2022 PGA Championship by the rankings: Shane Lowry, Alex Noren, Corey Conners could surprise

The PGA Championship field is broken down here according to the Golfweek/Sagarin rankings as well as the OWGR.

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We have reached the eve of the 2022 PGA Championship and all eyes are on Tiger Woods, making his first start since he made the cut at the Masters in April.

The PGA field is 156 players, and this list reflects the late Wednesday WD of Bryson DeChambeau, who was replaced by Denny McCarthy.

The Heat Index breakdown below takes into account the latest Golfweek/Sagarin rankings as well as the most recent Official World Golf Ranking.

The column labeled “Heat” is a player’s ranking based on his play over the past four months. That can help those of you looking to make a few friendly wagers pick a player who is trending.

So far in the 2021-22 PGA Tour season, the average ranking of the winner heading into the week in which he won a PGA Tour event has been 50.7 in the Golfweek/Sagarins and 54.3 in the Official World Golf Ranking.

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Golfer Heat GW/Sags OWGR
 Scottie Scheffler 1 2 1
 Shane Lowry 2 9 27
 Justin Thomas 3 3 9
 Hideki Matsuyama 4 6 11
 Jon Rahm 5 1 2
 Alex Noren 6 25 52
 Max Homa 7 37 28
 Corey Conners 8 14 32
 Rory McIlroy 9 7 7
 Billy Horschel 10 13 14
 Tyrrell Hatton 11 29 24
 Sebastián Muñoz 12 60 51
 Viktor Hovland 13 5 6
 Sergio Garcia 14 20 47
 Collin Morikawa 15 11 3
 Cameron Smith 16 12 4
 Keegan Bradley 17 42 45
 Maverick McNealy 18 16 76
 Ryan Fox 19 91 90
 Matt Fitzpatrick 20 23 17
 Patrick Cantlay 21 4 5
 Cameron Young 22 67 38
 Rikuya Hoshino 23 129 66
 Will Zalatoris 24 26 30
 Joaquin Niemann 25 27 16
 Adam Scott 26 15 39
 Troy Merritt 27 41 94
 Tommy Fleetwood 28 22 44
 Louis Oosthuizen 29 8 15
 Joel Dahmen 30 40 117
 Robert MacIntyre 32 98 79
 Xander Schauffele 33 19 10
 Matt Kuchar 35 55 78
 Si Woo Kim 36 45 57
 Jhonattan Vegas 37 31 92
 Adam Hadwin 38 65 107
 Patton Kizzire 40 83 129
 Daniel Berger 41 10 25
 Harold Varner III 42 33 37
 Russell Henley 43 18 43
 Keith Mitchell 44 69 80
 Mito Pereira 45 36 100
 Brian Harman 46 57 55
 Denny McCarthy 47 51 158
 Jason Kokrak 51 47 31
 Dustin Johnson 52 28 12
 Jordan Spieth 54 34 8
 Sepp Straka 55 142 53
 Brooks Koepka 58 52 18
 Oliver Bekker 59 110 84
 Ian Poulter 60 54 83
 Bio Kim 63 N/R 115
 Christiaan Bezuidenhout 64 32 67
 Anirban Lahiri 65 114 75
 Bernd Wiesberger 66 44 87
 Abraham Ancer 67 15 21
 Pablo Larrazabal 70 73 70
 Yuki Inamori 71 201 93
 Tom Hoge 73 74 40
 K.H. Lee 74 64 41
 Chris Kirk 76 97 101
 Cameron Champ 77 121 102
 Talor Gooch 78 21 35
 Russell Knox 79 113 186
 Lucas Glover 81 100 112
 Tony Finau 82 49 19
 J.J. Spaun 83 85 96
 Aaron Wise 84 39 91
 Davis Riley 88 109 130
 Gary Woodland 91 102 103
 Kevin Kisner 93 107 29
 Sam Burns 96 30 13
 Kevin Na 101 46 33
 Marc Leishman 108 43 48
 Lanto Griffin 114 63 99
 Erik van Rooyen 117 61 61
 Adri Arnaus 118 151 56
 Brendan Steele 120 135 164
 Cameron Tringale 121 53 49
 Stewart Cink 124 131 81
 Seamus Power 125 35 42
 Matt Jones 127 152 74
 Bubba Watson 133 62 73
 Scott Stallings 134 149 203
 Lucas Herbert 141 89 46
 Jinichiro Kozuma 142 240 97
 Laurie Canter 145 165 111
 Dean Burmester 147 84 77
 Richard Bland 148 75 58
 Justin Harding 164 116 106
 Webb Simpson 166 59 50
 Rickie Fowler 167 146 146
 Daniel van Tonder 168 243 104
 Chad Ramey 171 99 119
 Francesco Molinari 172 125 190
 Joohyung Kim 173 78 72
 Ryan Palmer 179 122 86
 Jason Day 181 90 124
 Kevin Streelman 183 88 113
 Beau Hossler 189 190 193
 Sadom Kaewkanjana 193 N/R 118
 Thomas Pieters 202 72 34
 Henrik Stenson 203 186 224
 Ryosuke Kinoshita 210 217 82
 Hudson Swafford 214 143 85
 Cam Davis 215 118 89
 Mackenzie Hughes 224 93 69
 Padraig Harrington 226 196 172
 Carlos Ortiz 227 124 98
 Patrick Reed 240 86 36
 Branden Grace 241 172 108
 Zach Johnson 253 176 250
 Charl Schwartzel 259 253 116
 Harry Higgs 275 221 157
 Luke List 282 120 62
 Shaun Norris 294 179 68
 Lee Westwood 297 157 71
 Min Woo Lee 307 132 54
 Kramer Hickok 310 231 162
 Ryan Brehm 314 388 286
 Chan Kim 355 275 95
 Justin Rose 359 50 65
 Adam Schenk 370 206 185
 Takumi Kanaya 407 171 63
 Matthew Wolff 438 154 59
 Garrick Higgo 442 394 105
 Martin Kaymer 444 188 204
 Nicolai Hojgaard 553 257 88
 Jason Dufner 662 446 560
 Alex Beach N/R N/R 1733
 Rich Beem N/R N/R 1733
 Brandon Bingaman N/R N/R N/R
 Michael Block N/R N/R 1733
 Matthew Borchert N/R N/R 1733
 Alex Cejka N/R N/R 1733
 Tyler Collet N/R N/R 1733
 John Daly N/R N/R 1733
 Paul Dickinson N/R N/R N/R
 Tim Feenstra N/R N/R N/R
 Austin Hurt N/R N/R N/R
 Colin Inglis N/R N/R N/R
 Nic Ishee N/R N/R N/R
 Jared Jones N/R N/R N/R
 Sean McCarty N/R N/R N/R
 Kyle Mendoza N/R N/R 1733
 Shaun Micheel N/R N/R 1733
 Jesse Mueller N/R N/R 1733
 Dylan Newman N/R N/R N/R
 Zac Oakley N/R N/R N/R
 Casey Pyne N/R N/R N/R
 Ryan Vermeer N/R N/R 1733
 Shawn Warren N/R N/R 1733
 Tiger Woods N/R N/R 818
 Wyatt Worthington II N/R N/R N/R
 Y.E. Yang N/R N/R 1053
 Sam Horsfield N/R 58 64

