Pair of PGA Tour stars want Tour Championship format to change, but not host East Lake

“Man, I’m a big believer in not changing anything that’s already really great.”

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Xander Schauffele capped his PGA Tour Rookie of the Year season in 2017 with a win at the Tour Championship.

Over the last six years the 29-year-old has made the Tour’s season finale his personal ATM with consecutive finishes of 1-T7-2-T2-T5-4. It’s safe to say Schauffele, 29, knows a thing or two about the event and its esteemed host, East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta, and he didn’t hold back his opinions while discussing both ahead of this week’s 2023 Tour Championship.

As the culmination of a season-long race for the FedEx Cup, the Tour Championship features a staggered start system that aims to reward players for their performance over the season. The top player in the FedEx Cup standings, world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, will start at 10 under, with Viktor Hovland in second at 8 under, Rory McIlroy in third at 7 under and so on. Schauffele will start 15th at 3 under.

“I can happily say I’ve been on both sides of it. I’ve never won the (FedEx Cup), but I’ve won this event and I was given a trophy and I’ve won it and was not. So I can’t really comment on that, just because I haven’t thought of a way to make it better,” said Schauffele of the staggered start, who also claimed he didn’t “even know how the tournament works” earlier in his pre-tournament press conference.

“I still believe that when I talk to some friends and people they still feel like a little confused on how it all happens,” he continued. “I think this is supposed to be like our most important event all year. It kind of comes down to this moment. And, like, for people to be like a little bit confused, it’s still not a finished product to me in that sense.”

Jon Rahm hasn’t been shy with his opinions on the Tour Championship, and while he admitted the format is easier to understand, he still believes some work needs to be done.

“I don’t think it’s the best we can come up with,” said the world No. 3. “I think I’ve expressed my dislike towards the fact that you can come in ranked No. 1 in the FedEx Cup. You can win every single tournament up until this one. You have a bad week, you finish 30th, and now you’ll forever be known as 30th in the FedEx Cup this season. I don’t think that’s very fair.”

The Spaniard liked the old format because if a player entered the week as No. 1 they rarely fell out of the top three.

“But when you’re in fifth place you are, what, 5 under, so you’re five shots from the lead,” he explained. “But you’re also five shots from 30th place. So that to me just doesn’t make much sense.”

“So if you ask me I think we can come up with something better.”

However, as Schauffele points out, after Thursday and Friday, when the opening rounds even out the scores, everyone is on the same page through to the finish.

“Like it doesn’t even matter anymore how it started, it’s all about how you finish it,” said Schauffele. “And everyone knows what’s going on when guys are coming down this nice final stretch here at East Lake and everyone knows what’s at stake.”

That final stretch will look drastically different this time next year as the club is set to undergo a “dramatic renovation” to everything from the golf course to East Lake’s entire infrastructure, including drainage and irrigation.

“Man, I’m a big believer in not changing anything that’s already really great,” said Schauffele. “When you go to a restaurant and order something that tastes really good, I usually order it over and over and over again … So when this course is set up great and the condition it’s in right now, with really fast greens, rough is up, it’s awesome. It’s hard. You have to golf your ball.

“So the guy that’s going to come, Andrew Green is going to come in and he said he’s going to take out a lot of trees and it’s a little concerning, to be honest,” Schauffele explained. “I’m not a member here. I hear members are excited. But as a Tour pro, we talk about distance and all those things, but the thing that we can’t do is hit it through trees. So when you start taking a bunch of trees off a property it definitely can change how it plays. And I’m hoping that East Lake keeps its teeth. Because when it plays hard you shoot 10- or 12-under you’re going to win this golf tournament.”

Schauffele and Rahm may be competitors this week (and at next month’s Ryder Cup), but the two are in total agreement on both the Tour Championship and its host course.

“So if it was up to me, there’s not much that this golf course needs changing,” said Rahm. “With that said, the golf course does belong to the members, so the members should do whatever the members think is best for the golf course. That’s what I would say. I think it’s great the way it is right now, but if they want to make it member-friendly, I am nobody to object against that.”

