Andre Metzger, Brett White, Dalton Ward advance to 2023 WM Phoenix Open via Monday qualifier

The 96-man 2023 WM Phoenix Open Monday qualifier did not need a playoff to decide things.

In what has to count as a minor miracle, the 96-man 2023 WM Phoenix Open Monday qualifier did not go to a playoff.

Andre Metzger of Scottsdale shot the round of the day on the Pine Course, a bogey-free 65 that included birdies on Nos. 14, 16 and 17.

Brett White of Houston and Dalton Ward of Saint Simons Island, Georgia, each shot 66 to tie for second. White had eight birdies on his card. Ward also had a bogey-free day with six birdies.

Only the top three advance and generally this qualifier needs a playoff to decide things.

SCORESWM Phoenix Open Monday qualifier

Sudarshan Yellamaraju, Nicolo Galletti, Danny Guise, Austen Truslow, Cole Hammer and Michael Gligic all shot 67s to miss out on forcing extra golf by a shot.

Derek Oland, Carson Schaake, Aaron Baddeley and Harry Hall tied for 10th after shooting 68s.

Other notables: DJ Trahan T-14 (69), Parker Mclachlin T-23 (70) and Bo Van Pelt T-23 (70).

The day started with 96 golfers teeing off; 90 finished their rounds.

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Lynch: Field sizes are a coming flashpoint on the PGA Tour, and the WM Phoenix Open shows why

A tournament’s elite status is defined not just by the caliber of player it attracts, but by those left outside looking in.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Lee Iacocca, the iconic former president of the Ford Motor Company, once said that executives are often presented with great opportunities brilliantly disguised as insoluble problems, the kind of homespun aphorism you’d expect from a man who only had to navigate challenges like exploding Pintos rather than the mercurial demands of PGA Tour stars.

The quest to find opportunity amid insoluble problems has been turning Jay Monahan’s altar-boy coif from silver to white as he tries to shape the PGA Tour schedule – designated events and not – around constituencies that are always competing but not always convivial.

Like the Goliaths, who understand the competitive need for Davids but who aren’t eager to share too much of the pot with them. And the Davids, who dominate a member-led organization. And sponsors, who object to the perception of a tournament caste system if theirs isn’t among the chosen. And tournament operators, whose financial benchmarks aren’t as flexible as the whims of Tour players.

The interests of all of the aforementioned factions collide at one intersection: field sizes at designated Tour events. Or more specifically, the reduction thereof.

The reality of the ongoing reshaping of the PGA Tour is that greater riches for the elite will invariably come at the expense of the sackcloth contingent, the not-so-silent majority who don’t sell tickets, don’t draw eyeballs and don’t make a bad living. This week’s WM Phoenix Open is a fertile example of the challenges looming with the new designated events.

Put simply, who and how many should be allowed to play?

There are 135 golfers in the field at TPC Scottsdale, including 18 of the world’s top 20. As with most full-field events, scrolling the exemption criteria tends to dilute the perception of an elite meritocracy at work. For example, the local PGA section’s player of the year is competing, a common if parochial tradition on Tour. Fair enough. A horse race is no less exciting for the presence of an ultimate long shot. But an opaque category sure to come under pressure in the new realm of designated events is sponsor exemptions, the system of invitations by which those who pay the bills can reward rising talent or favored partners of their choosing.

Sponsors are, and should be, given tremendous latitude in deciding how their exemptions are used, and at the Phoenix Open WM’s are the customary mix of the welcome, the defensible and the bewildering. Taylor Montgomery is wholly deserving, a rookie making inroads early in his career. So too Davis Thompson, who recently ran Jon Rahm close in Palm Springs (though he withdrew from last week’s AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am after being handed a spot this week, depriving a needier, undesignated tournament of his presence). The other sponsor freebies are considerably more debatable, moreso since the event is billed as a showdown of the elite.

