‘I love it’: Rory McIlroy, PGA Tour players react to schedule changes

“This is to make it better for the fans. It is a guarantee on who will be at events, more or less.”

Change is coming to the PGA Tour in 2024. Whether that is a good thing depends upon who you ask.

During a board meeting held Tuesday in Orlando ahead of the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Palmer’s Bay Hill Lodge & Club, the Tour approved reducing the size of fields and eliminating the cut at several of its designated events. It also created a pathway for players in the regular events to get promoted to the tournaments with the strongest fields and largest purses. The moves should please sponsors and television honchos, who can rest easy knowing that the biggest names will be guaranteed to play in all four rounds, As for members of the rank-and-file? They may perceive the Tour as becoming more of a closed shop.

“I love it,” said Rory McIlroy, a player director on the Tour’s board. “Obviously I’ve been a part of it and been in a ton of discussions. I think it makes the Tour more competitive. I think we were going that way anyway. You think of the (FedEx Cup) playoffs used to be 125, 70, 30. Obviously this year they have went 70, 50, 30. So I think – like, I’m all about rewarding good play. I’m certainly not about – I want to give everyone a fair shake at this. Which I think this structure has done. There’s ways to play into it. It’s trying to get the top guys versus the hot guys, right? I think that creates a really compelling product. But in a way that you don’t have to wait an entire year for your good play to then get the opportunity. That opportunity presents itself straight away. You play well for two or three weeks, you’re in a designated event. You know then if you keep playing well you stay in them. So, for example, someone like a Chris Kirk last week that wins Honda, he’s set.”

Arnold Palmer Invitational: Photos

But it also is a fundamental change for the Tour, creating designated events that are a cross between the World Golf Championships, which have slowly petered out for a reason, and LIV Golf, which has smaller fields and no cut, too. It likely won’t sit well with the Tour’s rank-and-file, who are going to have fewer playing opportunities. For the fan, part of the appeal of the Tour has always been that it is a true meritocracy and that if a player doesn’t survive the 36-hole cut, he goes home empty-handed.

“I think it’s easy to frame these changes as a way to put more money in the top players’ pockets. But it has been made to make it easier and more fun for the fans,” said Max Homa, a member of the Tour’s player advisory council. “I know it’s low-hanging fruit to jump on, ‘Oh, this is just a money grab.’ This is to make it better for the fans. It is a guarantee on who will be at events, more or less, and leaning more on them there.”

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McIlroy pointed out that no-cut events are nothing new for the Tour, citing the World Golf Championships, the FedEx Cup playoff events and fall events such as the CJ Cup and Zozo Championship.

“Is there going to be a few more of them? Maybe. That’s still TBD by the way,” McIlroy said. “But if we do go down that path there’s precedent there to argue for no-cut events. It keeps the stars there for four days. You ask Mastercard or whoever it is to pay $20 million for a golf event, they want to see the stars at the weekend. They want a guarantee that the stars are there. So if that’s what needs to happen, then that’s what happens.”

Homa and reigning Masters champion Scottie Scheffler both noted that one of the side effects of the larger fields this year at the big-money designated events has been diluting fields at regular events such as last week’s Honda Classic.

“If we made these fields very large in these designated events it would ruin non-designated events that have been staples of the PGA Tour, that go to cities that people love watching these events with their families. It would ruin them,” Homa said. “No one would play in half of them because it would no longer fit your schedule by any means.”

Scheffler used the dilemma of 100th ranked player in the world to prove his point that a player of that caliber is going to play in the $20 million events and skip events such as Honda.

“It’s double the money and all that stuff,” he said. “But now all of a sudden you have those 50 guys that aren’t going to be playing in the next event and that event is going to suffer and there’s a chance we’d lose events because of that because guys aren’t playing. So the math isn’t necessarily that simple.”

“Purses aren’t going down out here,” Scheffler continued. “The guys that may not be able to get into those 70-man fields are going to be playing a lot of other events where the purses aren’t going down. So I think it’s going to benefit the membership as a whole.”

“At the end of the day we’re selling a product to people,” McIlroy added. “The more clarity they have on that product and knowing what they’re buying is really important. It’s really important for the Tour. I think this solves for that.”

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PGA Tour approves radical schedule changes, reducing fields in elevated events and ending cuts

The PGA Tour board on Tuesday night ratified a radical new approach for the 2024 schedule, Golfweek has confirmed.

The PGA Tour board on Tuesday night ratified a radical new approach for the 2024 schedule that will see reduced fields in the new designated events and the removal of the 36-hole cut.

Fields in designated events will be reduced to between 70 and 78 players with no halfway cut. The changes will not apply to all of the elevated events— the majors, the Players Championship and the FedEx Cup playoff tournaments will be unaffected.

