Scottie Scheffler wins 2024 Tour Championship to claim FedEx Cup, $25 million bonus

“Golf is hard, and he’s figured out how to make it easy.”

ATLANTA — Randy Smith was speaking about his star pupil Scottie Scheffler when Scheffler’s mother, Diane, swooped in for a hug. But as he accepted her embrace, Smith answered the question about what he learned seeing Scheffler overcome the dreaded shank at the eighth hole in the final round of the 2024 Tour Championship and bounce back with three straight birdies and go on to win the title and the FedEx Cup for the first time with a winning score of 30 under.

“A lot,” Smith said, his eyes growing wide.

He still remembers when Scheffler was seven or eight years old and he would grow increasingly frustrated when he would do everything in his power correctly but the ball would take a funny bounce or would hit a spike mark and go off line. Scheffler couldn’t understand it. Smith said it took time, but he learned to control what he can control and appreciate that golf is not a game of perfect.

“Golf is hard,” Smith said, “and he’s figured out how to make it easy.”

2024 Tour Championship
Scottie Scheffler lines up his putt on the fifth green during the final round of the TOUR Championship. (John David Mercer-USA TODAY Sports)

Indeed, Scheffler has, making five birdies and an eagle at East Lake Golf Club to shoot 4-under 67 on Sunday and beat Collin Morikawa by four strokes in the FedEx Cup finale to remove any doubt of who is the PGA Tour Player of the Year. Scheffler became the first player to win seven times in a single season – eight according to Scheffler, who counts the gold medal at the Paris Olympics – since Tiger Woods in 2007. In the last 40 years, Scheffler joins Woods, who did it four times, and Vijay Singh, who won nine times in 2004.

No less than Adam Scott, the 44-year-old veteran who experienced Tiger’s prime and finished T-4 this week, said Scheffler’s season was worthy of comparisons to some of Tiger’s best work.

“I think it is on par with those great years of Tiger’s. I think it’s very hard today for anyone to separate themselves as much as Scottie has. I don’t think we’ve seen that in a long time. I think it’s harder to do it today,” he said.

Golf Channel’s Brandel Chamblee argued Scheffler’s game from tee to green has been every bit as good as Tiger in his prime. “I never thought I’d be able to say that – Tiger Woods was a much better putter…what we (saw) this week is Tiger Woods-type putting,” he said of Scheffler, who ranked third in Strokes Gained: Putting this week.

Just a few weeks after Rory McIlroy suggested on national TV that Scheffler should consider using a mallet putter, he switched to a TaylorMade Spider in March, and the putts started to drop. When Scheffler, already the game’s most complete player, putts well, it’s not a fair fight.

“I made a lot of putts this year when I really needed to,” he said. “I think of the putt to win Memorial, I think of some of the putts I made over the week at the Players and the putts I made on the back nine Sunday at the Olympics. I made some putts this year when I really needed to, and that’s why I’m sitting here with a lot of wins instead of a few.”

Scheffler entered the Tour Championship at No. 1 in the FedEx Cup standings for the third consecutive year and began at 10 under in the staggered start, two strokes clear of Xander Schauffele and as many as 10 ahead of the last man in the 30-man field. With rounds of 65-66-66, he enjoyed a five-stroke lead heading into the final round, and with Morikawa making bogey at the first and Scheffler sinking a birdie at No. 2, his lead grew to seven. But that seemingly commanding advantage began to shrink. Scheffler made three bogeys in a four-hole stretch beginning at the fifth and concluding with the world No. 1 shanking that ball from a greenside bunker at No. 8.

“You can see it in his body language right now,” NBC’s Jim “Bones” Mackay said. “He is shaken up.”

Tour Championship: Leaderboard | Photos

Very surprising were the words Morikawa used to describe the shot. He pounced, rolling in his birdie putt for a two-stroke swing to cut the deficit to two. All the momentum had shifted. But one of Scheffler’s super powers is his ability to only look forward.

“He went back to work,” Smith said.

“It almost brought his focus back in for a half second, and that’s something you can’t teach. You just either have it or you don’t,” Morikawa said.

It looked as if Scheffler, who blew a six-stroke 54-hole lead in the 2022 Tour Championship to McIlroy, was reeling. A pep talk from caddie Ted Scott helped settle his nerves. Morikawa wasn’t surprised what happened next: “He played Scottie golf.”

Scheffler drilled a 4-iron at the par-3 ninth to 3 feet and made birdie. He birdied the next two holes to stretch the lead to five. That’s what the greats do. Just like he did down the road at Augusta National Golf Club in April, he sucked all the drama out of the closing holes.

