Could Korn Ferry Tour make its way back to Jacksonville?

After a couple years away, the recent events in the Jacksonville area proved the region is worthy of a return to the Korn Ferry schedule.

Although success was hard to measure with no fans and no corporate hospitality, two Korn Ferry Tour events in a row played in Jacksonville, Florida, over the last two weeks might be a signal that the tour could return to the area on a permanent basis.

Korn Ferry president Alex Baldwin is open to the idea.

“We’re not going to rule anything out,” she said on Saturday as Chris Kirk was on the course wrapping up a one-shot victory over Justin Lower in the King & Bear Classic, at the World Golf Village course. “We are open to it. We’re still evaluating how 2021 looks like and we’re open to various scenarios.”

Baldwin said a more likely possibility is that if the Korn Ferry Tour returns to the Jacksonville area, it would be in 2022.

But first, a title sponsor would have to be found who would willing to put up at least $400,000 per year for a multi-year deal.

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“We would love to see it … we would like to see more Korn Ferry tournaments across the country,” said Adam Renfroe, the executive director for the King & Bear Classic and the Korn Ferry Challenge at TPC Sawgrass, which was won the week before by Luke List at the Dye’s Valley Course. “It requires the right partner [title sponsor] with the right motivations to be sustainable in this market. It doesn’t have to be local but it would have to have a market presence here. We’ll talk to anyone who’s interested.”

The Korn Ferry Tour was last played on the First Coast in 2018, with the season-ending Tour Championship at the Atlantic Beach Country Club. It was played there twice (losing one year in 2016 because of a hurricane cancellation) and before that was at Dye’s Valley from 2013-2015.

The Winn-Dixie Jacksonville Open was played at the Valley from 2010-2012 and morphed into the Web.com Tour Championship when the local corporation, which was started by Jacksonville native Dave Brown, signed on to be the umbrella sponsor for the entire tour.

About a month after the last Web.com Tour Championship, Brown sold the company to Siris Capital Group, a private equity firm. Even though there were three years remaining on the title sponsorship contract, Siris told the PGA Tour it was not interested in renewing and they mutually canceled the contract, with Korn Ferry stepping in as the umbrella sponsor.

The Tour Championship was moved to Victoria National in Newburgh, Indiana, and United Leasing signed a 10-year presenting sponsor deal.

The two tournaments were played at the Valley and King & Bear as part of the revamped schedule in which five new tournaments were added on an on-off basis to give players more opportunities to ply their trade, after losing three months because of the coronavirus pandemic.

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Two events will be played at the TPC San Antonio next month and the 2020 calendar year will end with an event at Orange County National near Orlando.

Both tournaments in St. Johns County were played without fans (as will be the case with the next four) and there was no corporate presence. In that way, financial success wasn’t a consideration.

However, the golf was scintillating. List had to make difficult two-putts from long distance at the Valley to ensure a one-shot victory over Joseph Bramlett and Shad Tuten; and Kirk shot 26-under to hold off Lower, who birdied four of his last five holes.

The field carved up the King & Bear on a week of light wind and sunny skies, with Vince India setting a record at 25-under through 54 holes and the course record being broken twice and tied five times.

In addition, Bramlett locked up a tie for third when he made the first albatross in history at the par-5 18th hole of the King & Bear.

The other measure of success is that the Korn Ferry Tour got through two weeks without a player, caddie or tournament staff member testing positive on-site for COVID-19.

Baldwin had high praise for the TPC Sawgrass and Honours Golf staff (which manages the King & Bear and Slammer & Squire at the World Golf Village) for getting their courses and clubhouses ready for tournament golf in a short window — plus two the gated communities, which also supplied dozens of volunteers.

“We can’t thank these communities and clubs enough for their support in welcoming us,” Baldwin said. “They went to extraordinary measures to bring this to fruition.”

Renro said one thing working to the advantage of bringing the Korn Ferry Tour back to the First Coast is the number of golf courses available.

“That’s the easy part,” he said. “This market has to many great courses and we could have played these events at any number of sites. That’s certainly not the issue.”

But he said in addition to a title sponsorship, local corporate hospitality packages and support for a pro-am would be necessary.

“We would need support from the local market, equal to the amount we get from a title sponsor,” Renfroe said. “Sponsorship is always the hardest element to find.”