Two sources familiar with the details confirmed the changes to Golfweek.

Designated events were launched this year in an effort to guarantee the presence of the game’s top stars and to ensure they are paid more, with minimum purses of $20 million in each event. Due to the haste with which the designated events came about — a direct response to the threat posed by LIV Golf — no changes were made to field sizes for 2023. That won’t apply when the Tour returns to a calendar-year schedule in 2024.

Reducing field sizes is sure to cause concern among rank-and-file members who will see it as the denial of playing opportunities. However, one top player who spoke on condition of anonymity says the plan will have opportunities for members to play their way into designated stops and will not create a closed ecosystem for elite stars.

“We want top players and hot players,” the source said.

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Fields at designated events will be comprised of the top 50 players who qualify for the BMW Championship during the previous season’s FedEx Cup playoffs, plus the top 10 players not otherwise eligible on the current FedEx Cup points race. There will also be five places earned through performance in non-designated events.

For example, the goal is to have a cadence to the calendar that would see two designated events followed by three non-designated tournaments, then another two designated. The top five point-earners from the three non-designated stops would earn their way into the next designated events. Any player who wins on Tour would automatically be eligible for every designated event that season.

Other qualification criteria will include consideration of the Official World Golf Ranking, most likely with a focus on the top 30. That is intended to accommodate a top player who may be returning from injury and otherwise ineligible for designated events. Sponsor exemptions will also remain in use, though with more defined parameters on who is eligible to receive one. Such exemptions are a controversial feature of designated events, but that free pass also represents the most obvious way to ensure Tiger Woods can play any event he wishes to.

Tour executives ran multiple data simulations of how a season would play out to ensure sufficient churn in the system. Proposals from top players at their meeting in Delaware last summer called for smaller fields and no cuts, but their criteria would have seen 80 percent of players remain in the elevated events from season to season. The structure ratified by the board projects that only 60 percent of those eligible for designated events would remain so for the following season.

A PGA Tour spokesperson declined to confirm any details of the plan to Golfweek. A memo explaining the changes will be sent to Tour members later Wednesday.

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Dawn of the designated-event era begins in Sentry Tournament of Champions at Kapalua

This week’s Sentry Tournament of Champions has attracted 17 of the top 20 in the world.

KAPALUA, Hawaii — On the rolling hills of a former pineapple plantation in West Maui and amid an array of the state’s signature rainbows, 39 PGA Tour pros will begin a chase for a pot of gold at Kapalua Resort’s Plantation Course.

With the flip of the calendar, the PGA Tour is set to debut the first of 10 designated tournaments with lucrative purses – $15 million this week or nearly double the prize money of a year ago – aimed at attracting the top players to compete against one another more often. This week’s Sentry Tournament of Champions has attracted 17 of the top 20 in the world, though World No. 1 Rory McIlroy opted to skip it. The WM Phoenix Open and the Genesis Invitational hosted by Tiger Woods in Los Angeles mean three of the first seven tournaments on the West Coast Swing have been elevated in status by the Tour this year.

“I’m excited to see how they are received throughout the year,” said Tour veteran Adam Scott. “Change needs to happen. If you don’t change, you get run over. The world is moving forward. I’m excited for something different.”

If all goes according to plan, the Tour elite will compete against each other at least 17 times per year. The idea of the best players competing against each other more frequently was a player-driven concept aimed to prevent more top talent from jumping ship for the upstart LIV Golf, which will expand to a 14-event circuit next month. Patrick Cantlay, for one, contends that LIV Golf has helped improve the professional golf landscape by forcing the Tour to adapt.

“I think that it’s been interesting how much it’s changed golf, as in, like, everyone’s trying to innovate and make golf better all of a sudden,” he said. “I think that will be a massive benefit for the viewer because I think now more than ever competition is making people evolve and making people grow and think outside the box.

“So I think it’s been really good and will be good for professional golf in the long run. But it’s been such a polarizing issue that it’s made people, you know, feel emotional about something that has been the same for such a long time.”

Some claim the Tour’s designated events aren’t all that different than what the Tour did previously in the 1990s to combat Greg Norman, LIV Golf CEO and Commissioner, and his previous effort for a breakaway circuit. Will Zalatoris, who is a member of the Tour’s Player Advisory Council, noted it won’t change his schedule significantly and termed it “a rebrand or a rename, however you want to look at it.”

Will the Tour’s changes be drastic enough to attract fans and stave off more player defections?

“What I hope is the Tour and its broadcast partners and everyone do a really good job of making a big deal of how strong the fields are these particular weeks and will it resonate with what people want to see,” Scott said. “The fields are going to be phenomenal if everybody shows up as they are meant to. Hopefully the elevated events are like a whole group of World Golf Championship events in today’s world.”