2024 Tour Championship
Scottie Scheffler celebrates with wife Meredith and their son Bennett after winning the 2024 Tour Championship. (John David Mercer-USA TODAY Sports)

In a year in which he welcomed the birth of his first child, a son Bennett, and stretched in a Louisville jail cell before the second round of the PGA Championship at Valhalla, Scheffler collected his 13th Tour title, tying him with a group that includes Jordan Spieth, Jason Day and David Duval. That included another major championship, his second Masters title, and he also won the Players, becoming the first player to win the Tour’s flagship event in back-to-back years. He also claimed four signature events: the Arnold Palmer Invitational, the RBC Heritage, the Travelers and the Memorial.

He won $25 million in bonus money as the FedEx Cup champion, bringing his grand total to $62,228,357 this season between official and bonus money.

“He’s the guy to beat every single week,” Justin Thomas said. “I don’t think people understand how hard that is to do, when you’re expected to win, when you’re the favorite to win, when every single thing you’re doing is being looked at, good and bad, on the golf course, and how hard it is to get in your own little zone and own little world and truly just quiet the noise. It’s something that is just as much of a skill as being able to hit a driver in the fairway or an iron on line. He’s clearly figured that out very well.”

Scott has tried to figure out Scheffler’s secret sauce, which included ranking first in 40 different statistical categories measured by the Tour – among them first in greens in regulation (73 percent) and putting average (1.69). No player had led both categories in a single season since 1980. (In 2000, Woods was second in putting average.)

“I’m observing all the time everything he does. I switched to his golf ball this year. I did a bunch of stuff just to see what’s going on. But I didn’t find it,” Scott said.

Aaron Rai, who made it to East Lake for the first time this season, has been keeping close tabs on Scheffler’s relentless play and run of dominance and offered a different take on what makes Scheffler special.

“His biggest strength is his outlook and his perspective on life,” Rai said. “To be able to maintain that level of golf under the pressure of being world No. 1 and the attention that surrounds him every week and to be able to play his best golf at No. 1 shows a different dimension to his game.”

Schauffele, who with two majors enjoyed a breakthrough season and finished T-4 at the Tour Championship, has witnessed Brooks Koepka, Dustin Johnson, McIlroy and Jon Rahm take their turn at No. 1, but what Scheffler has done stands alone.

“I think by the definition of dominance, I think that’s literally where he’s sitting,” Schauffele said. “They were kind of punching back and forth between 1, 2 and 3. Scottie has just been at the tip-top of the mountain for, what, two full years now it seems.”

Schauffele, Scott, Morikawa and the best players in men’s golf will get another shot next season to knock Scheffler from his perch, but none of his success surprises CBS analyst Colt Knost, who watched Scheffler blossom into the best in the world from a young age.

“This is what he does,” Knost said. “He’s been a winner his whole life, and I don’t see him slowing down any time soon.”

PGA Tour A/PGA Tour B: An in-depth look at the regular events the top 30 played in 2024 and what it means

“I felt like it forced me to put all my eggs in the signature and major basket this year.”

ATLANTA, Ga. — There’s a PGA Tour A and a PGA Tour B schedule these days and it is evident in looking at where the pros who qualified for the Tour Championship by finishing in the top 30 on the FedEx Cup season-long standings teed it up this season.

There’s always been certain tournaments that attracted the best fields – that’s nothing new – but it has never been more pronounced than it is in the era of the signature events, which feature eight limited-field events with jacked up purses and inflated FedEx Cup points and often no cuts. Former longtime Wells Fargo Championship tournament director Kym Hougham once compared how players fill their schedule to college.

“You have your requirements and your electives. For years, there used to be four requirements – the majors – and the rest of the events were electives. You had four that were a given and then had 14 others to choose from.”

Now there’s eight signature events, the Players and three playoff events. That makes 16 requirements.

“The electives are vying for four or five spots,” Hougham said.

Some are electing to play even fewer than that. Viktor Hovland only played one non-major or signature event this season, the Genesis Scottish Open, which counts as a DP World Tour event for his Ryder Cup qualification. Asked if he may play more regular events next season, Hovland explained that this season he didn’t feel confident in his game and preferred to practice at home.

“I might,” Hovland said. “There are plenty of other tournaments I like to play. If I feel like my game is in a good spot I might just keep playing and add some non-Signature events. I’d love to do that, it just didn’t work out that way this year.”

2024 BMW Championship
Viktor Hovland hits his tee shot on the eighth hole during the final round of the 2024 BMW Championship at Castle Pines Golf Club. (Christopher Hanewinckel-USA TODAY Sports)

Rory McIlroy, who said he expects to finish with 27 worldwide starts by the end of the year, said he’ll play fewer events next season.

“I’m going to try to cut it back to like 18 or 20 a year going forward, I think,” he said on Sunday after his round at the Tour Championship.