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New world order: Official World Golf Ranking adds some teeth to more accurately evaluate players

A three-year analysis involved nearly a dozen academics, mathematicians, statisticians and sports analytical experts.

Following a three-year, independent in-depth analysis involving nearly a dozen academics, mathematicians, statisticians and sports analytical experts working with the game’s governing bodies, championships and tours in men’s professional golf, the Official World Golf Ranking (OWGR) added some teeth to its measuring system to more accurately evaluate players.

Chief among the changes announced Wednesday by the OWGR governing body were two critical modifications:

World ranking points will be given to all players making the cut.

For instance, in last week’s World Golf Championships-FedEx St. Jude Invitational, Cameron Davis finished 60th while Si Woo Kim was five strokes back in 65th; neither received rankings points. Under the OWGR revision, Smith would receive slightly more rankings points than Kim.

And a Field Rating system has been developed where tournament fields will be evaluated based on the skill level of every player in the field, rather than just those in the field among the current top 200 of the OWGR.

The previous version of the system used several assigned values (minimum point levels, for instance), resulting in a bias in the system. By using modern analytic techniques, OWGR can accurately evaluate the Field Rating of all eligible tournaments through mathematically justifiable methods.

Dustin Johnson, Peter Dawson
Dustin Johnson receives The Mark H McCormack award for being the leading playing in the Official World Golf rankings for 2018, from OWGR Chairman Peter Dawson during a ceremony ahead of the 2019 British Open at Royal Portrush in Northern Ireland. Photo by Jon Super/Associated Press

The OWGR began in 1986 and covered six tours. Today it covers 23. Since its inception, the system has been modified 17 times.

“Sometimes these modifications have been very minor and sometimes a bit more radical, but they’ve all been directed at catering to this expansion and at increasing the accuracy of the rankings,” Peter Dawson, the chairman of the OWGR governing board, said in a Zoom conference with reporters. “Now, despite all of these well-considered improvements, and believe me, they were well-considered, the OWGR governing board felt that the time may have come for an in-depth review of the rankings.”

The updated OWGR system goes into effect in August 2022.

“What these reviews revealed was that through the use of assigned values in its strength-of-field calculation, which includes tour minimums, flagship tournaments, and the home tour rating, there was some level of bias in the system, which means that there was some level of performances that were either being undervalued or overvalued,” said Billy Schroeder, a member of the OWGR technical committee and vice president of PGA Tour international relations. “What the reviews also revealed is that there’s an opportunity for improvement in the ranking’s ability to differentiate performances, and that sounds like a fancy term, but when you get down into it, and you look at a given week’s ranking, there are quite a number of players out there that, although they have made the cut, they are awarded zero ranking points.”

Added R&A executive director Steve Otto, a member of the OWGR technical committee: “The enhanced accuracy offered by the new field rating calculation enables a higher level of differentiation between performances. This further removes an additional artificial constraint and enables a truer reflection of established golfing norms within ranking systems and the rewarding of players who make the cut in all events.”

The OWGR determines significant portions of the field for major championships, the Players Championship, several World Golf Championships events and many other tournaments. The four major championships will continue to award 100 points to the winner while the Players victor will get 80.

Being inside the top 50, 60 or 100 in the OWGR leads to more playing opportunities for larger purses. As well, many of the game’s players receive bonuses from their sponsors and equipment manufacturers based on their OWGR.

