Schupak: The case for why Junior Players champ Benjamin James should be teeing it up with JT in the Players

Here’s one man’s take on why the PGA Tour should reserve a spot in the Players field for an amateur.

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – A dozen years before Justin Thomas won the Players Championship last March, he won the AJGA’s 2009 Wyndham Invitational and earned a berth into the PGA Tour’s Wyndham Championship. All the 15-year-old whipper snapper did that week was shoot an opening-round 65 to make the cut in his debut on golf’s biggest stage.

“I remember leaving there very hungry and wanting to get back,” Thomas recalled. “Looking back, it was a great learning experience for me. I drew back on that the next couple of years.”

Thomas, 28, became the first Players champion who also had played in the Junior Players, which was first contested in 2007. It won’t be long before a Junior Players champ wins the big-boy version. That’s why the time has come for the PGA Tour to recognize its new blood waiting in the wings and offer a spot to the winner of the AJGA’s Junior Players.

Before they haul me off to Crazy Town, hear me out.

Since 2007, it has been tradition for the winner of the Players to tee it up during the first two rounds with the winner of the Senior Players. That isn’t happening this year because Senior Players winner Steve Stricker has been sidelined since being the winning captain of the Ryder Cup. (He’s recovering from pericarditis, a heart inflammation illness that nearly took his life in January.)

Imagine the thrill to be the third member of that threesome if you’re the winner of the Junior Players. In September, moments after he won the title, I asked winner Benjamin James, who just added winning the Dustin Johnson World Junior Golf Championship to his resume last weekend, how cool that would be if he had earned a spot in the field at golf’s fifth major. His eyes grew as big as saucers.

“Wow,” James said. “That would be the coolest. Every kid on the planet would want to play in this event.”

Junior Players Championship
Benjamin James accepts the trophy after winning the 2021 Junior Players Championship at TPC Sawgrass. (Photo: Garry Smits/Florida Times-Union)

Indeed, they would. Here’s the funny thing: I asked several AJGA players, including James, U.S. Junior champ Nick Dunlap and Junior PGA champ Caleb Surratt, where the Junior Players ranks among the top junior golf events. The consensus answer? Fifth.

Then I asked them what if the Junior Players winner got to play in the Players?

No. 1, or at worst No. 2, they all said.

Make it 1B.

The U.S. Junior Amateur Championship, which dates to 1948 and includes Tiger Woods winning three times in a row and Jordan Spieth claiming the title twice, always has been the premier event in the world of junior golf. Beginning in 2020, the winner of the Junior has earned an exemption into the U.S. Open. That’s a pretty big deal. If the PGA Tour wants the Junior Players to be considered best of class, it really needs to keep up with the Jones’s.

Part of what makes the Masters special is how it celebrates amateur champions. The first time most golf fans saw Tiger, Phil and Bryson on the big stage was playing Augusta National as the U.S. Amateur winner. Our first exposure to Japan’s Hideki Matsuyama, the reigning Masters champ, was playing at Augusta as the two-time winner of the Asian Amateur. In short, one junior isn’t going to weaken the Players from boasting to be “golf’s strongest field.”

This week, 32 players in the field of 144 had played in the Junior Players. In all, 45 pros have played in both the Junior Players and Players. Bud Cauley was the first to do so. Then, Jordan and Justin and all the other young studs who have been cleaning up in the big leagues, including four of the top 5 and nine of the top 20 in the world.

Course set up is the same at the Junior Players – same tees, same hole locations. The average winning score with the pro setup is 6 under (for 54 holes). Sure, it will be a different pressure in March and they might miss the cut, but last I checked the Senior Players champ hasn’t exactly been channeling Phil Mickelson at Kiawah vibes at the Players: Loren Roberts in 2008 and Fred Couples in 2012 skipped it altogether and Mark O’Meara in 2011, who finished 74th, is the only one to make the cut.

The Players: How to watch | PGA Tour Live on ESPN+

Personally, I like the symmetry of the Senior, Junior and Players champ teeing it up, but given how precious every spot in the field is I’d settle for subbing out the Senior Players winner with the Junior Players champ. What a cool introduction for a young golfer to dream about.

I called up Billy Dettlaff, the visionary behind the Junior Players, who loved my idea but delivered a dose of reality.

“It would be a real longshot,” said Dettlaff, TPC network’s national director of golf who was based at TPC Sawgrass until he retired in 2009. “How does the Tour explain that it’s taking a spot away from a pro who feels he deserves it?”

“Never in a million years” another former Tour executive told me. Best case scenario: a spot in a Tour opposite-field event.

I asked Thomas, who hosts his own AJGA event in his native Louisville, Kentucky, and he said he was neither for it or against it and explained why it may be a tough sell.

