PGA Tour pros hit the ugliest – and prettiest – shots you’ll see Sunday at 2024 Valspar Championship

Sunday’s final round at the Valspar saw a pair of pros do the unthinkable, both good and bad.

Within 30 minutes during the final round at the 2024 Valspar Championship a pair of PGA Tour players hit the best and worst shots you’ll see from professionals.

First up was Robby Shelton.

Coming off his best season as a professional in 2023, the 28-year-old has been slow to start in 2024 and entered the week off a pair of missed cuts. He played his way to the weekend at Innisbrook Resort’s Copperhead Course in Palm Harbor, Florida, and on Sunday hit a shot he won’t soon forget. Shelton made an albatross on the par-5 14th hole after he sunk his approach from 258 yards out in the fairway.

This thing was a laser-guided missile destined to find the hole.

And then there was Peter Malnati, who has made headlines in recent weeks for his thoughts on the future of the PGA Tour and his touching reason for why he uses a yellow golf ball. In contention for his second win on Tour and first since 2015, Malnati found the fairway and pulled a hybrid from the bag for his second shot on the par-5 5th hole. With 291 yards to the cup, Malnati hit one of the uglier non-shanks you’ll see from a pro. You can’t quite call it a top because the ball somehow still went 172 yards, but he sure didn’t catch it clean.

Even the broadcasters were confused about what they had just seen.

Professional golfers: sometimes they do the unthinkable and other times they’re just like us amateurs.

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The real simple reason why Peter Malnati uses a yellow golf ball

“It still makes me think of (my son), and that’s worth a smile or two.”

The Valspar Championship bills itself as the PGA Tour’s most colorful tournament and someone is going to try to paint the town of Palm Harbor, Florida, home of Innisbrook Resort’s Copperhead Course, red on Sunday.

It could be Peter Malnati, who scribbled five birdies on his card on Saturday and shot 3-under 68 to improve to 8-under 205 and just two strokes off the lead. In addition to being a colorful character with an ever-present smile, he plays with a colorful ball. After the round, he was asked why he uses a yellow ball. It turns out Malnati, 36, father to Hatcher and Dash, had a quite simple reason.

Peter Malnati hits his bunker shot on the fifth hole during the third round of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am golf tournament at Pebble Beach Golf Links. (Photo: Michael Madrid-USA TODAY Sports)

“Well, I started using it in Minnesota at the 3M (Open) last summer,” he said. “And the reason I switched to it is because my, at the time, 3-year-old (Hatcher), who is now 4, liked them. And so, he’s kind of over it now, but it still makes me think of him, and that’s worth a smile or two, which is worth a lot out there for me.”

Malnati is bidding for his second career Tour title and first since the 2015 Sanderson Farms Championship.

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Giddy after a 66, Peter Malnati goes on a rant (and shares more than he probably should)

Before he finished his rant, Malnati found time to torch LIV’s team-golf concept.

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — Peter Malnati has been working overtime – on his game so that he can continue living his dream on the PGA Tour, on his role as a Tour player director because he cares about the future of professional golf and feels a responsibility to voice the concerns of the players outside the top 50 and most importantly, as a husband and father of two.

It doesn’t leave much time to talk to the press, but after making eight birdies, including sticking inside 2 feet at 17, and shooting 66 on Saturday during the third round of the 2024 Players Championship, Malnati went on a rant about the state of the professional golf and shared some thoughts on what unification might look like for the PGA Tour and LIV Golf.

“I think something needs to happen for our sport,” he said. “I want to see a unified game where, when we have events like the Players Championship, that we have all the best players in the world and we’re proud to call ’em PGA Tour members. That’s what I want. I don’t know how we get there, but that’s what I want.”

Malnati also voiced what many players surely think but have been reluctant to say about this week’s Players.