“It is very important to the game of golf and to all of the organizations in it that player pathways clearly exist. We want good players coming through to the very top of the game and finding the route to do so,” Dawson said. “It is not, however, the job of the rankings to provide those pathways. The rankings are there to try to accurately rank players relative to one another, and pathways have to be provided not just through that process but also by the, shall we say, higher level tours and championships, finding ways for players from perhaps lesser events or lesser tours in terms of standard of play to find their way through.”

Ranking points for each player are accumulated over a two-year “rolling” period, with ranking points awarded for each tournament maintained for a 13-week period to place additional emphasis on recent performances. Points are then reduced in equal decrements for the remaining 91 weeks of the two-year ranking period. Each player is then ranked according to their average points per tournament, which is determined by dividing the total number of ranking points by the number of tournaments he has played over that two-year period.

There is a minimum divisor of 40 tournaments over the two-year ranking period, with no more than the most recent 52 tournaments within the two-year period counting towards a player’s rank.

In a given two-year period, there are approximately 2,800 rounds in which 8,600 players post 250,000 scores.

“A huge amount of work has gone into developing this revised system, and we think it’s fit for purpose for many years ahead,” Dawson said. “I have no doubt that things will arise that suggest to the technical committee that one or two changes might be appropriate, but it’s very hard to see at this point what they will be. I think we’re satisfied that a very thorough job has been done.”

PGA Championship heat index: Who to pick at Kiawah Island?

Using the rankings, we’ve identified players who are trending heading into this week’s PGA Championship at Kiawah Island.

Looking for a player to pick in your office pool? One strategy is to consider players who have had the most success in the months leading up to this week’s PGA Championship, the second major of 2021.

The entire PGA Championship field is broken down below according to the Golfweek/Sagarins and the Official World Golf Ranking. The left column, or the “heat index,” is a player’s ranking based on his play the past four months. That can help you pick a player who is trending.

So far in the 2020-21 Tour season, the average ranking of the winner heading into the week in which he won a PGA Tour event has been 89.35 in the Golfweek/Sagarins and 96.35 in the OWGR.

Player Heat Index GW/Sagarin OWGR
 Jordan Spieth 1 23 26
 Brian Harman 2 12 47
 Joaquin Niemann 3 9 29
 Paul Casey 4 20 20
 Viktor Hovland 5 3 11
 Xander Schauffele 6 1 4
 Jon Rahm 7 2 3
 Corey Conners 8 16 39
 Louis Oosthuizen 9 14 31
 Charley Hoffman 10 40 75
 Matt Jones 11 30 56
 Will Zalatoris 12 10 30
 Collin Morikawa 13 24 6
 Cameron Smith 14 21 25
 Brendan Steele 15 52 82
 Daniel Berger 16 7 16
 Webb Simpson 17 5 10
 Abraham Ancer 18 11 19
 Cameron Tringale 19 22 66
 Chris Kirk 20 33 63
 Bryson DeChambeau 21 8 5
 Jason Kokrak 22 39 35
 Ryan Palmer 23 25 32
 Matt Fitzpatrick 24 29 17