There are myriad reasons why players skipped tournaments, ranging from births to deaths to just being plain tired. Some players added starts to enhance their chances of making the Olympics, qualifying for a major, making the Aon Swing 5 to get into a signature event or helping their FedEx Cup chances. Sometimes a player has a sponsorship commitment. Some honored a commitment as defending champion. Others like Tom Hoge just like to play a lot of golf.

“Early in the year I played the entire West Coast chasing the top 50 so I could get in the Masters,” said Hoge, who played 11. “If I take a few weeks off, it usually takes me a week or two to get back in the groove so I like to play ahead of big events.”

But others found that the cadence of the schedule limited the number of times they played outside of the biggest tournaments. Justin Thomas, who wasn’t in the top 50 but ended up playing his way in or getting a sponsor exemption into all of the signature events, didn’t play a single tournament outside the majors and signature events after March.

“The way the schedule worked out we had signature event, major, signature event,” said Russell Henley, who played only three regular events. (He would’ve played the Wyndham Championship, where he has a great track record, but was dealing with the passing of his father.) “Just the way it was set up, I felt like it forced me to put all my eggs in the signature and major basket this year.”

The players who competed in the most regular events typically weren’t in the signature events to start the season. Billy Horschel needed to play 13 regular tournaments, including an opposite-field event (which he won), to make his way back to East Lake. Horschel said he would still play many of the regular events next season even though he’s in the signature events.

“It’s hard to get to Atlanta,” Horschel said. “With my record at events like the Wyndham Championship, I’d be crazy not to go there. Guys are going to realize that they need points and there are other places to get them.”

Matthieu Pavon and Robert MacIntyre both earned cards for finishing in the DP World top 10. Pavon played three regular events right out of the gate but after winning the Farmers Insurance Open in late January in his third start, he played just two more the rest of the season as he gained admission to the signature events. In contrast, MacIntyre didn’t notch his first win until June at the RBC Canadian Open (and then skipped his first signature event at the Travelers Championship to fly home to Scotland).

2024 FedEx St. Jude Championship
Robert MacIntyre tees off on the first hole during the third round of the 2024 FedEx St. Jude Championship at TPC Southwind in Memphis. (Chris Day/The Memphis Commercial Appeal)

Before that, he even played two opposite-field events. In all, he played 17 regular events, the second most of any player to make the FedEx Cup finale, behind only Aaron Rai, who didn’t win until the regular-season finale at the Wyndham Championship and missed all the signature events.

“I think it will be pretty different,” said Rai, who also is in all the majors next season as well as the signature events. “You can’t really miss the signature events.”

He guessed he’d likely play 18 tournaments before the playoffs next season, which would mean dropping from 18 regular events down to six.

It’s difficult to make definitive statements based on one year of data of having signature events but it sure looks like the top players are taking fewer electives than ever, which makes it a tough time to be a regular tournament.

