Member of PGA Tour executive leadership resigns after more than 30 years on job

The PGA Tour saw a significant change in its executive leadership Tuesday.

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The PGA Tour saw a significant change in its executive leadership Tuesday.

Andy Pazder, the Tour’s chief tournaments and competitions officer, has resigned after more than 30 years with the association.

In his role, he had strategic and operational oversight of the Tour, PGA Tour Champions and Korn Ferry Tour and its more than 120 tournaments across five domestic and international tours.

Pazder joined the Tour in 1989 and worked under three different Commissioners, previously serving as executive vice president and chief of operations for the Tour and prior to that role serving as senior vice president of tournament administration for the PGA Tour, PGA Tour Champions and Korn Ferry Tour.

He has had various roles in the rules, competitions and tournament administration area.

In a memo to players informing them about the move, PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan said that Tyler Dennis would assume Pazder’s responsibilities. Dennis, executive vice president and President of the PGA Tour, and not Pazder, was chosen to co-lead day-to-day operations of the Tour with Ron Price in Monahan’s absence.

Some of Pazder’s duties could be assumed by former PGA Tour pro Jason Gore, who joined the Tour earlier this year. He was promoted recently to the position of executive vice president and chief player officer and has become a point person in restoring trust between the Tour’s management and the players.

PGA Tour clears players to compete in controversial Saudi event, but with conditions

The PGA Tour has granted permission for 30 of its members to play the Saudi International, Golfweek has learned.

The PGA Tour has granted permission for 30 of its members—including Phil Mickelson, Dustin Johnson and Bryson DeChambeau—to play the controversial Saudi International, Golfweek has learned.

But the okay comes with strings attached.

The decision was revealed in a memo sent Monday afternoon to the Tour’s entire membership, a copy of which was obtained by Golfweek. Players who sought permission to compete in Saudi Arabia received additional memos outlining the specific conditions attached to their releases for the event, which will be staged opposite the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, February 3-6, 2022. Tour members are required to obtain a waiver to compete in conflicting events.

A PGA Tour spokesperson confirmed the contents of the memos but declined to identify the 30 players who are being granted releases. Last month, the Saudi International released a list of commitments that included Mickelson, DeChambeau and Johnson, the defending champion. It also named Sergio Garcia, Ian Poulter, Henrik Stenson and Bubba Watson, among others.

The Saudi International is the latest front in a war between the PGA Tour and the Saudis, who have been trying to launch the rival Super Golf League by offering golf’s biggest stars huge guaranteed pay days. The Super League concept has been widely criticized as an effort by the Saudi regime to ‘sportswash’ its human rights abuses. The PGA Tour had indicated in July that it would deny permission for members to play in the tournament.

The memo sent to the Tour’s membership was signed by Tyler Dennis, the chief of operations. It reiterates the rules governing conflicting event releases as stated in the official PGA Tour Player Handbook. Those guidelines allow Commissioner Jay Monahan to grant or deny waivers based on the best interests of the Tour, and to attach conditions to waivers. The memo specifies the conditions that will apply to members who compete in Saudi Arabia.

Any player who has competed in the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am event at least once in the past five years must commit to play at least once in the next two years (2023 and 2024). Players who have not competed at Pebble Beach in the last five years will need to do so twice in the three years until 2025. A source familiar with the names of the 30 players who applied for waivers told Golfweek that 19 of them will have to commit to one appearance at the AT&T, while the other 11 will be required to play twice.

Golfweek reached out to Andy Pazder, the PGA Tour’s chief tournaments and competitions officer, for comment on the decision. “While we certainly have grounds under Tour regulations created by and for the players to deny conflicting event releases, we have decided in this instance to allow a group of Tour players the opportunity to play in a single sanctioned tournament outside North America on a recognized Tour, with conditions attached that will contribute to the success of AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am in future years,” Pazder replied.

Players who do not meet the obligations attached to their waivers would be subject to disciplinary action.

The memo emailed to Tour members late Monday afternoon also highlighted a requirement that applications for conflicting event releases must be submitted at least 45 days before the first round of the tournament in question. The Saudi International begins February 3—exactly 45 days from the date of the memo.

The 30 releases requested for the 2022 Saudi International marks a sharp increase on the 23 sought in 2021, and suggests a deliberate Saudi strategy of inviting so many players that the PGA Tour would be forced to deny the waivers in order to protect the quality of the field at the AT&T tournament. Had permission been refused, the Saudis could claim the PGA Tour was not acting in the best interests of members by denying them earning opportunities, further stoking discontent among the top players it has been attempting to recruit to the Super Golf League.

One source familiar with the situation told Golfweek that lower-profile players invited to compete in King Abdullah Economic City have been offered appearance fees of around $400,000, with mid-tier players receiving between $500,000 and $750,000. High-profile stars get seven-figure offers. Chartered private aircraft to and from Saudi Arabia is also provided.

Not every player who applied for a conflicting event release will necessarily compete in Saudi Arabia. It is likely that an updated list of competitors will be released by the Asian Tour, which sanctions the event, and in which the Saudi government has invested $200 million.

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When will fans be allowed back at PGA Tour events?

“We obviously hope that there will be a point in time this summer where we are able to welcome back fans,” said the PGA Tour’s Andy Pazder.

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The PGA Tour’s 37-page Return to Golf plan officially released on Wednesday had countless specifics on what the Tour and tournaments plan to do to ensure the safety of everyone going forward.

