to reschedule the event at TPC Harding Park later in the summer, and that it would remain in contact with the PGA Tour and the City of San Francisco to find the right date.

“Throughout our evaluation process, we have been committed to following the guidance of public health authorities and given the coronavirus shelter-in-place order in effect in San Francisco, postponement is the best decision for all involved,” said PGA of America CEO Seth Waugh.

That’s now two majors that have been postponed, considering that Augusta National made the same announcement March 13 for next month’s Masters Tournament.

A day earlier, PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan had announced the Tour would cancel the Players and all events through the Valero Texas Open (scheduled April 2-5) due to the coronavirus outbreak.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended on March 15 that gatherings be limited to 50 people or less for the next eight weeks. The PGA Championship fell just one week outside of the recommendation.

The situation became more uncertain Monday afternoon when a “shelter in place” order was announced for six Bay Area counties, directing residents to say inside and away from others for three weeks.

San Francisco Mayor London Breed issued an emergency declaration aimed at preparing the city for an outbreak before there were any confirmed cases of the virus in late February. President Trump declared a national state of emergency on Friday, March 13. As of that date, California public health officials reported the state had five fatalities and more than 270 official coronavirus cases, with an additional 11,400 people in self-isolation. About 60 percent of confirmed cases stemmed from the Bay Area.

With two of the season’s four majors postponed, attention now falls to the U.S. Open, scheduled for June 18-21 at Winged Foot Golf Club in Mamaroneck, New York.

Local qualifying for the U.S. Open was set to begin on April 27 but the USGA announced Tuesday that it would cancel that stage of qualifying and look to redesign the qualifying process going forward as events unfold.

The USGA will continue to hold open the U.S. Open competition dates, however.

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