PGA Tour Policy Board approves changes to field sizes, eligibility and FedEx Cup points system

The PGA Tour is changing in 2026.

The PGA Tour is officially getting smaller in 2026.

On Monday, the PGA Tour Policy Board approved “competitive changes supported by the Player Advisory Council that will deliver a stronger and more competitive and entertaining PGA Tour to fans, players, tournaments and partners,” according to the PGA Tour.

The changes include field size adjustments to account for events with limited daylight and minor changes to the FedExCup points structure. Eligibility and field size changes will take effect for the 2026 season, while adjustments to the FedExCup points system will be implemented beginning in 2025.

“Today’s announced changes build on the competitive and schedule enhancements incorporated over the last six years in seeking the best version of the PGA Tour for our fans, players, tournaments and partners,” PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan said in a release. “This was a true collaborative effort, and I’m extremely proud of the PAC for the time and effort they put into evaluating how we build a stronger PGA Tour.”

Lynch: The PGA Tour’s board meeting will bring changes, but not yet to player entitlement or fans being shortchanged

For eligibility, the changes include exempt status changing from top 125 to top 100 in the FedExCup standings with conditional status for finishers 101-125. This change was incorporated for players who receive their cards via the Korn Ferry Tour/DP World Tour/Q-School to have a greater certainty of schedule and equitable playing opportunities for full-field events, per the release.

Only the top 20 finishers on the Korn Ferry Tour will receive PGA Tour cards instead of 30. Ten players from the DP World Tour will still receive cards, and Q-School will be limited to five instead of five and ties.

For Monday qualifiers, in 144-player fields, only four spots will be available. That number goes to two spots for 132-player events and none for 120-player fields.

Sponsor exemptions used for players in the DP World Tour/Korn Ferry Tour/Q-School category, and those restricted to PGA Tour members, will be removed and reallocated to the next eligible members on the priority ranking. Open events maintain unrestricted sponsor exemptions.

More: Lucas Glover slams changes being voted on by PGA Tour Policy Board: ‘They think we’re stupid’

As for field sizes, the Tour is reducing the maximum number of players in a starting field played on one course from 156 to 144 players; a reduction to 120 or 132 as required by circumstances such as daylight. The Players will move to a field size of 120 players. Most tournaments played on multiple courses will stay at 156 players, with the exception of the Farmers Insurance Open, which will have 144 players.

These FedEx Cup points changes go into effect next year: major championships and the Players will have a slight increase to second-place points and a slight decrease in points for positions 11 and beyond. Signature events will have a slight decrease in points for positions 7 and beyond.

Some other approved changes include the top-10 finishers and ties, including amateurs, to be granted access to the next event, rather than the top-10 professionals. Additionally, an extra point will be awarded for a top-five finish in PGA Tour University Accelerated. Additionally, Invitational eligibility adjustments were made for the Players, Charles Schwab Challenge and Genesis Scottish Open to align with the revised standard eligibility structure.

“The PAC discussions were based on a number of guiding principles, including our belief that PGA Tour membership is the pinnacle of achievement in men’s professional golf,” said Policy Board player director Adam Scott. “The player representatives of the PGA Tour recognize the need to be continually improving its offerings to enhance the golf fan experience. The changes approved today will provide equitable playing opportunities for new young talent to be showcased, and positively refine the playing experience for our members.”

FedEx Cup Fall update: Who’s up, who’s down with one PGA Tour event to go

The RSM Classic is the final event of the season and the last chance for players to make their move for 2024.

Time is running out for players to secure status on the PGA Tour for next season.

The FedEx Cup Fall consists of seven Tour events – last week’s Butterfield Bermuda Championship was the sixth – which provide players an opportunity to lock up or improve their positions in priority ranking and secure additional playing opportunities for the 2024 PGA Tour season, which returns to a calendar-year format from January to August.

The top 125 in the FedEx Cup Fall standings through this week’s RSM Classic will be exempt into all full-field events and the Players Championship in 2024.

Nos. 51-60 in the standings at the conclusion of the RSM Classic will qualify for two Signature Events in 2024 via The Next 10 (AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am and The Genesis Invitational).