Just like the PGA Tour, East Lake serves its members. The club has listened to its constituents, will the Tour?

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Trevor Immelman Q&A: What to watch at Tour Championship, the big chair at CBS and Ryder Cup storylines

Immelman reflects on his first year as lead analyst for CBS and dishes on Tour Championship, Ryder Cup storylines.

This PGA Tour season has not disappointed fans in the least bit.

We saw Viktor Hovland steal the BMW Championship with a record-setting and career low round. Nick Taylor’s drought-ending bomb of a putt to win the RBC Canadian Open. Rickie Fowler returned to the top of the leaderboard at the Rocket Mortage Classic.

Trevor Immelman was there to call it all.

The 2008 Masters champion has been perched in the CBS Sports super tower off the 18th green as lead analyst alongside Jim Nantz for a full season now, and we caught up with him to discuss his year in the big chair, storylines for the Tour Championship and how he would go about picking players for the Ryder Cup.

Check the yardage book: East Lake for the 2023 Tour Championship

StrackaLine offers a hole-by-hole course guide for East Lake Golf Club.

East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta – site of the PGA Tour’s 2023 Tour Championship and the finale in the FedEx Cup Playoffs – originally was designed by Tom Bendelow and opened in 1908. Donald Ross redesigned the layout in 1913, and Rees Jones worked on the course in 1994.

Architect Andrew Green will begin another renovation, with a goal of returning many of the Ross features to East Lake, soon after the last putt drops in the Tour Championship.

East Lake ranks No. 5 on Golfweek’s Best 2023 list of top private clubs in Georgia, and it’s No. 92 on the list of top classic courses built before 1960 in the U.S.

The course will play to 7,346 yards and a par of 70 for the Tour Championship. Nos. 1 and 14 normally play as par 5s for members, but they will be listed as par 4s for the Tour Championship with only Nos. 6 and 18 playing as par 5s.

Thanks to yardage books provided by StrackaLine – the maker of detailed yardage books for thousands of courses around the world – we can see exactly the challenges the players face this week.

Lynch: Jay Monahan opens up on his health, but stays positively mum on his Saudi deal

Monahan’s shareholders in the locker room primarily have one yardstick (money) and one concern (how they’ll get more of it).

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It’s been 25 years since Tom Wolfe published “A Man in Full,” the novel in which an Atlanta good ol’ boy, Charlie Croker, sees the high times grind to a halt as the reserves of cash and goodwill so long extended to him finally run dry. Eventually, even his allies turn. “His botching things was malfeasance. It made them look so goddamned bad!” Wolfe wrote of Croker’s fleeing friends. “Half a billion! Now his heedless deadbeat squandering was making them all look like fools! Suckers! Patsies!”

For a time this summer, it seemed Jay Monahan was destined for his own “Cap’m Charlie” reckoning as the PGA Tour commissioner’s issues mirrored those of Wolfe’s character. There was the apparent need for a cash infusion to meet bills, laid bare in the announcement of a Framework Agreement with the Saudi Arabian Public Investment Fund. There were the legal headaches, LIV’s withdrawn litigation having been replaced with a Justice Department antitrust probe and U.S. Senate subcommittee theatrics. There were the people who thrived in the good times who began to sour when the going got tougher, in Monahan’s case the players, whose anger at the secrecy around the Saudi deal — and the associated moral backflip, but mostly the secrecy — threatened his future.

In retrospect, the least surprising moment of Monahan’s long, hot summer was his taking a month-long leave of absence to address his mental health.

The Monahan of ’23 is markedly different from what we saw twelve months ago at the Tour Championship, when he announced plans for designated events, increased purses and bonuses, and rookie subsidies. He was laying out a vision. Sure, it wasn’t his — it was largely the creation of Colin Neville, the Raine Group partner brought in to advise players by Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy — but it was an actionable concept. There were specifics.

This year, there were none.

He relied on boilerplate remarks and repeatedly stiff-armed inquiries about the ongoing negotiations with the Saudis. “We continue to reinforce the fact that the framework agreement ultimately is the path that we’re on and when we’re able to share more information, we will,” he said.