One went to Charley Hoffman, not for his performance – just one top-20 finish in almost two years – but by dint of his commercial relationship with WM. Another was bestowed on J.B. Holmes, the world No. 1,815 who has made the weekend in just five of his last 20 starts, dating back to 2020. He’s at least a two-time winner here, so one can forgive a compassionate sentimentality on the sponsor’s part. The last went to Ricky Barnes, for no obvious reason other than that he lives locally.

Spectators, viewers and fellow competitors might wonder if the WM Phoenix Open is truly an elite field when Barnes ambles to the tee having never won, being a dozen years removed from last qualifying for a major championship and with a current ranking of 1,669. His presence proves that designated events cannot be “full-field.” The elite status of a tournament is defined not just by the caliber of player it attracts, but by those left outside looking in.

Since “designated” status was a late addition to the 2023 schedule, the Tour announced that field sizes at elevated stops would remain unchanged. That will not be the case in ’24, and the winnowing of that number is one of the more contentious and complicated issues Monahan must tackle.

The objective of designated events isn’t only to bring the best players together more often – that’s the consumer-facing rationale – but to ensure they’re paid more. That means dividing the $20 million purses among fewer pockets. It also means paying top talent, even if they miss the cut. Both concepts are under discussion for designated events next year. Try selling journeymen on the idea that they’ll have fewer playing opportunities while top tier guys make bank even if they can’t play well enough to make the weekend.

Numerous insiders say that top players initially suggested field sizes for designated events be capped at 70 but the actual number next year is likely to be around 80, something similar to the old World Golf Championships. Apply that to the traditional field at a WM Phoenix Open, and 50-odd guys would be getting an unwelcome week off work. And that’s just the visible fiscal impact of cutting field sizes. Tournament operators won’t relish a reduction either since fewer tee times throughout the day makes it tougher to meet food and beverage revenue targets. This is trickle-down economics in action.

The radical changes coming to the PGA Tour schedule are intended to guarantee the product to sponsors, broadcasters and fans while rewarding stars who drive business. It’s tough to balance that ambition against the Tour’s longstanding and painfully democratic mandate to simply provide playing opportunities to members. Monahan will grasp the truth in another Iacocca maxim, that success belongs to the leader who holds onto the old only as long as it’s good, and who grabs the new just as soon as it’s better. However, persuading his competing constituencies of that will be about as easy as selling one of Iacocca’s perilous old Pintos.

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Photos: 2023 WM Phoenix Open Monday qualifier at McCormick Ranch

The Monday qualifier at McCormick Ranch in Scottsdale featured 96 golfers.

The 2023 WM Phoenix Open Monday qualifier at McCormick Ranch featured 96 golfers bidding to nab one of three spots, the final three spots, in the “People’s Open.”

The Monday qualifier for the Phoenix Open has become a stacked event, with a slew of veteran PGA Tour golfers bidding to get into what this year is a $20 million designated event.

First place at TPC Scottsdale is worth $3.6 million. Second place is $2.18 million. Even third place is in the seven figures at $1.38 million. Solo 64th-place would net a golfer $43,000.

That’s why there were so many veteran PGA Tour golfers taking a crack at making the WMPO field.

96 golfers in Monday qualifier vie for final three spots in $20 million WM Phoenix Open

The qualifier was first likened to an opposite-field event a couple years ago.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — To someone who didn’t know any better, the driving range at sunny McCormick Ranch Golf Club didn’t look any different Monday. Each hitting space was occupied with golfers slowly working their way through their buckets of Pinnacle practice balls.

A player in his 60s showed his friend his new driver head cover featuring Cartman from the animated TV show South Park. A younger golfer in his late 20s practiced in a black hoodie and camouflage joggers.

But this wasn’t any other Monday, as just feet away was Harrison Endycott, a PGA Tour pro from Australia. Fellow Aussie Aaron Baddeley was on the practice green with his two kids, hair as long as their dad’s.

Harry Hall, a 25-year-old Englishman who played at UNLV, had a Trackman stuffed in his Callaway Paradym tour bag on a brand new push cart.