Here’s a closer look at who was up and who was down after the 2023 Butterfield Bermuda Championship.

Here’s what the PGA Tour’s fall 2023 schedule looks like

This fall, the PGA Tour schedule looks a bit different.

The wraparound season is gone, but that doesn’t mean there will be a shortage of PGA Tour events this fall.

The seven-event slate tees it up next month in Napa, California, at the Fortinet Championship, and concludes in December at the silly season’s PNC Championship in Orlando. In between are the Ryder Cup and a new stop in Mexico.

Tour pros will get two weeks off before it all starts up again. And there’s much more on the line in the fall for players looking to shore up their eligibility for the 2024 season, which begins in January at the Sentry.

Those ranked No. 51 and beyond in the FedEx Cup standings from 2023 will carry their FedEx Cup points from the regular season and first playoff event into the FedEx Cup Fall and continue to accumulate points to finalize eligibility for the 2024 season.

The FedEx Cup Fall will finalize the priority ranking entering the 2024 season, including the top 125 category for those who finished outside the top 70 in the FedEx Cup standings. Standard FedEx Cup points will be issued in the seven events, including 500 points awarded to the winner.

Ten players, not previously eligible, with the most season-long FedEx Cup points through the FedEx Cup Fall, will earn exemptions into the first two signature events that follow the Sentry.

[pickup_prop id=”34552″]

A win during the fall will earn a two-year Tour exemption, 500 FedEx Cup points, entry to the season-opening Sentry and the Players Championship as well as eligibility into majors that have invited Tour winners in the past.

Here’s a look at the PGA Tour’s 2023 fall schedule, including purses for each event.

Date Tournament Course City Purse
Sept. 14-17 Fortinet Championship Silverado Resort and Spa (North Course) Napa, California $8.4 million
Oct. 5-8 Sanderson Farms Championship The Country Club of Jackson Jackson, Mississippi $8.2 million
Oct. 12-15 Shriners Children’s Open TPC Summerlin Las Vegas $8.4 million
Oct. 19-22 Zozo Championship Accordia Golf Narashino Country Club Chiba, Japan $8.5 million
Nov. 2-5 World Wide Technology Championship El Cardonal at Diamante Los Cabos, Mexico $8.2 million
Nov. 9-12 Butterfield Bermuda Championship Port Royal Golf Course Southampton, Bermuda $6.5 million
Nov. 16-19 RSM Classic Sea Island Golf Club (Seaside and Plantation Course) St. Simons Island, Georgia $8.4 million

The RSM Classic is the last chance for golfers to earn their 2024 Tour cards.

The 2023 calendar year ends with three silly season events: Tiger’s Hero World Challenge, a new mixed at Tiburon in Florida and the increasingly popular PNC Championship.

Date Tournament Course City Purse
Nov. 30-Dec. 3 Hero World Challenge Albany Albany, Bahamas $3.5 million
Dec. 8-10 Grant Thornton Invitational Tiburon Golf Club Naples, Florida $4.0 million
Dec. 16-17 PNC Championship Ritz-Carlton Golf Club Orlando $1.085 million

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 tag=451190056]

PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan booed during 2023 Tour Championship trophy ceremony

Monahan got the Roger Goodell treatment Sunday night.

[anyclip pubname=”2122″ widgetname=”0016M00002U0B1kQAF_M8224″]

PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan got the Roger Goodell treatment on Sunday night.

Goodell, the longtime commissioner of the NFL, is often booed when he speaks at events like the Pro Football Hall of Fame induction ceremony or the NFL Draft. Monahan got the same response when he stepped to the mic to introduce Viktor Hovland as the winner of the 2023 Tour Championship and the PGA Tour’s season-long race for the FedEx Cup.

The commissioner recently returned to work after taking some time off to deal with a health issue, but did give his annual State of the PGA Tour press conference ahead of this week’s season finale at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta. Monahan addressed his health but was silent on the pending deal between the Tour and Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1375]

Viktor Hovland wins 2023 Tour Championship to claim season-ending FedEx Cup

Hovland won the season finale at East Lake for his sixth PGA Tour win and second in a row.