It would seem a natural for the PGA Tour to have a tournament from each of its major tours, in its home market. Next year, the Furyk and Friends Classic at Timuquana returns the PGA Tour Champions to the First Coast for the first time since 2002.

Renfroe said that would be an ideal situation but said much of the corporate dollars for golf tournaments flow into The Players Championship, the Tour’s “Gold Standard” event.

It also remains to be seen how fast the economy bounces back from the coronavirus pandemic.

“Of course you’d love to have a tournament from all three tours here,” he said. “The area is growing more and more and eventually might support three events.

Masters champion Mike Weir, 14 other past PGA Tour winners highlight KFT return

Led by 2003 Masters champ Mike Weir, 15 players who have combined to win 30 PGA Tour events will be in the field at the Korn Ferry Challenge

Led by 2003 Masters champion Mike Weir, 15 players who have combined to win 30 PGA Tour events will be in the field for next week’s Korn Ferry Challenge at TPC Sawgrass, which will mark the return of the Korn Ferry Tour to Dye’s Valley.
The Korn Ferry Challenge is one of two high-level events that mark the return of professional golf since The Players Championship was canceled after one round on March 13. The PGA Tour is playing the Charles Schwab Challenge at the Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth.
The 72-hole tournament begins on Thursday. Fans will not be allowed on the course except perhaps to watch from their properties that border the playing area and there will be no live TV. The field of 156 players will be chasing a $600,000 purse, with $108,000 going to the winner.
Weir, an eight-time PGA Tour winner who has been plagued with injuries since 2011, is one of five players in the field who have won multiple PGA Tour events, only to lose their status and drop to the Korn Ferry Tour. The others are four-time winners Robert Allenby and Sean O’Hair, and two-time winners Ted Potter Jr., and Fabian Gomez.
Among the other Tour winners are David Lingmerth of Ponte Vedra Beach, Tommy “Two Gloves” Gainey, and international veteran Alex Cejka.
Lingmerth, Cejka and O’Hair are notable in that they all led or had a share of the 54-hole lead in The Players Championship, at the TPC Sawgrass Players Stadium Course. Lingmerth was in a three-way tie with Tiger Woods and Sergio Garcia in 2013 (Lingmerth shot 72 in the final round and Woods won), Cejka had a five-shot lead entering the final round in 2009 (Henrik Stenson won with a closing 66 as Cejka plummeted with a 79) and O’Hair led Phil Mickelson by one shot in 2007 (Mickelson won after O’Hair hit two balls into the water at No. 17).
In addition to Lingmerth, other area players in the field are Chris Baker (Jacksonville), Blayne Barber (Lake City), Sebastian Cappelen (Ponte Vedra Beach), Luke Guthrie (Jacksonville), Rick Lamb (St. Simons Island, Ga.), Sam Saunders (Atlantic Beach), Tim Wilkinson (Ponte Vedra) and Jared Wolfe (Nocatee).
Wolfe is sixth on the Korn Ferry points list and won his first tournament earlier this season in the Bahamas.
All six winners on the tour this season and the top-35 players on the points list at the time the tour was suspended are in the field, led by No. 1 Mito Perreira of Chile, a former Texas Tech player.
Eight Monday qualifiers will be added, four each from Palencia and Eagle Harbor.
The last time the Korn Ferry Tour played was March 1 when David Kocher won the El Bosque Mexico Championship.

Savannah excited to get Korn Ferry reprieve

The Savannah Golf Championship has been rescheduled for the fall, which is good news for players such as Savannah native Tim O’Neil who have entry into the Korn Ferry Tour event. “I don’t think I have anything else more important to do than that,” …

The Savannah Golf Championship has been rescheduled for the fall, which is good news for players such as Savannah native Tim O’Neil who have entry into the Korn Ferry Tour event.

“I don’t think I have anything else more important to do than that,” O’Neal said Monday, May 4, after the Korn Ferry Tour’s announcement of the new dates of Sept. 28-Oct. 4. “I definitely will be available for those dates to play in the tournament.”

The later dates also could be good news for local golf fans who might be permitted to attend the tournament if deemed safe based on the situation and protocols at that time regarding the coronavirus pandemic.