2023 WM Phoenix Open Monday qualifier
Harry Hall practices at the range at McCormick Golf Club ahead of the 2023 WM Phoenix Open Monday qualifier. (Photo: Todd Kelly/Golfweek)

“I know I’ve got a PGA Tour schedule for the rest of the year and I’m a rookie and I’ve got tournaments I’ll definitely be in so this would be a perk,” Hall said. “I’m a Vegas boy so I like the desert, I enjoy the crowd and that’s why I’m here.”

Another Tour rookie, Ben Griffin, who’s 30th in FedEx Cup points, was at the qualifier because he doesn’t yet have enough status to already be in the Phoenix Open field.

But it’s not just rookies in the qualifier field. Grayson Murray, Martin Trainer, Kevin Chappell, DJ Trahan, Bo Van Pelt and Robert Garrigus were there, too.

SCORES: WM Phoenix Open Monday qualifier

In all, 96 golfers took to the Pine Course to vie for one of the final three spots in the 2023 WM Phoenix Open. The qualifier was first likened to an opposite-field event a couple years ago but this year in particular it makes sense that there’s so much interest as it’s the first full-field designated event and features a $20 million purse with a $3.6 million first-place prize.

Baddeley is a past champion at TPC Scottsdale with more than $25 million in career earnings. He has made six cuts in eight outings in 2023, including two top-10s but didn’t snag one of the five coveted sponsor invitations. As he put the finishing touches on his pre-round warm-up, a fan noticed him, told him good luck and added: “Maybe next time you won’t have to put up with this.”

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Baddeley, whose 12-year-old daughter took it upon herself to write a letter to the Thunderbirds, who run the Phoenix Open, asking them to offer her dad a spot. That plan fell through so a day after finishing tied for 37th at the weather-plagued AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, Baddeley slept in his own bed at his Scottsdale home and drove to qualifier.

“I was disappointed not to get in for sure,” he said. “My game’s in a good spot, and being up there in the FedEx [60th], I thought I had a good chance, past champ. Already have two top-10s, the game is really good.”

The qualifier might have had even more golfers but the Monday finish at Pebble Beach altered a lot of plans.

There were 19 pros on the original entry list who withdrew from the qualifier, including Nick Hardy, the Phoenix Open’s first alternate.

At least two golfers who wanted to play the qualifier couldn’t. Eric Cole, T-15 at Pebble, and Sung Kang, T-29 at Pebble, scrambled from the Monterey Peninsula and landed at Scottsdale Airport about six miles north of McCormick Ranch about 30 minute before their 1:40 p.m. local tee time. But they were too late.

The Monday qualifier finished before dark and without a playoff, with Andre Metzger shooting a 65 to lead the way. Brett White and Dalton Ward each shot a 66, making those three the ones who advanced to 2023 WM Phoenix Open.

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WM Phoenix Open’s recent stellar run of champions and why it may continue

The recent list of winners at TPC Scottsdale reads like a future Hall of Fame roll call.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. – When Scottie Scheffler outlasted Patrick Cantlay in a sudden-death playoff to win last year’s WM Phoenix Open, he earned his first PGA Tour title.

In short order, he vaulted to World No. 1 thanks to a run of four wins in six Tour starts, capped off by the Masters. In doing so, Scheffler kept the streak alive of marquee names winning at TPC Scottsdale.

Since Brooks Koepka, who was such a no-name at the time that the first tee starter called him Bruce Cupcake, earned his maiden Tour title in 2015, the list of winners is stout:

  • Masters champ Hideki Matsuyama twice (2016, ’17)
  • U.S. Open champ Gary Woodland (2018)
  • Players champ Rickie Fowler (2019)
  • U.S. Open champ Webb Simpson (2020)
  • Koepka again (2021), who went on to win four majors

It reads like a future Hall of Fame roll call and is a refreshing change of pace from — no offense — the Mark Wilsons (2011), Kyle Stanleys (2012) and Kevin Stadlers (2014) of the world, which for many years tended to hoist the trophy at TPC Scottsdale.