How many non-signature events and majors the top 30 played in 2024

Player Non-major, non-signature event starts Total number of 2024 starts
Scottie Scheffler (4) AmEx, WM Phoenix, Houston, Schwab 19 plus Olympics
Xander Schauffele (4) AmEx, Farmers, Valspar, Zurich 20 plus Olympics
Hideki Matsuyama (5) Sony, Farmers, WM Phoenix, Valero, Scottish 19 plus Olympics
Keegan Bradley (6) Sony, Farmers, Valspar, Schwab, 3M, Wyndham 22
Ludvig Aberg (4) Sony, Farmers, Valero, Scottish 19 plus Olympics
Rory McIlroy (5) Cognizant, Valero, Zurich, Canadian, Scottish 19 plus Olympics
Collin Morikawa (5) Farmers, Valero, Zurich, Schwab, Scottish 21 plus Olympics
Wyndham Clark (4) AmEx, WM Phoenix, Houston, Scottish 20 plus Olympics
Sam Burns (4) AmEx, WM Phoenix, Valspar, Canadian, 3M 21
Patrick Cantlay (3) AmEx, Farmers, Zurich 19
Sungjae Im (8) AmEx, Farmers, WM Phoenix, Cognizant, Schwab, John Deere, Scottish, Wyndham 25
Sahith Theegala (8) Sony, Farmers, WM Phoenix, Houston, Zurich, Canadian, Scottish, 3M 24
Shane Lowry (7) AmEx, Farmers, WM Phoenix, Cognizant, Zurich, Canadian, Wyndham 20 plus Olympics
Adam Scott (6) WM Phoenix, Valero, CJ Cup, Schwab, Canadian, Scottish 19
Tony Finau (7) AmEx, Farmers, Mexico, Valspar, Houston, Schwab, 3M 22
Ben An (6) Sony, WM Phoenix, Cognizant, Valero, CJ Cup, Scottish 22 plus Olympics
Viktor Hovland (1) Scottish 16 plus Olympics
Russell Henley (3) Sony, Cognizant, Valero 19
Akshay Bhatia (13) Sony, AmEx, Farmers, WM Phoenix, Cognizant, Valspar, Houston, Valero, Schwab, Canadian, Rocket, 3M, Wyndham 26
Robert MacIntyre (17) Sony, AmEx, Farmers, WM Phoenix, Mexico, Cognizant, Puerto Rico, Valspar, Houston, Zurich, CJ Cup, Myrtle Beach, Schwab, Canadian, Rocket, Scottish, Wyndham 25
Billy Horschel (13) Sony, AmEx, Farmers, Phoenix, Cognizant, Valspar, Houston, Valero, Puntacana, Zurich, Schwab, Scottish, Wyndham 23
Tommy Fleetwood (3) Valero, Canadian, Scottish 19 plus Olympics
Sepp Straka (7) Farmers, Cognizant, Valspar, Zurich, Schwab, John Deere, Scottish 23
Matthieu Pavon (5) Sony, AmEx, Farmers, Cognizant, Scottish 19
Taylor Pendrith (15) Sony, AmEx, Farmers, Mexico, Cognizant, Valspar, Houston, Valero, Puntacana, Zurich, CJ Cup, Canadian, Rocket, Barracuda, 3M 24
Chris Kirk (5) Sony, AmEx, Cognizant, Schwab, Rocket 21
Tom Hoge (11) Sony, AmEx, Farmers, Phoenix, Cognizant, Houston, Zurich, CJ Cup, Schwab, Scottish, 3M 26
Aaron Rai (18) Sony, AmEx, Farmers, WM Phoenix, Mexico, Puerto Rico, Valspar, Houston, Valero, Corales Puntacana, Zurich, CJ Cup, Schwab, Canadian, Rocket, John Deere, Scottish, Wyndham 25
Christiaan Bezuidenhout (8) AmEx, Farmers, WM Phoenix, Cognizant, Valspar, Valero, Schwab, Wyndham 23 plus Olympics
Justin Thomas (3) AmEx, WM Phoenix, Valspar 19

 

Prize money, full field, starting strokes format for 2024 Tour Championship at East Lake

We look at the full field, the prize money and how the scoring works in Atlanta.

The 2024 FedEx Cup Playoffs come to a close this week at the Tour Championship, where the winner will take home $25 million in bonus money.

That’s an increase of $7 million from a year ago. In 2019, the first year of the current format, the top prize was $15 million.

The money earned this week is considered bonus money and does not count towards a player’s winnings on the PGA Tour’s official money list.

This year marks the 18th season of the playoffs. PGA Tour players battled through 38 events to get to the finale. The top 70 in the FedEx Cup points made the 2024 postseason with the top 50 advancing to Week 2 and then just the top 30 reaching East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta.

Viktor Hovland won the Tour Championship in 2023.

How much money is at stake at the Tour Championship?

The winner of the Tour Championship is declared the FedEx Cup champion and takes home the first-place prize of $25 million in bonus money.

The runner-up gets $12.5 million, third place will earn $7.5 million, all the way down to 30th place, which is good for $550,000. The top 12 finishers will earn seven figures. Here’s a closer look:

Bonus money payouts

Position Payout Position Payout
1 $25,000,000 16 $795,000
2 $12,500,000 17 $775,000
3 $7,400,000 18 $755,000
4 $6,000,000 19 $735,000
5 $7,000,000 20 $715,000
6 $3,500,000 21 $670,000
7 $2,750,000 22 $650,000
8 $2,250,000 23 $630,000
9 $2,000,000 24 $615,000
10 $1,750,000 25 $600,000
11 $1,075,000 26 $590,000
12 $1,025,000 27 $580,000
13 $975,000 28 $570,000
14 $925,000 29 $560,000
15 $885,000 30 $550,000

There is $100 million in bonus money from the entire FedEx Cup Playoffs in 2024.

The format

The PGA Tour will continue to utilize the FedEx Cup Starting Strokes, which was introduced for the first time in 2019. It’s a staggered system whereby the golfer in the top position will start the Tour Championship at 10 under.