“You can’t win,” he said. “On the one hand, it would be huge. To have the opportunity would be nuts. But that first alternate wouldn’t be very happy. It’s the type of event that could change a life. We have a lot of members who aren’t in the tournament, which is tough if you are going to let a junior in. But at the same time, it’s one person.”

I bumped into Players tournament director Jared Rice at a pro-am and asked for the official on-the-record word.

“It’s an interesting idea. I’m always open to suggestions,” he began. Then came the but.

“But based on what we are and what we are building to be, what makes the Players so special and why it stands on its own is how hard it is to get in. It’s about having 144 of the best players in the world and I see the eligibility staying the same for now.”

Not surprisingly, the AJGA happens to share my vision that having one amateur in the field wouldn’t diminish the tournament. Rather, the next evolution for the Junior Players and the Players should be to recognize a star of tomorrow. When I asked AJGA executive director Stephen Hamblin whether he may petition for such an exemption, he said, “I’m not afraid of a no. I get no a million times.”

Hamblin thinks he might even have an ace in the hole in PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan, who signed off on the creation of the Junior Presidents Cup.

“It fell on deaf ears before,” Hamblin said.

It all comes down to whether the PGA Tour wants the Junior Players to be considered one of the major championships for junior golf or if fifth-major status is as good as it gets. I vote for making it so every kid on the planet wants to play here.

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Benjamin James claims Junior Players Championship at TPC Sawgrass

Benjamin James had a word for it. “Magic,” he said after winning the 2021 Junior Players Championship.

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — Benjamin James had a word for it.

“Magic,” said the winner of the 2021 Junior Players Championship on Sunday, after a closing 68 at the TPC Sawgrass Players Stadium Course gave him a four-shot victory over U.S. Junior Amateur champion Nicholas Dunlap, at 8-under-par 208.

James, a high school senior from Milford, Connecticut, who is headed for the University of Virginia next year, pulled away from a three-way battle with Dunlap (74) and Bryan Lee of Fairfax, Virginia, (71) at the turn with a four-hole stretch of three birdies and an eagle between Nos. 9 and 12.

Dunlap, the 36-hole leader, birdied No 18 to break from a three-way tie at 3-under with Lee and Jonathan Griz of Hilton Head, South Carolina, (71).

James is ranked sixth in both the American Junior Golf Association Polo Rankings and the Golfweek/Sagarin rankings. He’s won twice this year, both tournaments coming back-to-back in May.

But he finished second in the Junior PGA and the Polo Junior Classic at Liberty National and was getting restless.

“I was tired of coming in second,” he said. “I really wanted this so bad. It means a lot.”

James arrived two days before the first round and spent hours on the TPC Sawgrass range trying to find an element to his game that had been missing in two previous pedestrian starts in the Junior Players: drive the ball with a fade and draw on command.

“It was one event where I couldn’t get off the tee,” James said. “I was able to move the ball both ways with my tee shot this time and putted a lot better.”

James bided his time with rounds of 69 and 71. He was even-par through eight holes on Sunday and stood on the ninth tee two shots behind Dunlap.

James then needed only 13 strokes to complete the next four holes.

It began with a two-putt for birdie at the par-5 ninth hole that James within a shot of Dunlap and Lee at 4-under. James then dropped a 6-foot birdie putt at No. 10 to make it a three-way tie.

He smacked a 6-iron from 190 yards out to 12 feet at the par-5 11th to set up an easy two-putt for birdie to take the lead when Lee bogeyed and Dunlap parred.

James then delivered the shot of the day: with the tee at the par-4 12th hole moved up to 275 yards, James drove the green with a 3-wood, with the ball nestling 4 feet from hole. He made the putt to get to 8-under.

“I had been pulling my 3-wood this week, so I just aimed further right,” he said. “It turned out good.”

James had only one blip the rest of a hot, breezy day when he had his first three-putt of the tournament at No. 14, missing an 18-incher for par.

Dunlap parred and was only one back.

James then came through with the clincher, a 9-iron from 145 yards out at No. 15, followed by a 15-foot birdie putt. He was so excited that he hit the brake on his pull cart too hard, breaking it from the cable attaching it to the wheels.

An AJGA official took the cart away and James had to carry his bag the last three holes.

He did what every Players Championship winner has tried to do with a big lead: play the last three holes of the Stadium Course with extreme care. James missed the fairway right at No. 16, pulled his second shot onto a bank near the green to leave himself with a downhill lie, but chipped safely on and two-putted for par.

He found dry land at the Island Green and two-putted from 45 feet, then hit the 18th fairway, laid up to the front fringe, chipped to 6 feet and made the par putt.

“It’s crazy,” he said. “I’ve been playing well but haven’t been getting it done. To do it now means the world to me.”