Check the yardage book: TPC Southwind for the 2023 FedEx St. Jude Championship

StrackaLine offers a hole-by-hole course guide for the 2023 FedEx St. Jude Championship.

TPC Southwind in Memphis, Tennessee – site of this week’s FedEx St. Jude Championship, the first leg of the PGA Tour’s 2023 FedEx Cup Playoffs – opened in 1988 and was designed by Ron Prichard with consultation from former Tour pros Hubert Green and Fuzzy Zoeller.

The private TPC Southwind has been host to a PGA Tour event since 1989, first the FedEx St. Jude Classic and later the WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational.

The course will play to 7,243 yards with a par of 70 this week.

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.

Photos: 2023 FedEx St. Jude Championship at TPC Southwind

Here are some of the best photos from the week in Memphis.

This first event of the 2023 FedEx Cup Playoffs, the FedEx St. Jude Championship at TPC Southwind in Memphis, Tennessee, is here.

After a long, grueling season for the game’s best players, it all comes down to this.

The field this week is made up of the top 70 in the FedEx Cup standings. At next week’s BMW Championship outside Chicago, only 50 players will remain. Then, a week later in Atlanta, the top 30 players will fight for the FedEx Cup at East Lake.

World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler is the betting favorite to win at +650. Jon Rahm and Rory McIlroy are +900.

Here are some of the best photos from the FedEx St. Jude Championship.

Rory McIlroy, Scottie Scheffler test new putters at FedEx St. Jude Championship

Both players are looking for a spark on the greens.

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This season, world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler ranks 135th in Stokes Gained: Putting. Rory McIlroy is 84th.

Despite the struggles with the flat-stick, both players have won twice in the 2022-23 campaign: Scheffler at the Players and WM Phoenix Open, McIlroy at the CJ Cup and Scottish Open.

But those win totals could be even higher with decent showings on the greens. Scheffler finished T-5 or better in seven straight events from the AT&T Byron Nelson to Scottish Open. McIlroy is currently on a run of seven straight finishes of T-9 or better.

If either player got it going on the greens, they could be looking at four or five wins this season.

As the two best players in the world arrived at TPC Southwind in Memphis, Tennessee, for the FedEx St. Jude Championship, the first event of the playoffs, they were spotted practicing with different putters.

“The guys at Taylor Made have done a lot of work for me with the putter,” Scheffler told the media Wednesday. “I’ve always liked the visual of that Spider putter, but I really just did not like the feel. That’s something we discussed, kind of the feel and — I’ve always struggled with putters that have a lot of weight in the back side of it, and this one is a bit different than a lot of the Spiders that they’ve made, and the weight is more in the front so it has the feel of a blade putter that I like but it also has a lot of that visual on the top where it’s easier for me to line up. It feels like at times this year I’ve hit a lot of good putts that have gone right up to the edge and not gone in.”

As for McIlroy, he played his practice round Tuesday with a Scotty Cameron Phantom 5.5.

“Honestly, I just wanted a different look, just wanted to freshen it up,” McIlroy said. “I’ve got my Spider with me this week if that putter isn’t doing what I want it to do over the first couple days. I may go back. I just wanted to freshen it up.

“Honestly, it was zero testing process. It was go into the garage and see what I had and just pull a couple out and go have a few putts. That was it.”

The Northern Irishman put an old Scotty in the bag in March at the WGC Dell Match Play but went back to his TaylorMade Spider X shortly thereafter.

Scheffler made a change recently at the U.S. Open, putting a wider-bodied Scotty Cameron in the bag.

McIlroy, Scheffler and Jon Rahm headline the tee sheet and will play together for the first two rounds in Memphis. The trio tees off Thursday at 10:26 a.m. ET.

Top 50 or bust? Why advancing in FedEx Cup Playoffs this week offers huge head start for 2024 PGA Tour season and not everyone is happy about it

Only the top 50 on Sunday will advance to next week.

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GREENSBORO, N.C. — Justin Thomas fell to the ground Sunday at Sedgefield Country Club when his pitch shot at 18 hit the flagstick but wouldn’t drop, leaving him on the outside looking in at No. 71 in the final regular season FedEx Cup point standings.