The Korn Ferry Tour, which is owned and operated by the PGA Tour, announced additional modifications and details regarding the restart of the 2020 schedule and a fall calendar of events that will be part of a one-time, combined 2020-21 Korn Ferry Tour season.

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Included in the fall series of tournaments is the third annual Savannah Golf Championship at The Landings Club’s Deer Creek Course.

The 2020 Savannah Golf Championship, which was originally scheduled for the week of March 30-April 5, was postponed on March 17 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The event is now one of five tournaments that will make up the Korn Ferry Tour’s new fall schedule.

Tournament director Cheyenne Overby said it’s been a fluid situation but the current plan allows for spectators.

“We will not play unless it’s safe,” she said. “We’re moving forward with that notion that we’ll have fans, that we’ll carry the special events that we have as normal. But we will follow all protocols that are in place at the time of the tournament. If there are guidelines handed down by CDC, the World Health Organization, local public health officials, that’s what we’ll go by.”

Dan McCarthy holds the trophy after donning the seersucker jacket awarded to the winner of the 2019 Savannah Golf Championship. McCarthy won by one stroke at 16 under par on March 31, 2019 at The Landings Club’s Deer Creek Course. [PHILIP HALL/SAVANNAHNOW.COM FILE PHOTO]
According to a release from the Korn Ferry Tour, play will resume with at least the first four events closed to the general public while continuing to monitor the COVID-19 situation and follow the recommendations of local and state authorities in order to determine the most appropriate on-site access in each market. Decisions on fan attendance at all events thereafter depend on available protocols.

Overby confirmed that O’Neal has maintained the sponsors’ exemption from Korn Ferry, a global organizational consulting firm and the tour’s title sponsor. O’Neal said he would have understood if it had not been honored because of the complications of players with conditional status and the scarcity of tournaments.

“I’m just happy I still have the exemption and I get a chance to tee it up,” said O’Neal, who hopes that spectators — particularly his children — are allowed to attend.

“They don’t know the news yet but they’ll be excited to come out and watch me play and give their dad some support,” the Savannah resident said.

Overby said that she cannot speak for other events on the Korn Ferry Tour, but the Savannah event will have a Monday qualifier with details still to come. That’s good news for Savannah native and Thunderbolt resident Mark Silvers, a professional golfer like O’Neal without status on the PGA and Korn Ferry tours.

“If anything changes with sponsors or there’s a Monday (qualifier), I will definitely be there,” Silvers said. “Nobody has any plans moving forward unless you’re on the PGA Tour or Korn Ferry Tour. All of us on the inside, looking in are waiting to hear.”

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Silvers and O’Neal have played in previous Savannah Golf Championships and know well the sports landscape in their hometown.

“It was a huge bummer for everybody in Savannah not to have that event – whether you’re playing or just want to go watch,” Silvers said. “To have it back on the schedule is definitely great for everybody.”

The restart to the 2020 Korn Ferry Tour season will begin as previously announced with the Korn Ferry Challenge on June 8-14 at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida. The event will now be one of four new events in the first six weeks back to play that have been created by the Tour to make up for the cancellation or postponement of events affected by COVID-19.

Korn Ferry Tour announces modifications, including wraparound 2020-21 season

The Korn Ferry Tour announced five fall events to the schedule that will be part of a one-time combined, wraparound 2020-21 season.

The Korn Ferry Tour has announced five fall events that will be part of a one-time combined, wraparound 2020-21 season.

The newly created 2020-21 Korn Ferry Tour schedule will bridge two seasons and conclude with 25 PGA Tour cards awarded at the 2021 WinCo Foods Portland Open, with an additional 25 cards awarded at the conclusion of the 2021 Korn Ferry Tour Finals.

Among them is a new event at Orange County National in Orlando, which will be the last event of the year, Oct. 8-11.

The four other added events were all on the original 2020 schedule but were postponed or canceled because of the coronavirus: the Lincoln Land Championship, Evans Scholars Invitational, Wichita Open and Savannah Golf Championship. Instead, they have been scheduled between Sept. 3 and Oct. 4, with no Korn Ferry event held during the week of the rescheduled U.S. Open (Sept. 17-20).

The announcement of a fall schedule comes after the PGA Tour announced last week that, due to circumstances related to the COVID-19 pandemic and the cancellation or postponement of 13 events from the 2019-20 Tour season, eligibility has been extended for exempt 2019-20 PGA Tour members for the 2020-21 season.