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Even when Monahan touted figures highlighting the robustness of the PGA Tour’s business — viewership, engagement, revenue, demographics — it felt like a perfunctory concession to metrics that only matter in a rational business environment, a conventional standard by which he is no longer judged. His shareholders in the locker room primarily have one yardstick (money) and one concern (how they’ll get more of it).

Which explains why the commissioner was at pains Tuesday to remind us for whom he works. Monahan never could muster the imperious swagger of his predecessors, but what little he had was extinguished by the recent revolt in which players demanded more say in governance. I asked if he saw that move by players as an indictment of how the organization has been managed.

“I did not,” he replied. “I look at this as not an indictment, but a very positive message… We’ve listened, we’ve responded, and now we have the right people, the right process in place for us to be able to move forward and determine that future. But I look at it as a positive and something that I and we embrace.”

Something else Monahan has embraced is this phrase: “a positive outcome for the PGA Tour,” words he relied upon several times today. What constitutes a “positive outcome” is, of course, wholly subjective. Some people within the Tour contend that a positive outcome has already been accomplished — the ending of litigation. Others point to the Tour’s creation of a for-profit entity to expand its product, an investment vehicle in which the Saudis need not be passengers, or at least not the only ones. There’s also a group for whom a positive outcome is no Saudi partnership at all, a position bolstered by reports this week from human rights groups that their putative business partners machine-gunned hundreds of migrants and asylum-seekers.

Monahan acknowledged that there is other investment interest — clean capital, as it were — but that he is focused on talks with the Saudi PIF. “I think the realization that there is an entity that can be invested into at the PGA Tour and the uniqueness of being able to invest into a professional sports league of the caliber, quality and sustainability of the PGA Tour, obviously has generated a lot of interest,” he said. “But in terms of alternatives, right now, you know, the sole conversation that we’re having is the conversation we’re having with PIF.”

Right now. Or until an alternative definition of a “positive outcome” has the votes.

The only area in which Monahan provided clarity was his health. “I have never felt better mentally and physically than I feel right now. And obviously, I had to take some steps to go from where I was to this position. But I’m a work in progress,” he said. “So I’m working on the things that I’ve learned that are going to help me in my life and help me in this role. That’s how I feel, but more importantly my doctors, my wife, and girls, ultimately, that’s how they feel about how I’m doing. They are my arbiters. I feel as strong as I’ve felt in a long, long time.”

In that too, Monahan echoes Wolfe’s Charlie Croker, who found comfort in his version of stoicism, albeit too late in his case.

While he didn’t offer much in the way of policy particulars, Monahan gave the impression of someone for whom professional stresses now seem less important, less defining. Whatever his other shortcomings this summer, that’s not a bad place to arrive at for a man charged with laying out a sumptuous banquet for people with competing views about the menu, the timeliness of the service and the sourcing of the food.

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Photos: Equipment used by Scottie Scheffler, Collin Morikawa and more at 2023 Tour Championship

Close up golf equipment photos taken at the 2023 Tour Championship.

ATLANTA — What the season-ending Tour Championship lacks in quantity, it makes up for in quality. Only the golfers who finished ranked in the top 30 on the FedEx Cup point list after last week’s BMW Championship earned a spot in this week’s event at the East Lake Golf Club. Several big-name players failed to qualify, but some fresh faces are primed to play in their first Tour Championship and make a run at the $18 million first prize.

Golfweek’s equipment guru David Dusek is on-site at East Lake and sent these photos from the practice area and driving range of some of the equipment he spotted.

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Max Homa and Tom Kim face off in hilarious two-hole 1 Club Challenge

Watch the full match here.

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Max Homa and Tom Kim faced off against each other in Sunday singles at the 2022 Presidents Cup. Homa took home the W, 1 up.

Less than a year later, both players are in Atlanta for the 2023 Tour Championship at East Lake Golf Club. Homa will begin the week 4 under, six shots back of Scottie Scheffler (10 under), while Kim will start at 2 under, eight back.