The FedEx Cup Playoffs begin at the FedEx St. Jude Championship in Memphis, with the top 70 players in the standings through the Wyndham Championship qualifying (down from 125 in 2009-2022). The top 50 players after the first event will advance to the BMW Championship and also qualify for all eight Signature Events (formerly known as the Designated Events) on the PGA Tour schedule in 2024.

The level of disappointment that Thomas experienced on being left out of the playoffs is only expected to be ratcheted up this week. Those moving on to the BMW in Chicago next week will gain admission to a world of $20 million purses, jacked up FedEx Cup points and limited field, no-cut events with guaranteed paydays in many cases. (The Players Championship will still have a full field and cut to 65 and ties while the Genesis Invitational, Arnold Palmer Invitational and the Memorial will have fields of no more than 80 players and a cut to 50 and ties.)

Two tours?

“I don’t like the idea of creating two tours, which is what it’s doing,” said veteran pro Brandt Snedeker. “I don’t think it’s good for golf, for our tour, for our sponsors.”

Fellow veteran pro Kevin Streelman, who previously served as a player director on the board and remains involved as a member of the Player Advisory Council, argued that the player who ends up at No. 50 receives too much of a jumpstart on keeping his card and remaining in the top 50 compared to the player who finishes No. 51.

2023 3M Open
Kevin Streelman hits his tee shot on the 11th hole during the second round of the 3M Open. (Photo: Matt Krohn/USA TODAY Sports)

“It seems like a pretty extreme reward,” he said.

Ryan Armour, a fellow member of the PAC, who dubbed rank-and-file players of his ilk “the mules” of the organization, agreed.

“The fifth ranked player on the PGA Tour and the No. 55 player on the PGA Tour, why should their schedule be so vastly different than what they are going to become next year?” said Armour when he joined the 5 Clubs podcast. “There is a big discrepancy between No. 5 and 55, but there isn’t between No. 49 and 55. That to me is what irked everybody.”

Fewer events, more points at the majors

In 2024, the season returns to a calendar year, running from January through September’s Labor Day Weekend and condensed from 44 to 36 events, plus three playoff tournaments. Meanwhile the number of limited-field events increase from two (Sentry Tournament of Champions and WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play) to eight. Add in that 750 FedEx Cup points will be allocated to the winners of the four majors and the Players Championship, an increase from 600, and 700 for the Signature events, up from 550, compared to 500 for winners of regular full-field events and 300 to winners of opposite-field events, and it’s clear how membership in the top 50 has its privileges.

It’s unprecedented change and has many players who won’t be in the top 50 concerned that the deck is stacked against them.

2023 Wyndham Championship
Michael Kim lines up a putt on the 18th green during the third round of the 2023 Wyndham Championship. (Photo: David Yeazell-USA TODAY Sports)

“My initial reaction was, ‘What the hell is this?’” said Michael Kim, who finished No. 79 and missed the playoffs. “I’m trying not be too knee-jerk reaction.”

Players outside the top 50 still will have other avenues to qualify for the Signature events. Thomas, for instance, is No. 25 in the Official World Golf Ranking and players in the top 30 will be automatically eligible. Should his ranking no longer satisfy the criteria, he likely would be a popular candidate for one of four sponsor exemptions.

The Tour also created categories called the “Next 10” and the “Swing 5.” The Next 10 is “composed of the top 10 members, not otherwise exempt,” from the current FedEx Cup standings. The Swing 5 are the “top five FedEx Cup points earners, not otherwise exempt, from the swing of five full-field and additional events that precede each signature event.”

‘Path is stacked against you’

Speaking earlier this season, Rory McIlroy proclaimed, “You play well for two or three weeks, you’re in a (signature) event. You know, then, if you keep playing well, you stay in them.”

But that may be an oversimplification. Will the 30 Korn Ferry Tour grads, 10 DP World Tour grads and five PGA Tour Q-School grads get enough starts on the West Coast Swing? They also may endure a three-week sabbatical in the middle of the season if they don’t qualify for the U.S. Open. For those who do play their way in, how can they sustain energy to make the opportunity a success? If they don’t play well, they’ll be right back in the full field event and likely gassed from playing upwards of five events in a row.