Having the top players committed to show up to the same events is the dream for Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan and will make life easier for tournament directors of the designated events, who can promote the appearance of the top stars in advance. But on the flip side, what about the other 30-plus events whose job just got that much tougher to attract any star power?

“When you have 47 events, you want to be careful of maybe watering down the product, and now we’re just making sure that our product is as strong as possible,” Zalatoris said. “And, quite frankly, no, I’m not worried about these other events, worrying about their viability or whatever it is going forward.”

The top players are allowed to skip one of the designated events and still earn their full Player Impact Program bonus. Will McIlroy’s no-show at the inaugural designated event set a trend of players taking turns skipping out of the Tour’s premiere events? Zalatoris doesn’t think so.

“Why would I turn down any of the nine events where we’re playing for $20 million against the best players in the world?” Zalatoris said. “When I’m at home, I would be playing golf anyway, so I might as well play it against some of the best players in the world.”

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PGA Tour golfers can skip one ‘elevated’ event; Rory McIlroy to do so at 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions

PGA Tour members had a 5 p.m. deadline Friday to commit to the 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions.

It’s almost 2023, which means it’s almost time for tournament winners—plus non-winners who made the Tour Championship—to tee it up in Kapalua at the Sentry Tournament of Champions.

But as the 5 p.m. deadline for Tour members to enter came and went Friday, one name not on the entry list belongs to Rory McIlroy.

But it’s all good.

PGA Tour members are allowed to opt out of one of the 13 elevated events, and this just happens to be the one the reigning FedEx Cup champion wants to skip.

McIlroy qualified by winning the 2022 RBC Canadian Open. His lone appearance in the Sentry came in 2019 when he tied for fourth.

McIlroy didn’t play his first event of the 2022 calendar year until the Genesis Invitational in mid-February.

As of 5:02 p.m. on Friday, the PGA Tour has 39 names listed in the field for the Sentry.

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What will the PGA Tour look like in 2023?

While the tournaments and courses are largely the same, the PGA Tour will have three big changes in the coming year.

Change is coming to the PGA Tour in 2023 – for better or worse.

The three biggest changes for the coming year will be the debut of elevated events, the end of the wrap-around season and a re-invented fall season that ends with a Q-School with PGA Tour cards on the line.

Let’s start with the elevated events, which is a direct response to the challenge put forth by LIV Golf. When the top players on the PGA Tour met at the BMW Championship in Wilmington in late August, they came to the conclusion that the best players need to play more often against each other. As a result, they agreed to commit to play in 13 elevated events in 2023 plus the four majors – they are allowed to miss only one if they want to receive their Player Impact Program bonus money.

The Tour always has had a tiered system, where certain tournaments were already elevated in the minds of the players and attracted better fields – due to larger purses or FedEx Cup points, limited fields/no cuts, better courses, prestige, etc. – but now it is more clear cut in black and white. The RBC Heritage knows it will have its best field – probably ever in 2023 – the Honda Classic? Not so much.

Having the best players committed to playing in the same events is pretty much the dream for Tour commish Jay Monahan, TV execs and tournament directors at the elevated events, who can now promote their presence. Fans will be delighted to see the best going at it more often. But on the flip side, the job just got much tougher for the tournament directors of non-elevated events and there could be some weeks that fields may be even more watered down than in the past.

The 2022-23 wrap-around season will end as usual with the FedEx Cup being handed out in late August at the Tour Championship. But instead of the top 125 qualifying for the first playoff event in Memphis, only the top-70 players on the Fed Ex Cup points list after the final regular-season event (the Wyndham Championship) will advance to the playoffs. That’s a significant change and will force players to play more if they are on the outside looking in. In previous years, 70 was the cutdown for the BMW, the second playoff event, but that one will be reduced to the top 50 in 2023. No change for East Lake: the top 30 from there move on to the Tour Championship in Atlanta.

It’s still unclear how the fall portion of the schedule will work, but there will be no FedEx Cup points for the new season. This should appease exempt players for the 2024 season and allow them to take time off or compete elsewhere such as the DP World Tour without fear of falling behind in the FedEx Cup race.

Those that don’t qualify for the playoffs will have to play in the fall – it’s still unclear how many events will constitute the fall schedule – and battle it out for position Nos. 71-125. Expect weaker fields but also great theater as players fight to regain playing privileges for the 2024 year, which will run from January through the Tour Championship in late August. Expect the Tour to lay out how this is going to work sometime in the first quarter of 2023.

The last change to look forward to is that starting in 2023, the top five finishers and ties at Q-school will now earn PGA Tour status for the following season. This marks the first time since 2012 that Q-school will provide a path directly to the big leagues. This should be attractive to top collegiate talent that turn pro and will provide another route to playing for Tour riches without spending time on the Korn Ferry Tour.

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