But before play gets underway Thursday, Titleist released a two-hole 1 Club Challenge, pitting Homa and Kim against each other once again. The video is hosted by No Laying Up’s D.J. Piehowski, while NLU’s Kevin Van Valkenburg serves as the player’s caddie.

Can Kim get his revenge, or will Homa come out on top once again? Watch the full video below:

Jon Rahm on disruptive gambling fans: ‘I feel like we hear it every single round’

“It’s very easy, very, very easy in golf if you want to affect somebody,” Rahm said.

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During the third round of last week’s BMW Championship at Olympia Fields, gambling fans yelled at Max Homa and Chris Kirk in an attempt to influence their putting strokes.

Homa had some choice words for the fan after he signed his card: “He was cheering and yelling at Chris (Kirk) for missing his putt short, and he kept yelling that he had – one of them had $3 for me to make mine, and I got to the back of my back stroke, and he yelled, ‘pull it’ pretty loud[ly], and I made it right in the middle, and then I just started yelling at him, and then (caddie) Joe (Greiner) yelled at him.”

During his pre-tournament press conference at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta, Jon Rahm said that it happens a lot more than we may know.

“I feel like we hear it every single round,” Rahm said Tuesday ahead of this week’s Tour Championship. “That happens way more often than you guys may hear. I mean, it’s very, very present.

“In golf, spectators are very close, and even if they’re not directly talking to you, they’re close enough to where if they say to their buddy, I bet you 10 bucks he’s going to miss it, you hear it.

“So it happens more often than you think, yeah. But not only that, on the tee and down the fairway. I mean, luckily golf fans are pretty good for the most part and you’re hearing the positive, I got 20 bucks you make birdie here, things like that. But no, it’s more often than you think.”

Tour Championship: Picks to win | Thursday tee times, how to watch

When asked if the PGA Tour should step in and attempt to put an end to it, Rahm agreed.

“You know, in a game like this where you’re allowed to have your favorites, but it’s not a team aspect, right, it’s not a home team against a visiting team, I think the Tour maybe should look into it because you don’t want it to get out of hand, right? It’s very easy, very, very easy in golf if you want to affect somebody,” he said. “You’re so close, you can yell at the wrong time, and it’s very easy for that to happen.

“So I think they could look into it, but at the same time, it would be extremely difficult for the Tour to somehow control the 50,000 people scattered around the golf course, right? So it’s a complicated subject. You don’t want it to get out of control, but you also want to have the fans to have the experience they want to have.”

Rahm, who will begin the Tour Championship at 6 under, four back of Scottie Scheffler (10 under), is +800 (8/1) to win the FedEx Cup.

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5 things we learned from Commissioner Jay Monahan’s State of the PGA Tour press conference

PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan spoke during his annual State of the PGA Tour at East Lake Golf Club.

PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan said he is “certain” that a definitive agreement will be reached with Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund before the end of the year.

“As I sit here today, I am confident that we will reach an agreement that achieves a positive outcome for the PGA Tour and our fans,” Monahan said. “I see it and I’m certain of it.”

Monahan spoke on Tuesday morning during his annual State of the PGA Tour at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta, ahead of this week’s Tour Championship.

A year ago, Monahan introduced a number of changes that were implemented this season to combat LIV Golf, which had lured a number of the top players, including 2022 British Open champion Cameron Smith, with lucrative guaranteed contracts. Much has changed in the last 12 months, most significantly with the announcement of a framework agreement to create a new commercial entity with PIF. Monahan claims that a deal will secure the Tour’s position in “the driver’s seat” as the preeminent place for professional golf.

But at what cost? It has given Yasir Al-Rumayyan, the chairperson of PIF, a seat at the table he long desired, if not making him the most powerful person in the game. To Monahan, it is a price worth paying to make the litigation go away and bring new financial resources to the PGA Tour to make it bigger and, in his opinion, better.