Starting strokes

Starting position Starting score Golfer
No. 1 10 under Scottie Scheffler
No. 2 8 under Xander Schauffele
No. 3 7 under Hideki Matsuyama
No. 4 6 under Keegan Bradley
No. 5 5 under Ludvig Aberg
No. 6 4 under Rory McIlroy
No. 7 4 under Collin Morikawa
No. 8 4 under Wyndham Clark
No. 9 4 under Sam Burns
No. 10 4 under Patrick Cantlay
No. 11 3 under Sungjae Im
No. 12 3 under Sahith Theegala
No. 13 3 under Shane Lowry
No. 14 3 under Adam Scott
No. 15 3 under Tony Finau
No. 16 2 under Byeong Hun An
No. 17 2 under Viktor Hovland
No. 18 2 under Russell Henley
No. 19 2 under Akshay Bhatia
No. 20 2 under Robert MacIntyre
No. 21 1 under Billy Horschel
No. 22 1 under Tommy Fleetwood
No. 23 1 under Sepp Straka
No. 24 1 under Mathieu Pavon
No. 25 1 under Taylor Pendrith
No. 26 Even Chris Kirk
No. 27 Even Tom Hoge
No. 28 Even Aaron Rai
No. 29 Even Christiaan Bezuidenhout
No. 30 Even Justin Thomas

This system was established to give players at the top of the points list the reward of a starting advantage in the Tour Championship.

Only two multiple winners

The first 17 seasons of the playoff produced 14 different winners.

Rory McIlroy (2016, 2019, 2022) and Tiger Woods (2007, 2009) are the only golfers to have won it more than once.

See the full field of 30 PGA Tour golfers advancing to the 2024 Tour Championship

Rory McIlroy and Tiger Woods are the only golfers to win the FedEx Cup more than once.

CASTLE ROCK,  Colo. — It’s the third and final leg of the FedEx Cup Playoffs, and there are now just 30 golfers alive in the PGA Tour’s 2024 season.

The were 70 Tour pros who made the FedEx St. Jude Championship at TPC Southwind in Memphis to kick off the postseason, then 50 at the BMW Championship at Castle Pines Golf Club in Castle Rock, Colorado.

The Tour Championship puts a cap on the season and the winner of the event is also declared the FedEx Cup champion.

The first 17 seasons of the playoff produced 14 different winners with Rory McIlroy (2016, 2019, 2022) and Tiger Woods (2007, 2009) the only golfers to win it more than once.

There were four who played their way in, which meant there were four who dropped out. The biggest riser was the 2024 BMW winner, Keegan Bradley. The top three spots remained unchanged from a week ago. The Tour Championship format uses a “staggered start.”

Here’s the full list of 30 golfers advancing to East Lake in 2024:

Pos. Player
1 Scottie Scheffler
2
Xander Schauffele
3
Hideki Matsuyama
4 Keegan Bradley
5 Ludvig Aberg
6 Rory McIlroy
7 Collin Morikawa
8 Wyndham Clark
9 Sam Burns
10 Patrick Cantlay
11 Sungjae Im
12 Sahith Theegala
13 Shane Lowry
14 Adam Scott
15 Tony Finau
16 Byeong Hun An
17 Viktor Hovland
18 Russell Henley
19 Akshay Bhatia
20
Robert MacIntyre
21 Billy Horschel
22
Tommy Fleetwood
23 Sepp Straka
24 Matthieu Pavon
25 Taylor Pendrith
26 Chris Kirk
27 Tom Hoge
28 Aaron Rai
29
Christiaan Bezuidenhout
30 Justin Thomas

Here are the first five out:

Pos. Player
31 Brian Harman
32 Si Woo Kim
33 Jason Day
34
Davis Thompson
35
Denny McCarthy

 

Lynch: The FedEx Cup playoffs aren’t really playoffs — but one last tweak could turn things into must-see TV

The PGA Tour wants win-or-die suspense without actually subjecting players to a win-or-die system.

When an underwhelming product is extensively modified (say, for example, Greg Norman’s Irish golf course, Doonbeg) or even entirely discarded (like, say, Greg Norman’s Stonehaven design in Scottsdale or Greg Norman’s Great White course in Florida or Greg Norman’s Experience at Koele in Hawaii), the ultimate goal is something better.

But can that be said of the FedEx Cup playoffs system, which has been tweaked so frequently since its 2007 inception? It depends on what you believe the intent of the FedEx Cup is, and what you believe may not be aligned with what the mandarins at PGA Tour headquarters think.

Every change to the playoffs formula — how many guys can qualify, the number of events, how points are accumulated and weighted, the staggered scoring — all share one objective: to tether the postseason more snugly to the results of the regular season. In effect, to serve a function antithetical to that of playoffs in other major sports. The result of such manipulation is that golf’s playoffs are not actually playoffs. Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter said that good teams make the playoffs but hot teams win them. Regular season heroics guarantee zilch in the postseason, beyond perhaps a home-field advantage, but nothing material to a contest. The PGA Tour, however, wants the marketing punch of promoting playoffs — which conjure a win-or-die suspense — without actually subjecting its players to a win-or-die system.