Multiple levels of COVID-19 testing – including a pre-travel screening test sent to players and caddies – will be performed, according to the plan obtained by Golfweek. Players and caddies also will be tested upon arrival, likely at a host hotel, with daily questionnaire and temperature tests to follow.

Testing is required for competition.

Another way the Tour is getting back into the swing of things is by holding the first four tournaments without fans.

Tournaments without fans

  • June 11-14: Charles Schwab Challenge, Colonial CC, Fort Worth, Texas
  • June 18-21: RBC Heritage, Harbour Town GL, Hilton Head, South Carolina
  • June 25-28: Travelers Championship, TPC River Highlands, Cromwell, Connecticut
  • July 2-5: Rocket Mortgage Classic, Detroit Golf Club, Detroit

When asked during a conference call with reporters on Wednesday if there’s a chance fans could be allowed on site in Detroit, before the end of the four-week period, Andy Pazder, PGA Tour’s Chief Tournaments and Competitions Officer, said: “There will not be spectators at the Rocket Mortgage Classic.”

That means that the John Deere Classic at TPC Deere Run in Silvis, Illinois, July 9-12, is scheduled to be the first tournament with fans. But that can change.

“It’s going to be dependent on local, state and federal regulations that will largely dictate when we’re able to resume having some number of fans,” Pazder  said. “I would absolutely anticipate that whenever that occurs, it would initially be on a limited basis to ease ourselves back into spectators being on site.”

Pazder said from the John Deere on, tournament organizers are working on three options of “parallel planning with spectators, limited number of spectators and without spectators.

“We obviously hope that there will be a point in time this summer where we are able to welcome back our fans on site, but as we’ve said. … we’re only going to return to golf when we can do it in a safe and responsible manner, and it’s certainly not going to be just so we can hit some target date that isn’t supported by the local state and federal authorities.”

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Coronavirus has placed graduation to PGA Tour on hold

Further cancellations might force the PGA Tour to look at the possibility of a hybrid season covering 2019, 2020 and 2021.

Imagine being in Jared Wolfe’s golf shoes.

Since turning pro in 2010, he’s journeyed throughout the game’s lesser circuits in pursuit of his ultimate dream – earning membership on the PGA Tour. It was a struggle at times but Wolfe remained resolute in his quest and in January he captured his first title on the Korn Ferry Tour at the Bahamas Great Abaco Classic.

Graduation to the PGA Tour was well in hand. Now it’s on hold.

The COVID-19 global pandemic has stalled the world and halted play on every major golf tour. This week’s announcement of a new schedule beginning in mid-June for the PGA Tour and the Korn Ferry Tour offers hope. But the restart is far from certain and it remains undecided how playing status for players on the PGA Tour and Korn Ferry Tour will be determined for next season if the restart is delayed due to the coronavirus.

Normally, the top 25 on the Korn Ferry Tour points list after the final regular-season event – Wolfe is No. 6 – earn PGA Tour cards for the next season. The top 75 players also qualify for the three-tournament Korn Ferry Tour Finals, where they would be joined by 75 PGA Tour members who finished Nos. 126-200 on the FedExCup points list. From that postseason, the top 25 players also earn PGA Tour cards.

A view of the tee marker on the 16th hole during the first round of the 2019 Korn Ferry Tour Championship in Newburgh, Indiana. Photo by Stacy Revere/Getty Images

But the truncated season could force PGA Tour officials to adjust allocation of PGA Tour cards. Graduation could even be annulled.

Wolfe said he’s gone down a “rabbit hole” thinking about potential scenarios but his wife pulls him out of the proverbial abyss.

“I’m at peace with whatever happens,” Wolfe said.

A hybrid season for ’19, ’20, ’21?

The PGA Tour is set to return June 11-14 at the Charles Schwab Challenge in Texas. The PGA Tour would play 36 events – down from 49 last year. In a conference call this week, Andy Pazder, chief tournaments and competitions officer for the PGA Tour, said if 36 events are played, Tour officials and player directors on the policy board feel it would constitute a credible season.

But if there are further cancellations and/or postponements, a credible season would be in jeopardy and force the PGA Tour to make major status adjustments, including the possibility of a hybrid season covering 2019, 2020 and 2021.

“If there is a scenario where we carry eligibility from the PGA Tour over to the following season, that will likely have a profound impact on the Korn Ferry Tour eligibility system and could go as far as preventing promotions from the Korn Ferry Tour and their eligibility would then have to merge into their following season in 2021,” Pazder said. “We’ve had extensive conversations, and at this stage I can tell you that if we are able to resume at the Charles Schwab Challenge, playing nearly three-fourths of our season does give us great comfort in considering it a credible season. But we have not defined that threshold if we fall below X number of tournaments, then Y will happen.”

Six events have been played on the Korn Ferry Tour this season. The first event back for the tour is a new tournament set to begin June 11 on the Dye’s Valley Course at TPC Sawgrass near the PGA Tour’s headquarters in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida. Ten events would follow. Without further interruptions of play, the Korn Ferry Tour would have a 17-tournament schedule, down from 28 on the original schedule. Would that be enough to hand out promotions?

“We’ve looked at one option where there would be a hybrid model, I’d call it, where we would reward all of the players on the PGA Tour this year based on their play but find a way to also, for those who didn’t make the top 125, retain some type of access into the next season,” Tyler Dennis, chief of operations for the PGA Tour, said in a conference call. “And then that would flow down to the Korn Ferry Tour and how the graduates would morph between their seasons in a hybrid way, as well. We’re still in the process of analyzing that and evaluating options with our PAC and player directors.”

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