 Keegan Bradley 25 45 73
 Tyrrell Hatton 26 18 9
 Dustin Johnson 27 4 1
 Justin Thomas 28 6 2
 Adam Scott 29 19 38
 Max Homa 30 71 40
 Tony Finau 31 13 14
 Sungjae Im 32 36 23
 Scottie Scheffler 33 31 24
 Christiaan Bezuidenhout 34 44 41
 Alex Noren 36 49 99
 Marc Leishman 37 112 37
 Billy Horschel 38 35 18
 Brendon Todd 40 50 60
 Robert MacIntyre 41 53 45
 Tommy Fleetwood 42 43 28
 Patrick Reed 43 17 8
 Stewart Cink 44 55 43
 Rory McIlroy 45 15 7
 K.H. Lee 46 114 59
 Hideki Matsuyama 47 32 15
 Branden Grace 48 135 92
 Kevin Streelman 49 48 64
 Si Woo Kim 50 38 50
 Sam Burns 51 42 36
 Cameron Davis 52 59 127
 Kevin Na 56 47 34
 Charl Schwartzel 57 85 109
 Emiliano Grillo 58 51 76
 Talor Gooch 59 62 72
 Shane Lowry 60 64 48
 Russell Henley 61 34 57
 Lanto Griffin 63 66 61
 Matt Wallace 66 58 52
 Bubba Watson 67 57 55
 Zach Johnson 68 27 121
 Steve Stricker 69 68 240
 Lee Westwood 72 79 21
 Patrick Cantlay 73 28 12
 Sam Horsfield 74 207 86
 Harold Varner III 75 78 84
 Takumi Kanaya 77 73 77
 Sergio Garcia 79 65 46
 Thomas Pieters 80 88 94
 Adam Hadwin 82 86 107
 Wyndham Clark 86 105 150
 Matt Kuchar 88 69 49
 Harris English 89 26 22
 Gary Woodland 95 100 53
 Denny McCarthy 96 80 163
 Victor Perez 97 163 33
 Francesco Molinari 98 113 144
 Danny Willett 103 178 91
 Carlos Ortiz 104 94 54
 Bernd Wiesberger 106 76 62
 Justin Rose 107 91 42
 Rikuya Hoshino 108 139 69
 Aaron Wise 118 134 136
 J.T. Poston 119 102 88
 Mackenzie Hughes 120 60 58
 Antoine Rozner 125 133 74
 Jazz Janewattananond 127 222 111
 Richy Werenski 128 104 114
 Ian Poulter 130 63 67
 Martin Laird 131 143 101
 Sebastián Muñoz 132 98 71
 Andy Sullivan 136 92 70
 Thomas Detry 142 107 98
 Phil Mickelson 144 142 115
 Brooks Koepka 146 82 13
 Jason Dufner 151 146 409
 Rickie Fowler 158 137 128
 Jason Day 164 97 65
 Tom Lewis 168 183 116
 Dylan Frittelli 174 117 81
 Kevin Kisner 177 77 44
 Chan Kim 183 158 83
 Harry Higgs 184 201 154
 Erik van Rooyen 188 123 78
 Dean Burmester 191 238 89
 Maverick McNealy 196 145 104
 Kalle Samooja 206 297 112
 Garrick Higgo 218 229 51
 Tom Hoge 219 166 113
 Kurt Kitayama 231 327 106
 Byeong Hun An 233 234 119
 Joel Dahmen 234 96 68
 Cameron Champ 246 152 95
 George Coetzee 251 286 96
 Robert Streb 253 262 125
 Jimmy Walker 269 354 528
 Rasmus Hojgaard 276 219 102
 Padraig Harrington 279 216 257
 Peter Malnati 290 199 174
 Brian Gay 302 358 232
 Sami Valimaki 307 265 100
 Jason Scrivener 310 319 118
 Chez Reavie 323 191 117
 John Catlin 334 292 80
 Adam Long 343 154 85
 Lucas Herbert 344 255 97
 Martin Kaymer 351 228 93
 Aaron Rai 356 196 90
 Daniel van Tonder 358 392 79
 Jim Herman 371 281 143
 Hudson Swafford 409 422 194
 Brandon Stone 418 347 87
 Henrik Stenson 453 372 130
 Daniel Balin N/R N/R 1857
 Pete Ballo N/R N/R N/R
 Alex Beach N/R N/R 1857
 Rich Beem N/R N/R 1770
 Frank Bensel Jr. N/R N/R N/R
 Tyler Collet N/R N/R 1857
 Ben Cook N/R N/R 1174
 John Daly N/R N/R 1857
 Mark Geddes N/R N/R N/R
 Larkin Gross N/R N/R N/R
 Derek Holmes N/R N/R N/R
 Greg Koch N/R N/R N/R
 Rob Labritz N/R N/R 1770
 Brad Marek N/R N/R N/R
 Shaun Micheel N/R N/R 1857
 Tim Pearce N/R N/R N/R
 Ben Polland N/R N/R 1857
 Patrick Rada N/R N/R N/R
 Sonny Skinner N/R N/R N/R
 Stuart L. Smith N/R N/R N/R
 Joe Summerhays N/R N/R N/R
 Omar Uresti N/R N/R 1857
 Brett Walker N/R N/R N/R
 Y.E. Yang N/R N/R 672