Playoffs are about volatility and shock upsets. Ask the ’08 Patriots or the ’23 Bruins. By comparison, the paternalistic PGA Tour has spent almost two decades trying to offset those essential elements and attempting to engineer outcomes that mirror the results of the regular season. Points accumulated through the Wyndham Championship, the last stop before the playoffs, are carried all the way through to the grand finale at the Tour Championship and used to determine how many strokes under par a player will begin (Scottie Scheffler, No. 1 in points, will begin next week’s tournament 10-under-par). The Tour wants its FedEx Cup champion to be someone who performed consistently well all year, not someone who got hot for a couple weeks in August, so rolling regular season points into the playoffs helps stack the deck toward that outcome.

2024 FedEx St. Jude Championship
Hideki Matsuyama raises the FedEx Cup TPC Championship trophy to the crowd during the final round of the FedEx St. Jude Championship golf tournament at TPC Southwind. Mandatory Credit: Steve Roberts-USA TODAY Sports

Quibbles about the FedEx Cup are a matter of nomenclature. If it’s a season-long race (as the Tour admits), then stop promoting it as playoffs. If the aspiration is actual playoffs, then whatever happened before the first shot of the post-season shouldn’t matter. But there is a way to bridge this divide and produce genuinely exciting playoffs in golf. I offer it here to Commissioner Monahan at no cost beyond the usual retainer he sends, according to LIV’s conspiratorial gobshites.

The FedEx St. Jude Championship should remain as it is and where it is. Sure, Memphis in August makes Tour pros sweat more than seeing their wives scrolling through their text messages, but it’s where FedEx is headquartered and a little swamp ass is a small price to pay when the company is delivering such a huge sponsorship. Keep it as 70 players starting and only 50 moving on to the BMW Championship. Heck, as a sop to the importance of the regular season, let points continue to determine who those 50 guys are.

But end the utility of points there and truly shake things up.

Instead of 30 guys continuing on to the Tour Championship at East Lake in Atlanta, just 16 make it, and a head-to-head match-play bracket determines the $25 million first prize. The top four in points after the FedEx St. Jude Championship are exempt directly into the seeded bracket at East Lake, though still required to play all three postseason events. That’s their entire earned advantage for an outstanding regular season. To grant anything more amounts to placing thumbs on the scale. In any event, pre-playoffs results are already generously rewarded. Scheffler just took home $8 million from the Comcast Business Tour Top 10 for that very thing.

The 12 men needed to fill out the bracket for the match-play showdown would be determined not by a weighted and dated points formula but by the BMW Championship leaderboard, and if multi-man sudden death is needed to settle the last place, all the better. And since the BMW is the most mobile of the playoff events — it hasn’t been held at the same venue in consecutive years since 2011 — it ought to be moved out west, forcing broadcasters to air it in prime time in the east. Build audience interest in what’s at stake, and in what comes the following week.

Trauma from the WGC-Match Play era lingers at Tour HQ for good reason, having seen more than a handful of finals featuring worthy but thoroughly unengaging competitors. The prospects of that happening are reduced in a 16-man field versus 64, but if they’re playing for $25 million then the FedEx Cup itself takes center stage, regardless of star power. And most of us would watch a chop from the local muni play if 25 large is on the line. Match play would also eliminate the online mockery about gross and net divisions in the Tour Championship, which has plagued the event since the staggered starting scores were introduced in 2019.

There’s a way to value season-long accomplishments while guaranteeing the capriciousness and surprises that sports fans expect from their playoffs. It just requires the stomach for one more round of changes to the system.

There you go, Commish. You’re welcome. Just send the check to the usual offshore account.

Scottie Scheffler shrugs off tweaked back in Round 1 of 2024 BMW Championship: ‘It’s fine’

‘Maybe I hit a few too many balls yesterday or something. It was just a little sore.’

CASTLE ROCK, Colo. – It’s never good to see a professional golfer reaching for their lower back after hitting a shot. It’s even worse when that golfer is World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, who is trying to win the FedEx Cup for the first time to cap off a spectacular season.

But on the 17th hole, Scheffler hit his second shot and touched his lower back with his left hand. PGA Tour XM Radio’s Mark McCumber described it as if “it took his breath away” and Scheffler leaned on his club for an extra second.

Scheffler finished with a couple of pars and posted three birdies and two bogeys for an opening-round, 1-under 71. After the round, Scheffler downplayed any potential injury, saying, “It’s fine.”

Scheffler did concede that he woke up with a sore back and had trouble loosening it up.

“It was hard for me to get through it, and I was laboring most of the day to get through the ball,” he explained. “On 17 I was trying to hit a high draw, and that’s a shot where I’ve really got to use a big turn, big motion.”

Asked to elaborate on what happened, he said, “Maybe I hit a few too many balls yesterday or something. It was just a little sore. I’m sure I’ll get some ice on it and stuff, and I’ll be totally fine tomorrow.”

Would he do any special treatment? “Just normal routine. Just like always,” he said.