These adjustments mean the Korn Ferry Tour won’t have a graduating class in 2020; however, the Tour has established a performance benefit for the top 10 from the Korn Ferry Tour points list following the conclusion of the 2020 Korn Ferry Tour Championship. Those players will be granted access into all PGA Tour events for the 2020-21 season.

With six events completed through the El Bosque Mexico Championship, the remaining 2020 schedule now consists of 23 events. Korn Ferry Tour events to be contested in 2021 as part of the combined 2020-21 schedule will be announced later this year.

“While we won’t have the opportunity to graduate a Korn Ferry Tour Class in 2020, we feel our reimagined wraparound schedule – with newly created playing opportunities – is the best solution to our season that has been disrupted by the COVID-19 crisis,” said Korn Ferry Tour President Alex Baldwin.

The restart to the 2020 Korn Ferry Tour season will begin with the Korn Ferry Challenge at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida. The event will be followed by a second event in Northeast Florida at The King & Bear Course at World Golf Village in St. Augustine. This new tournament takes the place of the Wichita Open Supporting Wichita’s Youth, which will move to one of the newly created fall dates.

“With the impact sustained thus far to our 2020 schedule, it was imperative that we strive to create new playing opportunities for our membership, including these four events that were not on our original schedule,” Baldwin said.

The Lincoln Land Championship in Springfield, Illinois, will move from the week of July 13-19 to one of the new fall dates, which leaves the Price Cutter Charity Championship presented by Dr Pepper in Springfield, Missouri, as the first of six events on the original 2020 calendar that will remain as scheduled through the Korn Ferry Tour Championship.

In addition to the Lincoln Land Championship and the Wichita Open Supporting Wichita’s Youth, the Evans Scholars Invitational in Chicago, and the Savannah Golf Championship in Savannah, Georgia, were also rescheduled for the new fall season.

Revised 2020 Korn Ferry Tour Season schedule:

  • June 8-14: Korn Ferry Challenge at TPC Sawgrass, TPC Sawgrass (Dye’s Valley), Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida
  • June 15-20: The King & Bear Classic at World Golf Village, The King & Bear GC at World Golf Village, St. Augustine, Florida (Saturday finish)
  • June 22-28: Utah Championship, Oakridge CC, Farmington, Utah
  • June 29-July 5: TPC Colorado Championship at Heron Lakes, TPC Colorado, Berthoud, Colorado
  • July 6-12: TPC San Antonio Challenge at the Canyons, TPC San Antonio (Canyons Course), San Antonio, Texas
  • July 13-18: TPC San Antonio Championship at the Oaks, TPC San Antonio (Oaks Course), San Antonio, Texas (Saturday finish)
  • July 20-26: Price Cutter Charity Championship, Highland Springs CC, Springfield, Missouri
  • July 27-August 2: Pinnacle Bank Championship, The Club at Indian Creek, Omaha, Nebraska
  • August 3-9: WinCo Foods Portland Open, Pumpkin Ridge GC (Witch Hollow), North Plains, Oregon
  • August 10-16: Albertsons Boise Open, Hillcrest CC, Boise, Idaho
  • August 17-23: Nationwide Children’s Hospital Championship, Ohio State University GC (Scarlet Course), Columbus, Ohio
  • August 24-30: Korn Ferry Tour Championship, Victoria National GC, Newburgh, Indiana
  • August 31-September 6: Lincoln Land Championship , Panther Creek CC, Springfield, Illinois
  • September 7-13 : Evans Scholars Invitational, TBD, Chicago, Illinois
  • September 21-27: Wichita Open Supporting Wichita’s Youth, Crestview CC, Wichita, Kansas
  • September 28-October 4: Savannah Golf Championship, The Landings Club (Deer Creek), Savannah, Georgia
  • October 5-11: Orange County National Championship presented by Knight 39, Orange County Golf Center & Lodge (Panther Lake), Winter Garden, Florida

The Korn Ferry Tour is expected to resume play with at least the first four events closed to the general public while continuing to monitor the COVID-19 situation and follow the recommendations of local and state authorities in order to determine the most appropriate on-site access in each market. Decisions on fan attendance at all events thereafter will be dependent on available protocols that could be implemented to ensure the health and well-being for all involved.

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