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2021 Wells Fargo Championship field by the rankings

Check out the PGA Tour’s 2021 Wells Fargo Championship field by the rankings.

After a forced break in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the PGA Tour is back at Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, North Carolina once again this week.

Now a two-time winner on Tour, Max Homa returns to defend his 2019 title alongside a strong field that features eight of the top-10 player in the Golfweek/Sagarin world ranking, including four top-five players: No. 1 Jon Rahm, No. 2 Xander Schauffele, No. 4 Viktor Hovland and No. 5 Webb Simpson (a Quail Hollow resident).

Take a closer look at the Wells Fargo Championship field, with both the Goflweek/Sagarin and Official World Golf Ranking positions.

Wells Fargo Championship: Tee times | Odds | Fantasy rankings

Player GW/Sagarin OWGR
Jon Rahm 1 3
Xander Schauffele 2 4
Viktor Hovland 4 11
Webb Simpson 5 9
Justin Thomas 6 2
Will Zalatoris 7 28
Bryson DeChambeau 8 5
Joaquin Niemann 10 30
Tony Finau 11 13
Brian Harman 12 48
Abraham Ancer 13 26
Cameron Tringale 15 65
Corey Conners 16 37
Patrick Cantlay 21 12
Patrick Reed 23 7
Rory McIlroy 25 15
Sungjae Im 28 19
Zach Johnson 29 121
Harris English 32 23
Russell Henley 33 53
Matt Jones 35 54
John Huh 43 315
Tommy Fleetwood 44 27
Brendan Steele 46 79
Brendon Todd 47 57
Keegan Bradley 49 74
Kevin Streelman 51 63
Patton Kizzire 54 188
Mackenzie Hughes 55 55
Emiliano Grillo 57 83
Ian Poulter 59 64
Stewart Cink 60 42
Max Homa 61 39
Bubba Watson 62 58
Michael Thompson 63 104
Cameron Davis 64 130
Lucas Glover 66 122
Matt Wallace 67 52
Shane Lowry 68 45
Sepp Straka 70 152
Denny McCarthy 72 153
Talor Gooch 75 73
Harold Varner III 76 81
Lanto Griffin 77 60
Jason Day 78 59
Adam Hadwin 81 102
Justin Suh 88 403
Sebastián Muñoz 91 67
Francesco Molinari 92 128
Erik van Rooyen 93 72
James Hahn 95 148
Matthew NeSmith 97 135
Rickie Fowler 98 116
Adam Schenk 102 224
Scott Stallings 104 279
Doc Redman 106 162
Carlos Ortiz 107 51
Jhonattan Vegas 108 187
Joel Dahmen 109 68
Rory Sabbatini 110 134
Mark Hubbard 111 171
J.T. Poston 112 86
Richy Werenski 113 117
Charl Schwartzel 115 177
Pat Perez 119 241
Wyndham Clark 121 149
Maverick McNealy 122 105
Scott Piercy 124 213
Gary Woodland 126 61
Kyle Stanley 127 204
Adam Long 128 80
Tyler Duncan 129 180
Troy Merritt 134 159
Tom Hoge 135 108
Brice Garnett 137 235
Henrik Norlander 139 118
Phil Mickelson 140 115
Ryan Moore 142 205
Kyoung-Hoon Lee 144 136
Luke List 146 175
Will Gordon 148 208
Roger Sloan 149 355
Tom Lewis 150 110
C.T. Pan 151 164
Jason Dufner 154 416
Vincent Whaley 161 421
Nate Lashley 165 147
Aaron Wise 167 154
Cameron Percy 168 294
Bronson Burgoon 175 312
Chez Reavie 176 109
Danny Lee 179 174
Joseph Bramlett 181 291
Harry Higgs 183 140
Nick Taylor 185 141
Andrew Putnam 186 142
Russell Knox 191 218
Hank Lebioda 192 336
Brian Stuard 196 211
Patrick Rodgers 201 223
Bo Hoag 202 240
Chase Seiffert 206 207
Austin Cook 207 229
Ben Martin 210 410
Chesson Hadley 211 289
Keith Mitchell 214 249
Ryan Armour 220 249
Seung-Yul Noh 227 730
Peter Malnati 229 165
Lucas Herbert 230 94
Akshay Bhatia 233 821
Byeong Hun An 236 114
Vaughn Taylor 240 193
Kris Ventura 242 267
Rafa Cabrera Bello 243 129
Kramer Hickok 249 341
Brandon Hagy 252 179
Robert Streb 256 123
Sam Ryder 261 195
Scott Harrington 278 358
Tyler McCumber 284 271
Scott Brown 300 276
J.B. Holmes 313 425
D.J. Trahan 314 545
Ryan Brehm 322 488
Beau Hossler 323 369
Michael Gligic 332 377
Satoshi Kodaira 335 485
Robby Shelton 339 225
Rob Oppenheim 350 420
Kelly Kraft 362 648
Jimmy Walker 363 496
Jamie Lovemark 366 451
Xinjun Zhang 374 316
Seamus Power 379 448
Rafael Campos 383 269
Bill Haas 384 640
Sung Kang 420 156
David Hearn 424 487
Ted Potter Jr. 425 344
K.J. Choi 445 560
Luke Donald 451 635
Bo Van Pelt 467 585
Kevin Tway 472 457
Johnson Wagner 475 953
Grayson Murray 478 361
Sebastian Cappelen 482 530
Sean O’Hair 499 809
Michael Kim 570 1406
Hunter Mahan 606 1833
Martin Trainer 639 1000
Jonas Blixt 659 845
D.A. Points 666 1859
Patrick Cover N/R 1257
Keenan Huskey N/R 1859
Cory Schneider N/R 1859

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Who’s in, who’s out of WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play

Check out who’s playing (and who’s not) at the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play in Austin, Texas.

The field is set for the World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play in Austin, Texas, next week.

There will be 64 players in the bracket and there will only be five golfers who are eligible who will not be there. Austin Country Club will once again host the five-day tournament, March 24-28.

The top 11 players in the Official World Golf Ranking are set to play, including the top-ranked player in the world and Masters and FedEx Cup champion Dustin Johnson. Justin Thomas, ranked second and fresh off his Players Championship is also set to play. Jon Rahm, Collin Morikawa and Bryson DeChambeau round out the current top 5 in the ranking.

Defending champion Kevin Kisner will be back. He won the event in 2019; the 2020 event was canceled due to the COVID pandemic. Also, No. 69-ranked Dylan Frittelli is in the field. He gets the final spot because of the five players ranked ahead of him who will not be heading to Austin this week.

The final seeds will be determined based on the Official World Golf Ranking as of Monday, and that will finalize the bracket, which will be unveiled live on the PGA Tour’s digital platforms on Monday, March 22 at 11 a.m. ET.

Here are the notables not in the field.

Players Championship: Top 51 in World ranking headed to TPC Sawgrass

The final commitment list for the 2021 Players Championship was released by the PGA Tour on Friday.

The final commitment list for the 2021 Players Championship was released by the PGA Tour on Friday, with the top 51 players in the world coming to the First Coast to pick up where they left off last year when the tournament was canceled after one round because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Practice rounds are on March 9-10 and the first round will be March 11 at the Players Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass. A limited number of tickets that equal 20 percent capacity are sold out.

The only player who is eligible and not entered this week is two-time Players champion Tiger Woods, who suffered severe leg injuries in a car wreck last week. He is ranked 52nd in the world.

World No. 1-ranked Dustin Johnson, who has won the Masters and the FedEx Cup in the past six months, leads the field of 154 from a World Golf Ranking standpoint. The rest of the top-10 as of this week’s ranking is Jon Rahm, Justin Thomas, PGA champion Collin Morikawa, Xander Schauffele, Tyrrell Hatton, Patrick Cantlay, 2019 Players champion Rory McIlroy, Patrick Reed and 2018 Players champion Webb Simpson.