“Whoever wins this golf tournament is going to have achieved the most incredible accomplishment, to win on this golf course, against this field, but it would be even better if we had Jon Rahm here. I’ll just say it. It would be even better. It would be an even better win,” he said. “So that’s something that we as a membership and as leaders of the membership, we need to figure that out, how do we make this happen for people to come back, and do it in a way that has some semblance of fairness, some semblance of just, how do we do it in a way that can at least somewhat pass the sniff test and get us to a place where, when we have championships like this, we have a group of the best players – like, we already have a group of the best players in the world – how do we get to a place where we have all of the best players in the world here.”

Players: Leaderboard, tee times, hole-by-hole

Malnati may have best articulated how LIV players would be permitted to return.

“That might be the thing that’s most top of mind for people. You would find opinions that ran the gamut, from guys that just have a line in the sand that say never, and guys – I mean, I think Rory’s been pretty outspoken that he wants to see the best players playing on the PGA Tour – so we’re going to have to net out somewhere in the middle.”

He reiterated what fellow Tour player director Webb Simpson previously told Golfweek – that LIV defectors will have to earn their status back. But then he offered some new insights publicly, suggesting defectors will never be eligible to be part of the equity ownership plan.

“I think there’s certain methods that we’ve been able to establish and put in place that will be really, really good for the PGA Tour and its membership, and our fans, too. This player equity plan, I don’t understand it, it’s a little bit above my head, but I certainly know enough to say that I really do support it. It’s going to make players owners of the Tour, and guys who violated our policies aren’t ever going to be eligible for that. That’s a big deal. Like, that’s a big, big deal,” Malnati said. “So I think, if we do find a pathway for guys to come back, there will certainly be safeguards in place to protect the members of the Tour who stayed here.”

Asked about a potential meeting with the leaders of PIF, which was first reported by Golfweek’s Eamon Lynch on Friday, Malnati said, “I think at this point I probably should have more details because, yeah, there may be a meeting, but I don’t even know, I don’t know where it is or how I’m getting there. I would like to know that information, and I would like to then tell the membership about it before I talk about it.”

Malnati pointed out that when the framework agreement between the Tour and PIF was announced on June 6, he resisted the idea.

“As I’ve learned more, I think I understand better and I’m very open minded to learning what involvement they want, what they want out of this and how they think they can help. I’m very open minded to that now,” he explained. “But, yeah, on the surface, I think there are players who have resistance to that relationship, for sure. So that’s why I do think it’s important that maybe our next step is to meet at some point.”

Malnati also suggested that when it comes to determining the deal, the players should only have so much of a say.

“At its core, like, players have no business running the PGA Tour, but this is a member, this is a members’ organization. Like, we should have input in the direction it goes. For something, some of these monumental changes that are bound to happen as we start up this for-profit company and take on investment, whether it’s from the private sector here or the whatever it is, like, players should have involvement and knowledge of that, and even input.

“Like, players do not need to be running this organization, but we certainly, yeah, we certainly should be a part of decisions like that. I think we’ve almost swung the pendulum too far in the other direction now after what happened on June 6th, where players and the whole organization were left in the dark, the pendulum has swung too far to where players are probably feeling like they have, you know, more input than we should. So I think, as it comes back to sort of neutral, I think we’re going to land in a really sweet spot where we have the leadership of the Tour doing what they should, which they are, and we have a lot of transparency where the players know what’s going on and are able to give their input.”

Before he finished his rant, Malnati found time to torch LIV’s team-golf concept.

“I need to understand better what Yasir is really trying to accomplish there,” he said, adding that he doesn’t see a place for team golf as part of the FedEx Cup schedule. “Are there any fans that care which team won the tournament? And, like, and I don’t know, I don’t know what fans of LIV want or care about, but are there any fans that care about who won it? I mean, that seems so contrived to me.

“I feel like we could also create some contrived team golf something, somewhere outside of the FedEx Cup season, but, like, what does he really want is a question that I want to understand better. Because I don’t think it’s some contrived, fake, add up random guys’ scores and call them a team. I don’t think that’s it. I think what he means is more stuff like the Ryder Cup, I would guess, but I have no clue because I haven’t talked to him.”

That day may come as soon as Monday.

PGA Tour Enterprises launched with nine players, including Tiger Woods, on board of directors

The more significant news was the naming of retired Tour pro Joe Ogilvie to the board.