So what qualities stand out among the winners of the WM Phoenix Open? For a time, TPC Scottsdale was tagged as a bomber’s paradise, where it favored players able to blast it over the trouble. Length trumped accuracy.

“Some of the guys dove deep into the stats and discovered you don’t have to swing for the fences every hole. All you have to do is get it in the fairway and give yourself more opportunities because the par 5s are reachable and 17 is drivable,” said Davis Love III. “Some of these guys have figured out a way to pick apart that course.”

2020 Waste Management Phoenix Open
Tony Finau hits out of a bunker on the 18th during the playoff at the 2020 Waste Management Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale. (Photo: Joe Camporeale/USA TODAY Sports)

Tony Finau, who lost in a playoff here in 2020, offered a different theory on why the cream tends to rise to the top at TPC Scottsdale.

“The greens are fast so you have to be a good putter and the best putters in the world putt well on fast greens,” he said. “When nerves are high, the guys who are good chippers and putters are the ones who are going to win tournaments.”

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That may help explain why Phil Mickelson, who combined length and the cat-like skills of a burglar to escape trouble, won three times (1996, 2005, 2013) and finished second in 2008. But the Tour’s annual trip to the Valley of the Sun has been won by preeminent putters such as Aaron Baddeley (2007) and Fowler, short hitters like Wilson (2011) and Simpson, ball-striking extraordinaire’s Hunter Mahan (2010) and Matsuyama and bombers such as J.B. Holmes (2006 and ’08) and Woodland.

“There’s nothing to hide in your game. You have to do it all,” said Woodland. “You have to drive it well, for sure, but it doesn’t favor a long or short guy. It favors a guy who is hitting it really well.”

WM Phoenix Ope
Gary Woodland watches his shot on the par-3 16th hole at the 2021 WM Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale. (Photo: USA TODAY Sports)

If there is one common thread among the recent run of star power finding the winner’s circle at the WM, it may simply be golfers that can handle the amped up crowds and the pressure that rivals a major. In addition to success in golf’s biggest tournaments, all of the recent winners have competed on golf’s other biggest stages at either or both of the Ryder Cup and Presidents Cup international team competitions.

“There’s nothing in golf that compares to what that atmosphere is,” Fowler said of the WM Phoenix Open.

Xander Schauffele, who is ranked No. 6 in the world, echoed the sentiment that the largest and most unruly crowds in golf are a factor, and the pressure mounts on the closing stretch from Nos. 15-18.

“I think there are just a lot of shots that need to be pulled off,” Schauffele said “and a lot of the difficult shots or pressure shots are coming down the stretch. That’s probably why the leaderboard always looks the way it does.”

Schauffele’s usually in the mix, recording top-20 finishes in all five of his previous appearances, including T-2 and T-3 in his last two starts. After several close calls could Schauffele be the next marquee name to keep the streak of big-game hunters as winners alive?

“I’ve been knocking on that door for quite some time, and I am ready to break that door down,” he said. “But I’m going to stay patient.  I’m just going to hang tight, keep showing up to that tournament, keep giving myself a chance.”

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Why the 2023 WM Phoenix Open will be the biggest – and richest – yet

Some of the reasons why 2023 will be the biggest, loudest and most interesting WM Phoenix Open ever.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — The WM Phoenix Open is the fifth-oldest tournament on the PGA Tour. In 2023, it will celebrate its 88th playing and 36th time at TPC Scottsdale’s Stadium course.

This year will also mark the biggest, most high profile, most star-studded rendition of what has become the “People’s Open.”

The PGA Tour, in an effort to stave off the upstart LIV Golf League, which has been pilfering some of the top names in the game for the last nine months, has ramped up the prize money in a big way. The Phoenix Open had a purse of $9 million in 2022. It’s more than double that in 2023.

Here’s a closer look at some of the reasons why 2023 will be the biggest, loudest, and perhaps most interesting Phoenix Open ever.