The field also will include the players who have combined to win 24 of the last 25 major championships, all 21 PGA Tour winners in the 2020-21 FedEx Cup season and past Players champions McIlroy, Simpson, Si Woo Kim, Jason Day, Rickie Fowler, Matt Kuchar, Henrik Stenson, Sergio Garcia and Adam Scott.

The Players is missing only 15 of the top-100 players in the world, but that’s only because they’re not eligible under the stringent rules to make the field. The primary avenues for getting into the Players are to win a tournament in the last 12 months since the previous Players and to finish among the top-125 on the final FedEx Cup standings the week before.

The Tour added a wrinkle this season in light of the pandemic, with the points list from 2019-20 combined with the points this season through last week to add 10 players to the usual field of 144.

Only one other pro can get into the field: the winner of this week’s Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill, if he is not otherwise eligible. Six players in that category made the cut at Bay Hill but only Jazz Janewattananond of Thailand (4-under 140) is in serious contention, as he is five back of the lead headed to the weekend.

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Players Championship field

(Past champions in bold) 

Byeong Hun An

Abraham Ancer

Ryan Armour

Daniel Berger

Christaan Bezuidenhout

Keegan Bradley

Scott Brown

Sam Burns

Patrick Cantlay

Paul Casey

Cameron Champ

Stewart Cink

Wyndham Clark

Corey Conners

Austin Cook

Joel Dahman

Cameron Davis

Jason Day (2016) 

Bryson DeChambeau

Jason Dufner

Tyler Duncan

Harris English

Tony Finau

Matthew Fitzpatrick

Tommy Fleetwood

Rickie Fowler (2015)

Dylan Fritelli

Sergio Garcia (2008) 

Brice Garnett

Brian Gay

Doug Ghim

Lucas Glover

Talor Gooch

Branden Grace

Lanto Griffin

Emiliano Grillo

Adam Hadwin

James Hahn

Brian Harman

Scott Harrington

Tyrrell Hatton

Russell Henley

Jim Herman

Harry Higgs

Bo Hoag

Charley Hoffman

Tom Hoge

Max Homa

Billy Horschel

Beau Hossler

Viktor Hovland

Charles Howell III

Mark Hubbard

Mackenzie Hughes

Sungjae Im

Dustin Johnson

Zach Johnson

Matt Jones

Sung Kang

Jerry Kelly

Si Woo Kim

Chris Kirk

Kevin Kisner

Patton Kizzire

Russell Knox

Brooks Koepka

Jason Kokrak

Matt Kuchar (2012)

Martin Laird

Andrew Landry

Nate Lashley

Danny Lee

K.H. Lee

Marc Leishman

Tom Lewis

Luke List

Adam Long

Shane Lowry

Robert MacIntyre

Peter Malnati

Hideki Matsuyama

Denny McCarthy

Tyler McCumber

Graeme McDowell

Rory McIlroy (2019) 

Maverick McNealy

Troy Merritt

Phil Mickelson (2007) 

Keith Mitchell

Francesco Molinari

Ryan Moore

Collin Morikawa

Sebastian Munoz

Kevin Na

Matthew NeSmith

Joaquin Niemann

Alex Noren

Henrik Norlander

Louis Oosthuizen

Carlos Ortiz

Ryan Palmer

C.T. Pan

Cameron Percy

Pat Perez

Victor Perez

Scott Piercy

J.T. Poston

Ian Poulter

Andrew Putnam

Jon Rahm

Chez Reavie

Doc Redman

Patrick Reed

Patrick Rodgers

Justin Rose

Sam Ryder

Rory Sabbatini

Xander Schauffele

Scottie Scheffler

Adam Schenk

Charl Schwartzel

Adam Scott (2004) 

Robby Shelton

Webb Simpson (2018) 

Cameron Smith

Brandt Snedeker

Jordan Spieth

Scott Stallings

Kyle Stanley

Brendan Steele

Henrik Stenson (2009)

Sepp Straka

Robert Streb

Kevin Streelman

Brian Stuard

Hudson Swafford

Nick Taylor

Vaughn Taylor

Justin Thomas

Michael Thompson

Brendon Todd

Cameron Tringale

Harold Varner III

Jimmy Walker

Bubba Watson

Richey Werenski

Lee Westwood

Bernd Wiesberger

Danny Willett

Aaron Wise

Matthew Wolff

Gary Woodland

Will Zalatoris

Xinjun Zhang

Jon Rahm Says He’s Confident At The Masters But “There’s Only So Much You Can Do” To Prepare

Jon Rahm hit two holes in one during the practice rounds at The Masters, but the No. 2 ranked golfer in the world says preparation can only get you so far at Augusta National. Why? As he said in a sit-down interview with Mercedes Benz, so much changes from Monday to Thursday and even from Wednesday to Thursday as the course gets tournament ready and the superintendent perfects the greens. Still, Rahm is confident as he looks for his first major victory.

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Jon Rahm hit two holes in one during the practice rounds at The Masters, but the No. 2 ranked golfer in the world says preparation can only get you so far at Augusta National. Why? As he said in a sit-down interview with Mercedes Benz, so much changes from Monday to Thursday and even from Wednesday to Thursday as the course gets tournament ready and the superintendent perfects the greens. Still, Rahm is confident as he looks for his first major victory.

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Despite penalty on birdie chip, Jon Rahm wins Memorial, moves to No. 1

Jon Rahm was cruising to an authoritative victory in the Memorial when he ran into turbulence shortly after storms arrived and delayed play.