The newly formed PGA Tour Enterprises announced its first board of directors on Wednesday.

The 13-member board has nine PGA Tour Directors, approved by the Tour’s Policy Board, and four Strategic Sports Group Directors, appointed by the SSG investor group. This board will lead all commercial activities related to the PGA Tour and will focus on driving fan engagement and growth, as well as developing new media, sponsorship and commercial opportunities.

All six current Player Directors from the Tour Policy Board will simultaneously serve on the Tour Enterprises Board of Directors: Patrick Cantlay, Peter Malnati, Adam Scott, Webb Simpson, Jordan Spieth and Tiger Woods.

The more significant news was the naming of retired Tour pro Joe Ogilvie to the board.

“Given the significant time investment required from the players to serve on both Boards – and as part of the Tour’s governance review – the Player Directors identified the benefit of having a ‘Director Liaison’ on both Boards as well,” the Tour said in a news release. “Ogilvie will join the PGA Tour Policy Board and the PGA Tour Enterprises Board of Directors.

Joe Gorder, who serves as an Independent Director on the Tour Policy Board, and PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan round out the Tour representation on the Enterprises Board. Monahan will serve as the CEO of Enterprises, and Woods will serve as the Vice Chairman of the Board.

As announced in January, SSG – a consortium of American sports team owners led by Fenway Sports Group – joined PGA Tour Enterprises as a minority investor, providing an initial $1.5 billion of capital that will “unlock investment opportunities to grow the Tour and enhance the game of golf around the world.”

The four SSG Directors will be:

  • John W. Henry, Principal, Fenway Sports Group; Manager, Strategic Sports Group
  • Arthur M. Blank, Co-Founder, Home Depot; Owner and Chairman, AMB Sports and Entertainment (Atlanta Falcons, Atlanta United, Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Atlanta Drive GC, PGA Tour Superstore)
  • Andrew B. Cohen, Chief Investment Officer and Co-Founder, Cohen Private Ventures; Vice Chairman, New York Mets
  • Sam Kennedy, Partner/CEO, Fenway Sports Group; President & CEO, Boston Red Sox

The PGA Tour Enterprises Board will elect a chairman at an upcoming meeting.

“Today’s announcement is another milestone for our organization, as I believe we have arrived at a PGA Tour Enterprise’s Board of Directors with the right composition, expertise and balance necessary to take our organization into the future,” said Monahan. “Our current and former players will provide essential insight into our members’ priorities and needs. And we welcome key SSG members to the leadership team, whose exceptional track records and achievements in global professional sports will lend a wealth of knowledge into the opportunities ahead for the PGA Tour. Their expertise will undoubtedly play a pivotal role in the success and growth of our commercial initiatives.

“It’s an opportunity for us to shape something special that will not only create more value for the PGA Tour, but will also benefit and grow our fanbase,” the Player Directors and Liaison Director said in a joint statement.  “We’re ready to get started.”

“Our role on the Enterprises board will focus on hearing Player Director ideas and working alongside them to ensure the sport’s commercial growth occurs in a way that creates the best possible product for fans,” said Henry. “All of us at Strategic Sports Group see a bright future for the PGA Tour and the constitution of the Enterprises Board is an important first step in realizing that future.”

In addition to Ogilvie’s forthcoming appointment, Monahan will be a voting member as well, which will expand that Policy Board from 12 to 14.

Player Directors

Patrick Cantlay, Peter Malnati, Adam Scott, Webb Simpson, Jordan Spieth, Tiger Woods

Liaison Director

Joe Ogilvie

PGA Tour Commissioner

Jay Monahan

Independent Directors

Edward Herlihy, Jimmy Dunne, Mark Flaherty, Mary Meeker, Joe Gorder

PGA of America Director

John Lindert

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Peter Malnati defends being given sponsor exemption to AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

“I don’t think there’s ever been an amateur play with me who didn’t have the time of their life.”