Scheffler was paired Thursday with Xander Schauffele, who is second in the FedEx Cup and shot 69 to best Scheffler, the FedEx Cup leader, by two strokes.

Schauffele said he noticed that Scheffler’s back was stiff when he tried to turn his head but joked that it may be a bigger problem for the field than for Scheffler, noting that Scheffler needed treatment on his neck at the Players Championship and elsewhere when he won. “I guess it’s a bad sign for everyone else,” he said.

Photos: 2024 BMW Championship at Castle Pines Golf Club

Castle Pines will play at 8,130 yards this week.

CASTLE ROCK, Colo. — The 2024 BMW Championship will be played at Castle Pines Golf Club, the PGA Tour’s first visit to the course since the 2006 International.

That event was a Modified Stableford scoring affair, while the BMW will be a traditional 72-hole, stroke-play contest.

But the stakes are huge. It’s the second leg of the 2024 FedEx Cup Playoffs, with just the top 50 players in the field. The purse is $20 million and the winner will bank $3.6 million.

Castle Pines will play at 8,130 yard this week. Check out some photos of the event.

18 of the 27 PGA Tour winners in 2024 are in the 50-man field at BMW Championship

The second leg of the 2024 FedEx Cup Playoffs will be at Castle Pines Golf Club.

CASTLE ROCK, Colo. — The second leg of the PGA Tour’s FedEx Cup Playoffs will be contested at Castle Pines Golf Club, the Tour’s first visit to the course since 2006.

The field was finalized Sunday night at the conclusion of the FedEx St. Jude Championship in Memphis, won by Hideki Matsuyama. However, there were some big names who fell short of advancing.

There were 70 golfers at the St. Jude but 20 saw their seasons come to an end. Now the field is down to 50 with another 20 being lopped off Sunday night as only 30 advance to the season-ending Tour Championship.

Of the golfers making their way to this par-72 track that’ll play 8,130 yards this week are 18 PGA Tour winners from the 2024 season:

  • Akshay Bhatia
  • Wyndham Clark
  • Cam Davis
  • Nick Dunlap
  • Austin Eckroat
  • Billy Horschel
  • Stephan Jaeger
  • Chris Kirk
  • Shane Lowry
  • Robert MacIntyre
  • Hideki Matsuyama
  • Rory McIlroy
  • Matthieu Pavon
  • Taylor Pendrith
  • Aaron Rai
  • Xander Schauffele
  • Scottie Scheffler
  • Davis Thompson

The nine PGA Tour winners from 2024 who didn’t qualify for the BMW field:

  • Bryson DeChambeau
  • Brice Garnett
  • Chris Gotterup
  • Harry Hall
  • Jake Knapp
  • Peter Malnati
  • Davis Riley
  • Nick Taylor
  • Jhonattan Vegas

The BMW Championship starts Thursday.

FedEx Cup Playoffs are set as Victor Perez hangs on to 70th and final spot

The bubble didn’t burst for Perez.

GREENSBORO, N.C. – The bubble didn’t burst for Victor Perez.

He lived on the edge all week at the Wyndham Championship, the final event of the FedEx Cup regular season with the top 70 in the standings advancing for the FedEx St. Jude Championship.

Perez, a Frenchman in his first season as a PGA Tour member, entered the week as the Bubble Boy, but when it was all said and done, no player moved in from outside the bubble to qualify. It was just the second time and first since 2013 that there was no volatility at all.

Perez shot 2-under 68 on Sunday, saving a 6-foot par putt at 18 to finish T-33 and finish seven points clear of Davis Riley.

A week ago, Perez shot a final-round 63 in his native country to finish fourth in the Olympics. A week later, he had to play 36 holes on Sunday and then wait to see what Riley, whose only top-10 finish was a win at the Charles Schwab Challenge, and Japan’s Ryo Hisatsune would do behind him.

“I think you’re always nervous. This was probably a little bit closer to like a chance of winning a tournament because you’re trying to really stretch as much as you can, whereas usually you’re 25th place, you’re just trying to improve but it’s not as do or die,” Perez said.

He shot 69 in his third round in the morning and explained he didn’t know where he stood despite a friend at lunch asking him about it.

“I looked at Joe, my agent, and he had the biggest poker face going and he didn’t give me any clue, so I actually didn’t know where I was,” he said.

Riley, who battled sickness earlier in the week and called the postponement of play on Thursday a blessing in disguise, had good looks at birdie on the final three holes but couldn’t get any of the putts to drop.

“I gave myself a chance, I hit some really good shots coming down the stretch, I just couldn’t make the putts,” said Riley, who shot 70 and finished T-38. “Proud of the way I hung in there on a long day and a week when I was a little under the weather. Having to cap it off with a 36 day took about every ounce of energy I had in me.”