DUBLIN, Ohio – Jon Rahm was cruising to an authoritative victory in the Memorial on Sunday – and the world’s top ranking for the first time – when he ran into turbulence shortly after storms arrived and delayed play.

After a 50-minute stoppage, Rahm returned to the ninth hole at Muirfield Village Golf Club with an 8-shot lead. But a bogey on 10, a double-bogey on 11 and another bogey on 14, coupled with a birdie by Ryan Palmer on the 12th, cut Rahm’s lead to three shots.

Then matters got dicey when Rahm chipped in from behind the 16th green for birdie to up his advantage to four. But as he soled his club right before the chip, the ball moved and didn’t return to its original spot before Rahm hit his shot.

Rahm was later penalized two shots for the infraction.

Rahm didn’t learn about the situation on the 16th until he had finished his round. He had upped his advantage to five shots on the 17th with a par and closed out his victory with another par on the final hole.

With rounds of 69-67-68-75 in conditions that played like U.S. Open, Rahm finished at 9-under 279 and three shots clear of Ryan Palmer (67-68-73-74). Matthew Fitzpatrick finished in third with rounds of 75-66-74-68.

“I didn’t see or feel anything,” Rahm said when he was told about the incident on 16. “If I would have seen it, I would have said something. If the ruling governors want to rule that it was a penalty, that’s fine. It doesn’t take anything away from this victory.”

And now Seve has company. Rahm joined his hero, Seve Ballesteros, as the only Spaniards to become the world’s No. 1 player with his victory.


LeaderboardBest photos | Winner’s bag


At 25 years and 251 days old, Rahm became the fifth youngest player to become the No. 1 player in the world, trailing only Tiger Woods, Jordan Spieth, Rory McIlroy and Justin Thomas. Rahm is the 24th player to hold the top spot.

Ballesteros rose to No. 1 on five different occasions, the final time coming in 1989. Rahm supplanted Rory McIlroy as the world’s best.

It was Rahm’s fourth PGA Tour victory and 11th worldwide title.

“It’s an honor to win here,” Rahm told tournament host Jack Nicklaus on the 18th green. “I’m just trying to be like you.”

“Your play was fantastic,” Nicklaus told Rahm. “I’m really happy for you.”

A new No. 1

Rahm reached No. 1 in just over four years as a professional. Becoming No. 1 seemed more a matter of when it would happen, not if. He was the No. 1 amateur in the world for a record 60 weeks.

“Jon Rahm is a remarkable talent, and you’re seeing it,” said Phil Mickelson, who predicted that Rahm would quickly become a top-5 player in the world before he hit his first shot as a professional. “You’re seeing it in his play week in and week out from a game that has no weaknesses. Drives it long, drives it straight, good iron player, good wedge player, great putter. And he also has great course management, thinks himself around the golf course, and he knows himself.

“He knows that to relax sometimes he has to let some of his anger out. He can’t hold that in. It might upset some people, but he knows that it allows him to be at his best, and so I think that that’s a big thing, too, is identifying your own self, and he’s done a great job of that at a really young age, to know how he has to be, what his presence and attitude have to be for him to play his best.”

And Palmer, who missed the cut in last week’s Workday Charity Open played on the same course but brought out an old Odyssey Rossie II putter he used in his college days, said he knew Rahm was destined for greatness.

“I just said I was proud of him,” Palmer said when asked what he said to Rahm after the chip-in on 16. “He deserved it. He deserved to be No. 1 after he got there. I think he was going to. Just congratulated him and told him I was proud of him. He’s a young, fiery player, that’s for sure, but he’s fun to watch.

“That’s why he’s so good. You’ve got to have that. He gets probably a bad rap every now and then for his fiery outbursts, but that’s what drives him and gets him going. I was proud to see him win.”

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The Memorial Tournament field by the rankings

We break down the field at the Memorial Tournament according to the Official World Golf Ranking and the Golfweek/Sagarin Pro Rankings.

The PGA Tour starts its second consecutive week at Muirfield Village Golf Club with the Memorial Tournament, annually one of the top events on the summer Tour schedule.

This year, it stands out for another reason. Tiger Woods will tee it up for the first time since the PGA Tour restarted play in June post-coronavirus shut-down. In addition to Woods, the Memorial field is highlighted by nine of the top 10 players in the Golfweek/Sagarin Pro Rankings.


PGA Tour events Tiger Woods has won more than anyone else


The Memorial field is broken down below according to each player’s ranking in the Golfweek/Sagarins and in the Official World Golf Ranking. For the 2019-20 season, the average ranking of the winner heading into the week in which they won PGA Tour event has been 70.78 in the Golfweek/Sagarins and 97.04 in the OWGR.