2023 3M Open
Gary Woodland hits from a greenside bunker on the 13th hole during the second round of the 2023 3M Open in Blaine, Minnesota. (Photo: Matt Krohn-USA TODAY Sports)

“They are giving you opportunities to play your way in, but the path is stacked against you,” said 2019 U.S. Open champion Gary Woodland, who remains exempt to the four majors and hopes to play his way into the invitationals or else receive sponsor invites. “The top guys had leverage at the time, they had Jay (Monahan) in a tough spot. Jay was losing guys left and right and the guys that wanted to stay made a play and set the Tour up in their favor. I don’t have a problem with that. The sponsors will benefit from having more of the top players playing every week. Is it good for the Tour as a whole? Only time will tell. If you play well, you will be rewarded and that’s probably how it should be.”

The Tour has crunched the numbers, running over a thousand simulations, and predicts the churn of players being replaced in the FedEx Cup top 50 year after year to be between 14 and 22 players.

“I wouldn’t have thought that,” said Peter Malnati, one of the player directors on the board, noting earlier this year, “It seems kind of hard to believe.”

Play well and you’re in

Webb Simpson, another player director on the Tour’s board who voted in favor of the Signature events despite being outside the top 50, said he believes the Tour created enough play-in opportunities – some 20 per event – to reward the hot hands.

“I’ve always had the attitude that you adapt to how the system changes and if you play good enough you’ll be in those fields. I know some guys probably have a problem with that statement, that there needs to be more fair opportunities for everybody, but if you play well enough you’ll get in them,” he said. “I think at the end of the day, the PGA Tour is not here to showcase the best 200 players in the world. I think we’re here to showcase the best 75-100 players in the world. I think that’s what fans want, TV wants, and some people may not like that but that’s the truth. Sure, we want to take care of everybody as much as we can but at the end of the day, can guys qualify for these? Absolutely.”

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Report: Jay Monahan’s Tuesday meeting with PGA Tour players sparsely attended

Rickie Fowler told the Associated Press: “There really wasn’t that many guys in the meeting.”

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Two major champions from this season voiced support for PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan ahead of the 2023 FedEx St. Jude Championship.

Masters winner Jon Rahm and British Open Champion Golfer of the Year Brian Harman were both asked about Monahan during their pre-tournament news conferences Tuesday.

“I think Jay is a very qualified leader for our organizations,” Harman said.

“I think he should have the opportunity right now to finish this off the way he did,” Rahm said. “I think we’re quickly forgetting how well he managed a lot of things. He did an amazing job in COVID and kept a lot of people employed.”

Tuesday night at TPC Southwind, however, only about 25 PGA Tour pros showed up to a meeting with Monahan, according to Doug Ferguson of the Associated Press.

Rickie Fowler was one of them, according to the report. He told AP:

There’s still a whole lot that no one really knows, and we don’t know. It’s just continuing to trust that leadership and everyone is doing what’s best for all of us and the tour moving forward. Some of that was talked about in calls before this. There really wasn’t that many guys in the meeting, or less than I thought there would have been.

Monahan sent a memo to the Tour membership about a week ago in which he offered some updates on the PGA Tour, including news about the framework agreement with Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund.

Tom Hoge was also in attendance during Tuesday afternoon’s meeting in Memphis, which he said went about 90 minutes, but indicated there were still no definitive answers to many questions.

“It was good just to have Jay there in front of us, see him again and see that he’s doing well,” he said. “Who knows what the path is going forward? I’ll guess we’ll just wait and see.”

British Open champ Brian Harman: ‘Life is better as a major champion than not’

Harman couldn’t pinpoint exactly when it began to sink in that he had won his first major.

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Brian Harman couldn’t wipe the smile off his face when he was introduced as the champion of the 2023 Open Championship at his FedEx St. Jude Championship pre-tournament press conference on Tuesday in Memphis.