Hisatsune was the last player with a chance to burst Perez’s bubble. He needed a solo second but made a bogey at the last to shoot 67 and finish a career-best T-3. He improved from No. 107 to No. 83, which should lock up his card for next season but he’s officially off until the FedEx Cup Fall begins in September.

Here’s the last five in and out

66. Seamus Power (T-28)

67. Nick Dunlap (MC)

68. Jhonattan Vegas (T-61)

69. Emiliano Grillo (T-59)

70. Victor Perez (T-33)

71. Davis Riley (T-38)

72. Andrew Putnam (MC)

73. Kurt Kitayama (MC)

74. Luke List (MC)

75. Adam Svensson (T-7)

Full FedEx Cup Playoffs field

Pos. Player
1 Scottie Scheffler
2 Xander Schauffele
3 Rory McIlroy
4 Collin Morikawa
5 Wyndham Clark
6 Ludvig Aberg
7 Sahith Theegala
8 Hideki Matsuyama
9 Sungjae Im
10 Shane Lowry
11 Patrick Cantlay
12 Byeong Hun An
13 Russell Henley
14 Tony Finau
15 Akshay Bhatia
16 Matthieu Pavon
17 Robert MacIntyre
18 Sepp Straka
19 Justin Thomas
20 Brian Harman
21 Tom Hoge
22
Christiaan Bezuidenhout
23 Billy Horschel
24 Davis Thompson
25 Aaron Rai
26 Jason Day
27 Taylor Pendrith
28 Chris Kirk
29 Sam Burns
30 Corey Conners
31 Cameron Young
32 Tommy Fleetwood
33 Stephan Jaeger
34 Thomas Detry
35 Max Homa
36 J.T. Poston
37 Adam Hadwin
38 Si Woo Kim
39 Keegan Bradley
40 Matt Fitzpatrick
41 Austin Eckroat
42 Alex Noren
43 Tom Kim
44 Cam Davis
45 Denny McCarthy
46 Adam Scott
47 Max Greyserman
48 Mackenzie Hughes
49 Will Zalatoris
50 Jake Knapp
51 Harris English
52 Nick Taylor
53 Patrick Rodgers
54 Eric Cole
55 Justin Rose
56 Ben Griffin
57 Viktor Hovland
58 Erik van Rooyen
59 Maverick McNealy
60 Taylor Moore
61 Peter Malnati
62 Min Woo Lee
63 Jordan Spieth
64 Mark Hubbard
65 Brendon Todd
66 Seamus Power
67 Nick Dunlap
68 Jhonattan Vegas
69 Emiliano Grillo
70 Victor Perez

 

Did Adam Schenk really finish ahead of Jon Rahm in the FedEx Cup? Here’s how it happened

This example is why Rory McIlroy thinks the playoff system works.

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ATLANTA – Jon Rahm picked a bad time to go into a mini-slump.

The Masters champion held the lead in the FedEx Cup for 30 consecutive weeks but after a pair of middle-of-the-pack finishes, he fell to fourth heading into the Tour Championship and began the third and final leg of the Playoffs at 6 under. A final-round 74 sent him tumbling to T-18 in the final FedEx Cup standings. Despite winning four times during the season and being the favorite to capture PGA Tour Player of the Year honors, Rahm got passed by Adam Schenk, who was winless during the season.

Schenk, who started the week T-23 at 1 under in the staggered start, finished in a five-way tie for ninth at the Tour Championship and earned $980,000, upping his winnings for the season to $5.8 million.

Rahm didn’t speak to the media after his finish on Sunday but he shared his feelings about the FedEx Cup beforehand.

“It’s easier to understand,” he said. “I don’t think it’s the best we can come up with. I think I’ve expressed my dislike towards the fact that you can come in ranked No. 1 in the FedEx Cup. You can win every single tournament up until this one. You have a bad week, you finish 30th, and now you’ll forever be known as 30th in the FedEx Cup this season. I don’t think that’s very fair.”

Rahm makes a fair point. Schenk finishing above Rahm in the final standings is akin to the New York Giants beating the undefeated New England Patriots in the Super Bowl.

Rory McIlroy, for one, has no problem with Rahm tumbling down the FedEx standings despite having the most wins in the regular season.

“A basketball team could go 82-0 and lose in the first round of the playoffs. If that’s sort of the competitive environment that we’re trying to create, then I would say more Jon Rahm finished second in the regular season in the Comcast Top 10,” Mcilroy said. “I think as that might become more prevalent as the years go on and more money gets put into the regular season as well. You know, it’s almost like two different competitions, two different events.

“You’ve got the regular season and then you’ve got the playoffs. I think everyone tries to put them together in the same sort of thing, but really they’re like regular season and then this is sort of like a 12-round sprint to the finish.”

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