[anyclip pubname=”2122″ widgetname=”0016M00002U0B1kQAF_M8224″]

ATLANTA – When Viktor Hovland won the Hero World Challenge in December, it put a bow on a year that was defined by close calls but otherwise was short on victory. For some, it would have represented a time to kick back, enjoy the holidays and assume his end-of-the-season winning form would be a springboard to bigger things, but not Hovland. He sought to get better and that meant it was time to re-make himself into a more complete player.

“If you want to get to the next level, you have to look introspectively,” he said. “I think when you try to be honest with yourself and ask yourself, OK, how can I get better, I just basically have to force myself to change a couple of these mindset things.”

All the hard work – to his swing, short game, use of Aim Point and course strategy – paid off, culminating in back-to-back wins and a prize of $18 million as the FedEx Cup champion. On another hot, humid day that led to a nearly two-hour weather delay, Hovland carded a 7-under 63 at East Lake Golf Club and rolled to a five-stroke victory over Xander Schauffele in the 30-man Tour Championship, the 47th event of the 2022-23 season and third and final leg of the FedEx Cup Playoffs.

“He just keeps his foot on the pedal,” three-time FedEx Cup champion Rory McIlroy said, “just isn’t scared.”

No fear and a refusal to be complacent are attributes that have made the 25-year-old Norwegian a three-time winner this season and one of the best players in the game. Despite winning the U.S. Amateur in 2018 and finding immediate success on the PGA Tour as one of the best ballstrikers in golf, Hovland grew frustrated with his consistency last season.

“It’s a little frustrating showing up to events when you don’t feel like you have your best stuff,” he said before winning in the Bahamas in December. “You don’t have the confidence over the ball thinking, ‘OK, I’m going to stuff this 7-iron,’ because that’s what I used to do when I first came out here and the last two years basically it’s been pretty deadly from the fairway.”

Hovland’s frustration boiled over and in his search to identify flaws in his game that could help him challenge for world No. 1, he changed swing coaches in January, hiring Joe Mayo, better known in social media circles as the Trackman Maestro.

2023 Tour Championship
Viktor Hovland and caddie Shay Knight on the sixth hole during the final round of the 2023 Tour Championship at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta. (Photo: Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

“It is amazing that a player could win a tournament and not be happy with themselves,” Mayo said of Hovland switching coaches shortly after a win, but Mayo’s seen pros who have attributed a win to “smoke and mirrors.”

Switching coaches can be a risky proposition for a player. It can be a recipe for disaster but Mayo noted that Hovland is too savvy to let that happen.

“He’s not gonna let any instructor screw him up,” Mayo said. “He’s too smart for it. He’s got a great bullshit meter, as I would say.”

Mayo studied 3-D imaging of Hovland’s swing and helped him reestablish a repeatable swing and restore faith in his squeeze cut. Hovland said he’s had his best driving season. East Lake is too difficult to play from its wiry rough but Hovland, who ranked first in driving accuracy for the second straight week, could be aggressive and go flag-hunting.

“His ballstriking is probably top 3 on Tour, especially when he’s playing well,” said Edoardo Molinari, a winner of three DP Tour titles, who doubles as Hovland’s performance coach. “He doesn’t miss a shot.”

His short-game was another story. Early in his career, Hovland admitted his chipping game “sucked.” He ranked 191st in Strokes Gained: Around the Green last season.

“Before, when I was standing over every shot, I was like, ‘Don’t duff it, skull it, don’t leave it in the bunker,” Hovland said last week. “Me and a buddy of mine, we made up this saying: Just land it on and keep it on. We set the bar pretty low when we had a chip. Now it’s a lot of fun to be able to open up that face and just slap the ground and put some friction on the ball.”

At the Tour Championship, Hovland ranked first in scrambling as he notched his sixth career PGA Tour title. Mayo said he didn’t even discuss the short game with Hovland during their first month together. On Tuesday of the Genesis Invitational in February, Mayo told his pupil, “Anybody that can put a 4-iron on the back of the ball at 105 miles an hour and hit it 240, are you telling me that you can’t chip a golf ball? I don’t accept that, and I don’t buy it.”