[jwplayer bvqccpyX-9JtFt04J]

Player Golfweek/Sagarin OWGR
 Rory McIlroy 1 1
 Jon Rahm 2 2
 Patrick Cantlay 3 10
 Webb Simpson 4 5
 Justin Thomas 5 3
 Daniel Berger 6 28
 Bryson DeChambeau 7 7
 Xander Schauffele 8 11
 Collin Morikawa 10 13
 Dustin Johnson 12 4
 Matthew Fitzpatrick 13 27
 Sungjae Im 14 22
 Viktor Hovland 15 33
 Adam Hadwin 16 53
 Abraham Ancer 17 21
 Patrick Reed 18 8
 Hideki Matsuyama 19 23
 Paul Casey 20 25
 Harris English 21 145
 Tony Finau 22 19
 Gary Woodland 23 18
 Brooks Koepka 24 6
 Tiger Woods 25 14
 Ian Poulter 26 51
 Mark Hubbard 27 133
 Louis Oosthuizen 28 24
 Matthias Schwab 30 91
 Doc Redman 31 120
 Billy Horschel 32 39
 Rory Sabbatini 33 85
 Joel Dahmen 34 67
 J.T. Poston 36 63
 Talor Gooch 37 139
 Sergio Garcia 38 38
 Rickie Fowler 39 31
 Brian Harman 41 126
 Joaquin Niemann 42 64
 Matt Kuchar 43 20
 Carlos Ortiz 46 130
 Kevin Na 51 30
 Cameron Champ 52 76
 Jordan Spieth 53 61
 Corey Conners 54 66
 Byeong Hun An 55 57
 Lucas Glover 56 81
 Nick Taylor 57 100
 Shane Lowry 58 26
 Justin Rose 59 16
 Scottie Scheffler 60 60
 Harold Varner III 61 116
 Bud Cauley 62 132
 Marc Leishman 63 17
 Maverick McNealy 65 179
 Brendon Todd 66 52
 Stewart Cink 69 252
 Kevin Kisner 72 36
 Alex Noren 73 121
 Lanto Griffin 74 86
 Zach Johnson 75 198
 Brian Stuard 77 127
 Max Homa 79 74
 Vaughn Taylor 83 104
 Harry Higgs 84 128
 Denny McCarthy 86 192
 Brandt Snedeker 87 54
 Chez Reavie 88 40
 Adam Long 90 105
 Christiaan Bezuidenhout 91 48
 Keegan Bradley 92 70
 Troy Merritt 93 142
 Scott Piercy 94 102
 Brendan Steele 95 112
 Sebastián Muñoz 98 94
 Matthew Wolff 99 59
 Erik van Rooyen 100 42
 Dylan Frittelli 103 110
 Ryan Palmer 105 73
 Branden Grace 106 75
 Jim Furyk 108 90
 Victor Perez 111 43
 Matt Wallace 113 47
 Charles Howell III 114 88
 Tyler Duncan 115 163
 Patrick Rodgers 116 206
 Graeme McDowell 117 49
 Bernd Wiesberger 119 29
 Danny Willett 120 37
 Jason Kokrak 122 62
 Bubba Watson 123 56
 Tom Hoge 126 125
 Matthew NeSmith 127 187
 Henrik Norlander 128 189
 Ryan Moore 129 118
 Jason Day 130 58
 Rafa Cabrera Bello 134 50
 Phil Mickelson 135 69
 Cameron Smith 136 41
 Jason Dufner 139 293
 Jason Scrivener 141 180
 Zac Blair 146 208
 Danny Lee 147 96
 Kevin Streelman 155 44
 Andrew Putnam 159 82
 Steve Stricker 169 748
 Bo Hoag 173 303
 Wyndham Clark 176 161
 Andrew Landry 178 111
 Mackenzie Hughes 191 97
 Sung Kang 192 55
 Si Woo Kim 199 129
 Jazz Janewattananond 204 45
 Xinjun Zhang 208 151
 Sepp Straka 215 136
 Scott Harrington 227 243
 Charl Schwartzel 251 219
 Keith Mitchell 255 109
 Nate Lashley 264 89
 Emiliano Grillo 265 152
 Bill Haas 294 511
 C.T. Pan 331 107
 Ernie Els 335 462
 Haotong Li 369 101
 K.J. Choi 388 444
 Kevin Tway 393 176
 Jim Herman 397 306
 Jimmy Walker 408 298
 David Lingmerth 572 1005
 Vijay Singh 670 888
 Peter Kuest N/R 2076
 Tom Lehman N/R 2076
 William McGirt N/R 1393
 Andy Ogletree N/R 2076
 Carl Pettersson N/R 2076

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Golf equipment used by the top 10 players in the world

See the clubs used by PGA Tour stars such as Rory McIlroy, Jon Rahm, Justin Thomas, Brooks Koepka, Dustin Johnson and Adam Scott in 2020.

If everything goes well, the PGA Tour might be able to resume the 2020 season in six weeks at the Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas.

The Official World Golf Ranking has been locked since the Players Championship was canceled in mid-March. Below is a list of clubs the golfers ranked in the top 10 on the OWGR had in their bags at the Players Championship, which should provide a good idea about what they will use when professional golf returns.

Tommy Fleetwood's irons
Tommy Fleetwood’s Srixon and TaylorMade irons (David Dusek/Golfweek)

10. Tommy Fleetwood

DRIVER: TaylorMade SIM (10.5 degrees), with Mitsubishi Kuro Kage S TiNi 70X shaft

FAIRWAY WOODS: TaylorMade M6 (15 degrees), with Mitsubishi Diamana DF 70 TX shaft; (18 degrees), with Mitsubishi Kuro Kage S TiNi 80TX shaft

IRONS: Srixon Z 785 (4, 5), TaylorMade P7TW (6-9), with Project X 6.5 shafts

WEDGES: Titleist Vokey Design SM7 (48 degrees), TaylorMade Milled Grind 2 (52, 60 degrees), Titleist Vokey Design BV prototype TVD (56 degrees), with True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400 shafts

PUTTER: Odyssey White Hot Pro 3

BALL: Titleist Pro V1