“I see it because when you look at the performance of our players, you look at the commitment of our players, our partners, our fans, all of our constituents, our tournaments, I feel like we’re in the strongest position to be able to succeed and successfully conclude these negotiations in a way that protects the legacy of the PGA Tour on a long-term basis,” he said.

“I fully acknowledge that this hasn’t been an easy road,” he later added. “What’s most important through this all is that the PGA Tour has gotten stronger.”

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Here are four more things we learned from Monahan’s press conference.

Thursday tee times, streaming info for the 2023 Tour Championship

Everything you need to know for the first round at East Lake.

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After a long, adventurous season, the final event of the PGA Tour schedule is here as the top-30 players in the standings have descended upon East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta for the 2023 Tour Championship.

After his runner-up finish to Viktor Hovland at the BMW Championship, world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler will tee off Thursday with a two-shot lead (10 under) over the Norwegian (8 under). Three-time FedEx Cup winner Rory McIlroy will begin at 7 under, while world No. 3 Jon Rahm will start at 6 under.

You can find the full staggered-start leaderboard here (with a few picks to win).

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s everything you need to know for the first round of the 2023 Tour Championship. All times Eastern.

Thursday tee times

Tee time Players
11:26 a.m.
Jordan Spieth, Sepp Straka
11:37 a.m.
Emiliano Grillo, Tyrrell Hatton
11:48 a.m.
Jason Day, Sam Burns
11:59 a.m.
Adam Schenk, Collin Morikawa
12:10 p.m.
Taylor Moore, Nick Taylor
12:21 p.m.
Corey Conners, Si Woo Kim
12:32 p.m.
Sungjae Im, Tony Finau
12:43 p.m.
Xander Schauffele, Tom Kim
12:54 p.m.
Keegan Bradley, Rickie Fowler
1:05 p.m.
Tommy Fleetwood, Russell Henley
1:16 p.m.
Wyndham Clark, Matt Fitzpatrick
1:27 p.m.
Patrick Cantlay, Brian Harman
1:38 p.m.
Lucas Glover, Max Homa
1:49 p.m.
Rory McIlroy, Jon Rahm
2 p.m.
Scottie Scheffler, Viktor Hovland

How to watch

You can watch Golf Channel for free on fuboTV. ESPN+ is the exclusive home for PGA Tour Live streaming. All times Eastern.

Thursday, August 24

TV

Golf Channel: 1-6 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 12-6 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 11:15 a.m.-6 p.m.
Peacock: 1-6 p.m.

Friday, August 25

TV

Golf Channel: 1-6 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 12-6 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 11:15 a.m.-6 p.m.
Peacock: 1-6 p.m.

Saturday, August 26

TV

Golf Channel: 1-3 p.m.
CBS: 3-7 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 2-7 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 12-7 p.m.
Peacock: 1-3 p.m.

Sunday, August 27

TV

Golf Channel: 12-1:30 p.m.
CBS: 1:30-6 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 1-6 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 11 a.m.-6 p.m.
Peacock: 12-1:30 p.m.

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2023 Tour Championship odds, course history and picks to win

Let’s finish the season with another outright winner.

We’ve arrived at the final event of the 2022-23 PGA Tour season, the Tour Championship at East Lake in Atlanta. The top 30 in the point standings have made their way to the ATL ready to battle for the $18 million FedEx Cup bonus awarded to the winner.

After his co-runner-up finish at the BMW Championship, world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler will begin the tournament at 10 under, two shots clear of the man in the No. 2 spot, Viktor Hovland. Rory McIlroy, who has now finished T-9 or better in nine straight starts after a solo fourth at Olympia Fields, will begin three back at 7 under, while Jon Rahm starts at 6 under.

McIlroy chased down Scheffler last year to claim his third FedEx Cup, the only player who has achieved that feat (Tiger Woods and McIlroy are the only two players to win it more than once).

Golf course

East Lake Golf Club | Par 70 | 7,346 yards

2022 Tour Championship
Xander Schauffele on the 18th hole during the first round of the 2022 Tour Championship at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta. (Photo: Sam Greenwood/Getty Images)

Course history

Betting preview