[pickup_prop id=”34569″]

Mayo introduced the short-game package in tiny morsels throught the Players Championship in March. Hovland has improved to 105th in SG: Around the Green this season.

Mayo points out that that figure doesn’t take into account when they started working together. Mayo asked Molinari to run his short game stats from the Players through the FedEx St. Jude Championship and the numbers don’t lie: He’s gained .176 shots, “which puts him at about 55th,” Mayo said.

“That’s been the difference from being still a top-10 player in the world to what he’s done this year,” McIlroy said.

The final ingredient in turning Hovland into his best self this season was improving his course management. He began working with Molinari last year but it was this spring where they made one of their biggest discoveries. After the Masters, where Hovland finished T-7, Mayo asked Molinari to crunch some numbers and discovered that when Hovland attacked greens with pitching wedge through 8-iron, he was short-siding himself 30 percent of the time and the Tour average is 20 percent of the time.

“Sometimes he just misses in spots where no one would get up and down,” Molinari said. “The short game is less of an issue than it is believed to be.”
Hovland compared his new-found focus on course management to the game of poker and placing smart bets depending on the hand he’s dealt. He implemented the strategy at the PGA Championship and finished T-2, and it worked to perfection at the Memorial in June, the first of his three wins in his last eight events.

“Anytime you can tilt math to your advantage, that can be huge,” he said.
Mayo has beaten into Hovland’s head that in Tiger Woods’s heyday, he made a living off of hitting safely to 20 feet, shooting 70 and winning a bundle of majors.

“It’s called boring golf and if Viktor Hovland plays boring golf, he’s going to be hard to beat,” Mayo said.

A week ago, at the BMW Championship near Chicago, Hovland said he “blacked out for a minute” en route to a final-round 61, which included seven birdies and a back-nine 28 to clip world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler and Matt Fitzpatrick.

At East Lake, where he won the 2018 East Lake Cup men’s stroke play title, which included his first hole-in-one at the par-3 11th, Hovland began the week in second place with a stroke allocation of 8 under in the staggered start. With rounds of 68-64-66, he built a commanding six-stroke lead and he continued his assault on par with four birdies in his first six holes. Schauffele (62) did his best to chip away at the lead, making birdie at seven of his first 12 holes to trim the deficit to three.

“I’ll hold my head up high,” Schauffele said. “It was the most fun I had losing in quite some time.”

Just when it looked like it was about to become a taut affair, Hovland canned a clutch 23-foot par putt at No. 13, the longest putt he made all week, and tacked on birdies at 16 and 17 for good measure to wrap up a bogey-free final round and a total score of 27 under that made the walk to the 18th green a foregone conclusion. It was a testament to how far Hovland’s game has progressed.

“I’m very hard on myself and I felt like even though I had the game to compete, I never truly believed it,” he said. “I’ve just gotten better and better every single year, and with that comes the belief and I feel like the belief was the last missing piece.”

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1375]

Five years ago, fans stormed East Lake to follow Tiger Woods march to victory

Tiger Woods called it a stampede. It felt more like The Running of the Bulls in Pamplona.

ATLANTA — Tiger Woods called it a stampede. It felt more like The Running of the Bulls in Pamplona.

Five years ago, as Woods marched downhill to the 18th green on the verge of his 80th PGA Tour title, 1,877 days since he hoisted his last trophy at the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational in Akron, Ohio. The ropes opened behind him, and a sea of humanity fueled by alcohol blew past troopers and knocked over volunteer marshals to celebrate the long-awaited victory as if attending Tiger Woods-tock.

I was traipsing along in Tiger’s gallery that memorable day when it turned into bedlam, and I remember flashing my inside the ropes badge just before an officer built like a linebacker was about to flatten me Adam Hadwin-style, but somehow he pulled up just short and I survived.

I have so many fond memories of one the coolest tournaments I’ve ever had the pleasure of covering. I couldn’t help chuckling when after Woods rolled in his fourth birdie in five holes on Saturday, NBC’s Roger Maltbie sidled up to him and said, “You play a lot like that golfer Tiger Woods.”