“I will say that life is better as a major champion than not,” said the Champion Golfer of the Year, who earned that distinction two weeks ago at Royal Liverpool in England. “It’s been a wild ride, man. I’ve kept the Claret Jug right on top of our kitchen counter. My wife has asked me to move it several times, and it’s like, no, that’s a hard no, it’s going to stay right here.

“I’ve caught myself walking by it looking at it, and be like, ‘Damn, man, I still can’t believe it happened.’ I’m very grateful, very thankful. It was a very wild experience.”

Harman couldn’t pinpoint exactly when it began to sink in that he had won for the first time in more than six years and captured his first major at age 36.

“There’s like different layers of it sinking in,” he explained. “So I go visit my family, we rented a lake house, and after a few days I started feeling kind of normal, and then I go home and I have this just overwhelming support and a greet-and-meet at the airport. Then it takes a few days for that to sink in. Then yesterday I come out here to hit balls, and I was seeing all my fellow players, and it’s the first time I had seen them, and everyone is congratulating me. It’ll be another few days to try to let all that sink in.”

But when asked to single out a special moment, he recounted how he had returned to his rental house in England after partying with the Claret Jug on Sunday night at a nearby restaurant and he and his agent, Jeremy Elliott, were scheduled to be picked up to go to the airport at 3 a.m., and fly home.

“It’s 1:30, and I’m like, ‘Do we go to bed?’ And he goes, ‘No, we’re not going to bed. Are you crazy?’ So, it was just him and I and the Jug sipping a cold beer at 1:30 in the morning, just like, man, how cool is this?” Harman said.

First, he celebrated with his family at a lake house they rented in upstate New York, but after returning to a hero’s welcome at the airport in his hometown of St. Simon’s Island, Georgia, he hopped on his new tractor and put it to work at his farm.

“Got my place good and mowed,” he said, adding that he also, “probably partied a little too much.”

Harman arrived in Memphis on Monday and he was caught off guard by the autograph seekers who were waiting for him to sign commemorative flags and other memorabilia. He figures it will be a while before he can go find a good hole-in-the-wall restaurant as he tended to do while on the road and have dinner by himself. But Harman is ready to get back to work and see if he can continue his hot streak between the ropes. He enters the week No. 6 in the FedEx Cup standings and has his best chance to win the season-long title, which will be crowned in three weeks at the Tour Championship.

“Haven’t done a lot the last couple weeks so we’re going to be knocking some rust off for a couple days,” he said, “but I’m hoping to be ready to go by Thursday.”

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5 sleeper picks for the 2023 FedEx St. Jude Championship

It’s time to make a run in Memphis.

The top 70 in the FedEx Cup standings have made their way to Memphis, Tennessee, for the FedEx St. Jude Championship at TPC Southwind, this season’s first playoff event.

It’s no surprise to see world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler as the heavy betting favorite at +650. Rory McIlroy and Jon Rahm, Nos. 3 and 1 on the points list, respectively, are next in line at +900 to win. The Spaniard tied for fifth in Memphis last season while the other two missed the cut.

There’s plenty of star power in the field this week, but that doesn’t mean someone further down the odds list can’t make a run at the title.

Here are five sleeper picks to keep an eye on at the FedEx St. Jude Championship.

FedEx St. Jude: Odds, picks to win

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2023 FedEx St. Jude Championship odds, course history and picks to win

It’s time for playoff event No. 1.

Welcome to the FedEx Cup Playoffs, folks.

This week, the top 70 in the standings are in Memphis, Tennessee, for the FedEx St. Jude Championship at TPC Southwind.

Will Zalatoris, who captured this title last year for his first win on the PGA Tour, is not in the field as he continues to work back from an injury that forced him to withdraw from the Masters earlier this season.

Scottie Scheffler is the betting favorite at +650, followed by Rory McIlroy and Jon Rahm at +900. While Rahm tied for fifth at TPC Southwind last season, both Scheffler and McIlroy missed the cut.

Come Sunday afternoon, the top 50 players in the standings will move on to next week’s BMW Championship at Olympia Fields outside Chicago.

The winner in Memphis will receive 2,000 FedEx Cup points.