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. — Peter Malnati understands why some of his fellow competitors might take issue with three of the four sponsor exemptions into the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am being granted to members of the PGA Tour’s player directors on the Policy Board — namely Adam Scott, Webb Simpson and himself — who happened to be among the six players who voted unanimously to approve the Tour’s billion-dollar deal with Strategic Sports Group.

As Golfweek reported this week, multiple players described the choices for exemptions into the first-time signature event with a limited field of 80 and playing for $20 million with no cut as “shady,” “fishy” and “collusion.”

“You don’t even have to be looking at it to see that that could look bad,” Malnati said. “I get that.”

But Malnati also defended his selection as one of the four invites.

“I know why I felt worthy of writing a letter to get an exemption here.  It’s not because I’m on the board. It’s not because I vote. I felt worthy writing a letter because I come to this event every single year that I’ve been on Tour, and I don’t think there’s ever been an amateur play with me who didn’t have the time of their life. That’s why I felt comfortable writing a letter asking for an exemption,” he said. “If the reason I got that exemption is because I’m on the board, that’s not right. If the reason I got the exemption is because this is my 10th year, I would say six of the nine I’ve played with Don Colleran from FedEx, but those other three years I played with three different amateurs, and there’s always two amateurs in your group, not just one, and I take pride in making sure that those guys or gals have the time of their life. I think that gets back to Steve John and the Monterey Peninsula Foundation that if you come to this tournament, if you’ve never heard of Peter Malnati, he might be the guy that you want to play with.

“That’s why I felt comfortable asking for one. That’s why I feel comfortable having gotten one. If I got one because I’m a board member and that’s the only reason, I’ll fully admit that’s not right, but I don’t think that’s why I got one, and that’s certainly not why I asked for one.”

Dennis Roberson, who has been the longtime tournament manager of the Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial CC in Fort Worth, Texas, wrote on social media that the complaint by players over the AT&T exemptions is “way overblown by people with sour grapes.”

He continued, “If a player has supported your event for many years and proven himself to be a great pro-am partner, that is EXACTLY the kind of player you give an exemption to.”

Malnati finished T-4 at Pebble last year and opened with 3-under 69 on Thursday. Asked why he plays well at this event he said, “I play well here because I’m happy here.  Like I’m happy everywhere, but this is my favorite place, and the golf is almost secondary to just the most — this is the most amazing place. Then secondly, it’s fun for me to give to others, and we don’t get to do that during a PGA Tour event because nobody gives a shit about you during a PGA Tour event. This week there’s a partner that you’re playing with who only does this once a year. It’s fun for me to give to them. That takes pressure off me. If I fail at golf but I make them have a good time, it’s still a good day, whereas a normal week, if I fail at golf, it’s like, what am I doing? That helps me. I think attitude-wise, you get bumpy poa annua greens sometimes. You get bad weather sometimes. That stuff doesn’t bother me. I just love it here. And I’m also good at golf. I don’t always prove it, but I’m also good at golf. I’m going to play good anywhere, but here brings out the best in me.”

Golfweek’s best 2023 interviews: Lucas Glover, Colin Montgomerie, Morgan Pressel, Stewart Cink, Harold Varner III and more

At Golfweek, we continue to send live bodies on the road at events throughout the year.

Between COVID, advances in technology and myriad other factors, golf beat reporting just isn’t what it once was. Media centers have fewer and fewer members, Zoom calls and transcripts make it easier to keep tabs on players and tournaments from afar and player availability has become increasingly more difficult to secure as many pros (and some college players) are being pulled in numerous directions by sponsors and other responsibilities.

At Golfweek, we continue to send live bodies on the road at events throughout the year — on the PGA Tour, LPGA, LIV, USGA championships, amateur and college events, as well as silly-season tournaments.

Through the hard work of reporters like Adam Schupak, Beth Ann Nichols, Adam Woodard and Cameron Jourdan, we secured a number of great Q&As in 2023 away from the media scrums and online pressers, getting a deeper look at some of the most fascinating personalities that make this game great.

Here’s a look at some of our favorites, in no particular order:

With PGA Tour cards on the line, these pros missed the cut at 2023 RSM Classic

The cut at Sea Island Golf Club had more of a sense of finality for some.

ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. — A prominent swing instructor summed up why he could cut tension on the range at the RSM Classic with a rusty nail.

“Some of these guys don’t know whether they will ever tee it up at a PGA Tour event,” he said.

This week is the 54th and final Tour event of the 2022-23 season and so the 36-hole cut Friday had more of a sense of finality for some, especially those battling to make the top 125 and full status for next season or Nos. 126-150 and secure conditional status.

Peter Malnati, who entered the week at No. 116, shot 69-71 (140) and missed the cut and said he’ll be playing the waiting game all weekend. He’s projected No.122. Two three-putts in the first round was uncharacteristic of Malnati and the putter remained cold in the second round. But at least he had the right perspective.

“With or without a Tour card, I’m going to be awesome but I’d rather have one,” he said.

Harry Higgs, who started the week at No. 132 and had missed three straight cuts, made birdie on two of the last three holes to shoot 70 on Seaside Course and make the cut on the number.

All told, 78 golfers shot 4-under 138 or better at Sea Island’s Seaside and Plantation Courses. Higgs didn’t need anyone to let him know what what at stake when he made an 11-foot birdie putt on 18 at Seaside to make the cut.

“No, I know. I know it all too well after this year. Oddly, I wasn’t really that worried about it or focused on it,” he said. “For the last two years I’ve been stressing, worrying about all this shit. And for some reason, I don’t know why, I don’t know that I even said it aloud, I might have just thought it briefly, like I’m just not really going to worry about it this week.”

Patton Kizzire, who entered the week at No. 130, channeled the same philosophy and made birdie on his final two holes at the Plantation Course to make the cut and give himself two more rounds to jump up a few more spots. He’s projected No. 129.

Four players ranked between No. 120 and No. 126 in the FedEx Cup Fall standings entering the week missed the cut: No. 120 Matti Schmid, No. 121 Doug Ghim, No. 123 Troy Merritt and No. 126 Henrik Norlander.

Here’s more about them and some other pros who weren’t so fortunate and had their season come to a premature end. And here are the Saturday tee times for those who did make the weekend.

PGA Tour player Peter Malnati quickly retracts statement after calling Lexi Thompson’s exemption a ‘gimmick’

The 36-year-old Indiana native admitted he thought the exemption might have been a stretch.

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In his first year as a member of the PGA Tour policy board Peter Malnati has proved a champion of the everyman, coming clean on the average player’s reaction to the PGA Tour’s framework agreement with the Saudi Arabian Public Investment Fund.

Malnati stayed strong on comments that players lost trust in the Tour after the announcement of the arrangement and added that it would take some time to be restored.

On Tuesday, in advance of this week’s Sanderson Farms Championship, Malnati was asked about the news that LPGA star Lexi Thompson was given an exemption into the Shriners Children’s Open in Las Vegas. The event will be played Oct. 12-15 at TPC Summerlin, which last year played 7,255 yards with a par of 71. The field of 132 will compete for a purse of $8.4 million.

The 36-year-old Indiana native admitted he thought the exemption might have been a stretch.

“I just got a text this morning, so I don’t know much about it,” Malnati said. “Obviously I know that Lexi at times has been one of the top players on the LPGA Tour, and she’s obviously very athletic. Distance won’t be a problem. She’ll hit it far enough.

“My gut reaction when I saw that was like the tournament reaching to try to get — just trying to drum up interest. I think I understand that, if that is the case.”

2023 Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial
Peter Malnati plays his shot from the third tee during the third round of the Charles Schwab Challenge golf tournament. (Photo: Jim Cowsert-USA TODAY Sports)

Malnati started to step in hot water but caught himself quickly with his next statement.

“I don’t think we’re going to need to resort to gimmicks to drum up interest. I shouldn’t have said that. I don’t know that having Lexi play is a gimmick, but I don’t think the tournaments are going to have to go to those kind of lengths to drum up interest and get storylines that they can sell because I think these events are actually going to have a lot of meaning,” he said. “Like I said, change is hard for everyone at every level, so I assume if you’re a host organization of a tournament, if you’re the Century Club here in Jackson, if you’re Wayne Sanderson Farms, you just don’t know right now for sure what you have anymore because the fall is completely reimagined.