Woods broke his concentration for a moment to share a smile with Maltbie before continuing his assault on par.

Woods grabbed the lead in the opening round with a 65, and golf fans were on red alert that something special was in the making. Former NBA All-Star Vince Carter walked the front nine inside the ropes with Tiger’s group on Saturday while former Atlanta Falcons running back Warrick Dunn, whose home backs up to the fifth tee at East Lake, climbed out of his La-Z-Boy and poked his head over a mesh fence to watch Woods blast a drive 320 yards, stuff a wedge to 7 feet and can the putt for birdie.

His Comeback Tour after undergoing a fourth back surgery that fused a vertebrae in April 2017 had been nothing short of miraculous and the faithful showed their enthusiasm for Tiger from the moment he arrived on the golf course with a 3-stroke lead over Rory McIlroy and Justin Rose. It was just the first hole, but when Tiger’s 10-foot birdie putt rattled in, it was like a roundhouse right that floored McIlroy. He limped home in 74.

Woods led by five at the turn, but it got a little dicey near the end after Billy Horschel posted 9 under and Tiger’s lead was cut to two. On 18, there was still the formality of getting out of a greenside bunker, but for the Tiger faithful at East Lake, he had already done it: He’d made Sundays great again.

The whole scene was too good to be true, but it happened in front of our eyes.

Fans lined tee boxes and fairways elbow to elbow, 10, 15-deep, and all day long, loving superlatives fluttered around the fairways like confetti. “It’s your time,” a woman yelped. “You’ve got this, Tiger,” a man screamed. When Tiger birdied the 13th hole, the crowd circling the green exploded. Moments later, a second eruption of cheers emerged from the Grey Goose 19th hole and other hospitality tents as the TV delay showed the putt drop.

The crowd swelled as Woods grew closer to victory. Fans climbed trees, and dads placed daughters on their shoulders for a better vantage point. They exhorted as if at a religious revival, breaking into spontaneous chants of “U-S-A” and “Ti-ger, Ti-ger.”

When fans broke through the ropes, it was the culmination of an incredible celebration of golf, and it reminded Woods of his rookie year in 1997 at the Western Open in Chicago coming down the last hole.

“That was a little bit like that, but not this fevered pitch,” Woods said during his press conference.

Standing on the 18th green after the trophy ceremony, Woods wore the biggest smile on his face. NBC’s Dan Hicks turned to a bunch of us writers and said, “Did you ever see a scene like that?”

Who knew then that this was just an appetizer to what Tiger would do eight months later down the road in Augusta.

A look back at every FedEx Cup Playoff champion, beginning with Tiger Woods

View all the former FedEx Cup Playoff champions, beginning with Tiger Woods in 2007.

The FedEx Cup Playoffs have gone through multiple format changes over the years, but one thing remains the same — a massive payout to the winner.

A total of $18 million goes to the winner of the PGA Tour’s season-long race. Only the top 30 players make their way to East Lake and are broken down into an aggregate scoring system that went into effect in 2019.

Since the FedEx Cup Playoffs began in 2007, 13 different champions have been crowned. Rory McIlroy leads the way with three FedEx Cups to his name, surpassing Tiger Woods’ record in 2019. The two all-time greats are the only players to claim multiple FedEx Cups.

Although the winner of the event has claimed an eight-figure prize since 2007, everyone who makes it to Atlanta goes home with a sizeable check in their back pocket.

Who will add their name to the list this year?

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.

Viktor Hovland has eight 3s on back nine, posts career low to win BMW Championship

The win is the fifth of Hovland’s PGA Tour career and his second of the season.

[anyclip pubname=”2122″ widgetname=”0016M00002U0B1kQAF_M8224″]

OLYMPIA FIELDS, Ill. – As Rory McIlroy counted up Viktor Hovland’s scorecard after the final round of the BMW Championship, he realized that Hovland’s back nine included eight threes and a single four.

“It adds up to a nice little 28 for him,” McIlroy said marveling at Hovland’s brilliant performance. “He just keeps his foot on the pedal. Just isn’t scared. Just keeps going forward, keeps going at it.”