Jon Rahm is in Scottsdale preparing for the WM Phoenix Open alongside Tom Kim, J.J. Watt and Michael Phelps

Now that’s a group!

Jon Rahm’s last start ended with disappointment. A rough final round at Torrey Pines led to a T-7 finish — a season-best outcome for many on the PGA Tour, but standards are different for the world No. 3.

He’s already in Arizona preparing for next week’s WM Phoenix Open, the first full-field designated event in Tour history. To claim his third win in four starts, Rahm will have to take down the likes of Rory McIlroy, Scottie Scheffler, Justin Thomas and pretty much any other big name you could think of.

How’s he getting the game dialed in? Oh, just playing alongside J.J. Watt, Tom Kim and arguably the greatest Olympian to ever live, Michael Phelps.

Rahm’s career record at the WM Phoenix Open is absurd: T-10 (2022), T-13 (2021), T-9 (2020), T-10 (2019), T-11 (2018), T-16 (2017) and T-5 (2015).

No wonder why he’s the betting favorite entering the week.

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Monday qualifier for $20 million WM Phoenix Open loaded with PGA Tour veterans

The WM Phoenix Open, the first full-field designated event of 2023, is brimming with anticipation.

With a $20 million purse and a $3.6 million first-place prize, the WM Phoenix Open, the first full-field designated event of 2023, is brimming with anticipation. And it’s not just fans clamoring to get on the property at TPC Scottsdale.

The event will be without Adam Scott and Will Zalatoris but every other big name on the PGA Tour will be teeing it up.

For many others, the desire to get in the field has reached unprecedented levels, as last-minute scrambling has been taking place all week around the Phoenix area with eight pre-qualifiers and an upcoming Monday qualifier.

It’s the second year there were eight pre-qualifiers and each one sold out. That’s right, 78 golfers paid $250 to fill up each of the 624 spots at eight golf courses around town. And the competition was fierce.

“I don’t know if you saw the scores but it was ridiculous,” said Bill Ibrahim of the Southwest Section PGA, which runs all the qualifiers. “There was a guy who shot a bogey-free 64 and didn’t get through. It’s insane.”

The PGA Tour sets the criteria for advancing out of the pre-qualifiers and it was determined with eight of them that only the top two and ties from each would advance.

Berk Harvey of San Jose posted the best score of the week with a 62 at a City of Phoenix municipal golf course called Aguila. George Markham of Phoenix and Sudarshan Yellamaraju of Ontario, Canada, each shot 63s at Aguila to advance. Jared du Toit of Scottsdale topped his pre-qualifier with a 64 at Western Skies Golf Course in the suburb of Gilbert. The highest advancing score was a 67, shot by five players at the 500 Club in Glendale.

In all, 26 golfers finished top two or ties and have punched their tickets to Monday. Of those 26, two are amateurs: Joe Neuheisel of Scottsdale (the son of former Colorado, Washington and UCLA football coach Rick Neuheisel) and Leon Acikalin of Phoenix. Amateurs need a handicap of 2 or lower to get in the pre-qualifier.

As of mid-day Friday, there were 118 golfers in the Monday qualifier, according to Ibrahim, who said the field could swell in the next few days. With that many golfers though, the Monday qualifier likely won’t finish until Tuesday. Any frost delay would disrupt timing and Ibrahim, who joined the SWSPGA in 2017, says there’s been a playoff every year he’s been in Arizona to determine those precious three spots.

Already on the list for Monday are some well-known PGA Tour veterans: Byeong Hun An, Kevin Chappell, Robert Garrigus, Will Gordon, Ben Griffin, Harry Higgs, Grayson Murray, Ben Taylor, Martin Trainer and Bo Van Pelt.

“It’s gonna be littered with PGA Tour players,” said Pat Williams, tournament chairman for the 2023 WM Phoenix Open of the Monday qualifier. “We’ve got so many players at the professional level who already live here in metro Phoenix, so it’s convenient. And then you’ve got the elevated the designated status and people want to play for a lot of money.”