Golf course

TPC Southwind | Par 70 | 7,243 yards

2022 FedEx St. Jude Championship
Will Zalatoris kisses his trophy after winning his first PGA tournament on the last day of the FedEx St. Jude Championship at TPC Southwind in Memphis, Tenn., Sunday, Aug. 14, 2022.

Course history

Betting preview

Tour Championship: What’s at stake at the finale of the PGA Tour’s 2022 FedEx Cup Playoffs

What’s at stake? Money, money and more money.

What’s at stake in Atlanta at the 2022 Tour Championship?

Money, money and more money.

The PGA Tour upped the ante in the FedEx Cup Playoffs this season, which comes to a close at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta.

All the money won in the final event of a 47-tournament season is considered bonus money and does not count towards a golfer’s official money earnings. But it’ll spend just the same.

Patrick Cantlay is the defending champion and this year looks to join Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy as the only two-time winners. McIlroy, meanwhile, would be the first to win three titles if he were to win in Atlanta.

Tour Championship: See the top 30 in final points

The winner of the Tour Championship is declared the FedEx Cup champion. This is the 16th year of the playoffs.

Only 30 remain

The top 125 in points made the 2022 postseason. The top 70 after the first event—the FedEx St. Jude Championship—advanced to the BMW Champinship, with only the top 30 from there making the field in Atlanta.

Another perk of making the Tour Championship is an invitation to all four majors in 2023, if a golfer isn’t already qualified for those events.

Big money

A year ago, there was $60 million total up for grabs, with $15 million going to the winner. Here in 2022, those numbers are $75 million and $18 million.

The increased bonus pool means that the top-10 finishers will bank seven-figure paydays and the 30th-place finisher will make $500,000.

The breakdown

Finish Money
1 $18,000,000
2 $6,500,000
3 $5,000,000
4 $4,000,000
5 $3,000,000
6 $2,500,000
7 $2,000,000
8 $1,500,000
9 $1,250,000
10 $1,000,000
11 $950,000
12 $900,000
13 $850,000
14 $800,000
15 $760,000
16 $720,000
17 $700,000
18 $680,000
19 $660,000
20 $640,000
21 $620,000
22 $600,000
23 $580,000
24 $565,000
25 $550,000
26 $540,000
27 $530,000
28 $520,000
29 $510,000
30 $500,000

There is no longer a purse—like there is at all the other tournaments—for the Tour Championship. The FedEx Cup Playoffs bonus money is the only money that players earn at East Lake.

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.

Player Starting strokes
1 10 under
2 8 under
3 7 under
4 6 under
5 5 under
6-10 4 under
11-15 3 under
16-20 2 under
21-25 1 under
26-30 Even

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

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‘It wasn’t boring, that’s for sure’: Caddie Joel Stock guides Will Zalatoris to first PGA Tour win

“Conversations with Champions presented by Sentry” is a weekly series from Golfweek and The Caddie Network.

“Conversations with Champions presented by Sentry” is a weekly series from Golfweek in collaboration with The Caddie Network, where we take you behind the scenes for a chat with the winning caddie from the most recent PGA Tour event. This week: Joel Stock, caddie for Will Zalatoris, shares some thoughts about their win at the 2022 FedEx St. Jude Championship.

It took all of four rounds for Will Zalatoris and veteran caddie Joel Stock to find the winner’s circle.

The duo outlasted the field and survived a playoff at the FedEx St. Jude Championship in Memphis, Tennessee, last Sunday for the first—and long-awaited—PGA Tour win for Will Zalatoris.

John Rathouz from The Caddie Network caught up with winning caddie Joel Stock to break down the week that was.

“It wasn’t boring, that’s for sure,” Stock said. “It was really neat. Guys talk about the honeymoon period or whatever when they take new jobs.”

Zalatoris dispatched his former caddie after two rounds the week before at the Wyndham Championship, then had a good friend fill in for the weekend. Stock came on board just as the FedEx Cup Playoffs were starting.

“I didn’t fully know what to expect going into the week. I know Will fairly well, from being around him a lot, being paired with him a bunch. Always been impressed with how he plays, how he handles himself.

“When I got the call, I was super excited for the opportunity. And then the week, it couldn’t have gone any better.”

See the full video interview here:

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