The 25-year-old Norwegian kept his foot on the pedal and rode his way to a course-record 9-under 61 at Olympia Fields on Sunday and a two-stroke victory over world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler and Englishman Matt Fitzpatrick. Hovland’s sizzling 61 to clinch his fifth PGA Tour title was the low round by a winner this season on the Tour and also the lowest final round in the history of the FedEx Cup Playoffs.

When told that the CBS golf team declared it the best round of the year, Hovland exclaimed, “Wow!” and added, “It definitely has to be the best round I’ve ever played given the circumstances, a playoff event and this golf course.”

Hovland erased a three-stroke deficit on Sunday, making three birdies in his first five holes, but he didn’t let his lone bogey of the day, at No. 7, derail him.

“It felt like it was just going to be one of those days like the other days where I’ve gotten off to a nice start and kind of just played OK and shot 68 or 67 or 66, which is a nice score, but after making that turn, stuffed it on 10, hit it close on 11, stuffed it on 12, and that’s when I kind of felt like I hit the groove a little bit.”

Did he ever. Hovland reeled off seven birdies in his final nine holes to vault past Scheffler and Fitzpatrick, who shared second despite both shooting 66.

“Yeah, played great. Can’t do anything about 61,” said Fitzpatrick, who was the only player to move into the top 30 in the FedEx Cup and qualify for the Tour Championship, bumping out Chris Kirk. “I did just see Viktor, I called him a little (jerk).”

Hovland’s caddie Shay Knight said his player was in the zone and for him to do it on this big of a stage – though Olympia Fields was softened by rain earlier in the week and there was hardly a breath of wind on a humid day, it still is arguably one of the 50-100 toughest courses in the country – shows how much of “a bulldog he is.”

To hear Hovland tell it, he just kept hitting fairways – he led the field in fairways hit for the week – and kept giving himself chances at birdie. “We’re one shot closer, we’re one shot closer, and then suddenly we were tied. It just happened so quickly,” he said. “When I made the putt on 15 for birdie, I felt like, OK, we’ve got a chance now if I can finish pretty well, then you never know what’s going to happen behind you.

“Then when I made a birdie on 17, I was feeling really good, and then the birdie on 18, as well, I felt like I could win it outright. But it wasn’t until then, I had no idea what was going on. I was just going to try to play well and keep making birdies.”

Hovland’s record day lifted him to a 72-hole total of 17-under 263. Scheffler had made birdies on six of the first 13 holes but his putter, which has plagued him for much of the season, let him down again and he made a critical bogey at 17 to take some of the drama out of the finish. Scheffler, however, claimed the top spot in the FedEx Cup heading to Atlanta, knocking Jon Rahm back to fourth, and will hold a two-stroke lead over Hovland, who jumped to second in the point standings, in the staggered start at the FedEx Cup finale.

After munching on a piece of pizza that he snagged on his way to his winner’s press conference, Hovland conceded he was running on fumes but would be ready for the challenge of trying to win back-to-back weeks and the season-long championship.

“Well, I’m about to pass out right now, but no, just a good night’s sleep, and we’re right back at it next week at East Lake,” he said. “I’m sure it’ll be hot and we’ll be sweating a lot, so I’m definitely feeling that it’s been a lot of golf, but it seems like the more I’ve played recently, I seem to play better. Just need to lean into that and hopefully we have another good week next week.”

[pickup_prop id=”34465″]

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1375]

Check the yardage book: Olympia Fields North, host of 2023 BMW Championship

Thanks to yardage books provided by StrackaLine we can see the challenges the players face this week.

Olympia Fields Country Club’s North Course near Chicago – site of the PGA Tour’s 2023 BMW Championship – opened in 1923 with a design by Scotsman Willie Park Jr.

The BMW Championship is the second of three events in the PGA Tour’s FedEx Cup Playoffs.

The North Course ranks No. 67 on Golfweek’s Best list of classic courses built before 1960 in the U.S. It also ranks No. 6 in Illinois on Golfweek’s Best list of private courses in each state.

The layout will play to 7,366 yards with a par of 70 for the BMW Championship.

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.