A more significant change could be on the horizon, however, one that might bring an end to these manic Mondays.

“The PGA Tour still hasn’t decided the criteria they’re going to use for these designated events moving forward. Indications point to them all being some type of invitational,” said Ibrahim. “If they decide the elevated events are invitationals. … then the open qualifying aspect will be gone, which would be a shame because we all know golf is very unique in that having that open qualifying, even if it’s just one spot or three spots, it certainly gives these guys an opportunity to change their lives.”

With the big money up for grabs in these designated events, even a top-20 finish could be enough to alter the futures for some of these golfers.

“It’s a great thing about golf. Anybody can try to make it,” Ibrahim said. “If you have the talent you certainly can compete and try to get into the event and potentially change your life.”

The WM Phoenix Open is a designated event in 2023. The PGA Tour hasn’t released its 2024 schedule yet, and it’s unclear how many designated events will be played in the future. The WM Phoenix Open has expressed interest in remaining a designated event, according to Williams, but the Tour will make the final decision.

“Our hope would obviously be to execute this year and in a way that the Tour will give us the same honor the following year,” he said.

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2023 WM Phoenix Open odds, favorites to win at TPC Scottsdale

It’s no surprise that Jon Rahm and Rory McIlroy are the betting favorites at TPC Scottsdale.

The first-full field designated event in PGA Tour history is nearly here as the best players in the world are bound for Arizona for the WM Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale.

This event is known for chaos, and to take it to the next level, the Super Bowl is in town.

World No. 1 Rory McIlroy, fresh off the heels of a victory on the DP World Tour at the Hero Dubai Desert Classic, is making his first Tour start of 2023. Nos. 2 and 3, Scottie Scheffler and Jon Rahm join the Northern Irishman in the field. Overall, eight of the world’s top 10 will tee it up next week at TPC Scottsdale.

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Check out this full breakdown of the odds below.

WM Phoenix Open: Full field

Player Odds Player Odds
Jon Rahm (+550) Sungjae Im (+2000)
Rory McIlroy (+750) Max Homa (+2500)
Scottie Scheffler (+800) Matt Fitzpatrick (+2500)
Viktor Hovland (+1400) Shane Lowry (+2500)
Tony Finau (+1400) Cameron Young (+2500)
Justin Thomas (+1400) Russell Henley (+3000)
Collin Morikawa (+1400) Taylor Montgomery (+3500)
Xander Schauffele (+1600) Tommy Fleetwood (+3500)
Patrick Cantlay (+1600) Seamus Power (+4000)
Jordan Spieth (+1600) Tom Hoge (+5000)
Hideki Matsuyama (+1600) Rickie Fowler (+5000)
Sam Burns (+2000) Corey Conners (+5000)
Will Zalatoris (+2000) Billy Horschel (+5000)

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World No. 1 Rory McIlroy, Jon Rahm, defending champion Scottie Scheffler highlight first full-field designated event at 2023 WM Phoenix Open

Rory. Rahm. Scottie – all during Super Bowl week? Yes, please.

Rory McIlroy, the best player in the world, hasn’t made a start on the PGA Tour since the CJ Cup (an event he won). Well, that changes next week at the 2023 WM Phoenix Open where he headlines a monster field.

It’ll be the first full-field designated event in PGA Tour history (the Sentry Tournament of Champions was designated but was not full-field).

Joining the Northern Irishman – who did win his first start of 2023 in Dubai – are Jon Rahm, who’s won two of his last three starts, defending champion and world No. 2 Scottie Scheffler. Eight of the top 10 players in the world ranking will be there. Cameron Smith (4) can’t play because he’s on the LIV Golf League. Will Zalatoris (8) chose to not play.

The field is typically 132 golfers but it will be 136 in 2023, with 133 of the names announced Friday afternoon. The final three spots will be determined by the Monday qualifier at McCormick Ranch Golf Club in Scottsdale.

“We’ve had an incredible response from all the top players that are going to play,” said Pat Williams, the 2023 WM Phoenix Open tournament chairman.

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