“I’m pretty sure that the fall is going to be a blockbuster hit. I think it’s going to be very successful. But these tournaments, they don’t know yet.”

A full-time LPGA member in 2014, Thompson has racked up 15 professional wins including a major — the 2014 Kraft Nabisco Championship.

“Having Lexi play certainly will get a lot of headlines, and if that’s the goal for Shriners and the host organization in Vegas there, that’s great. Obviously, she’s a professional athlete. She’s accomplished a lot,” Malnati said. “It’s not like — I mean, who knows what’ll happen. She may go play really well and it’ll be huge. She may play absolutely terrible and finish 132nd.

“Either way, she’s a professional golfer. She has a spot in the field. The tournament is — if it gets them the attention that they want and it works out positively for them, it’s great, all for it.”

Malnati is one of seven past champions in the field at The Country Club of Jackson and is making his ninth straight start in the event. He won the tournament in 2015 and added a second-place showing in 2020, making him the only player to have a victory and a runner-up showing since it moved to its current location in 2015.

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Q&A: Inside the PGA Tour board room with Peter Malnati

The wide-ranging conversation started with a simple question: do you want this deal to be consummated?

DETROIT – Peter Malnati was in a Residence Inn at the Toronto Airport on Tuesday morning, June 6, when his phone rang at 7:36 a.m., informing him of the PGA Tour’s blockbuster agreement with the Saudi Arabian Public Investment Fund.

Malnati, 36, whose lone win came at the 2016 Sanderson Farms Championship, is in his first year on the PGA Tour policy board. On Tuesday, he and the nine other board members met for approximately eight hours in person. (Lunch was served at noon, there were two five-minute breaks and the meeting wrapped around 8 p.m.)

“Entering the Framework Agreement put an end to costly litigation,” the Policy Board said in a statement. “Management, with input from our Player Directors, has now begun a new phase of negotiations to determine if the Tour can reach a definitive agreement that is in the best interests of our players, fans, sponsors, partners, and the game overall.”

On Wednesday, after a lengthy practice session, Malnati spoke to Golfweek about the meeting and shed some new light on the task ahead, including how the Tour must earn back player trust, Commissioner Jay Monahan’s health, the formation of player committees to dole out discipline to LIV defectors and reward loyalty for those who stayed.

The wide-ranging conversation started with a simple question: do you want this deal to be consummated?

“I never wanted this deal to happen,” Malnati said. “But now that we’re apparently in a position where it was needed for some reason, I want to see the PGA Tour succeed and there are smart people that are telling me that this deal is going to set up the PGA Tour for long-term success. It’s still a hard pill to swallow because like I never turned down an offer (from LIV) and never had an offer. They never had any interest in me and that’s perfectly understandable. I’m the 250th-ranked player in the world. But even hypothetically had LIV made me a significant offer, it was never on the table for me to accept that offer because I didn’t want to be associated with the Saudis and the PIF. I never would have accepted an offer there. And people always said, ‘Well, everyone has a number.’ I didn’t have a number. So the fact that unbeknownst to any of us that choice was potentially made for us that we’re going to partner with PIF, that was really hard to swallow, for sure.

“So your question was, do I want this deal to happen?

“I think ultimately now I’m in a place where I’m going to say, ‘Yes.’ I think I understand it more. I think I want the deal to happen. Because I think it’s long-term what’s best for the PGA Tour. I don’t think it’s as much of a merger, I don’t think we’re going to be controlled by LIV. In fact, that’s one of the principal elements that the Board is going to ensure if we go forward, that there will be protections in the agreement that PIF can never be anything more than a minority investor in what we do. With those safeguards in place, I think, yes, I want to see a good deal done for the PGA Tour and its members.”

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Here are 10 more questions that Malnati answered:

Peter Malnati wants the world to know the PGA Tour’s new designated event model is good for the future

“Is it perfect? No, but I think it’s where we need to go.”

ORLANDO – Not long after the PGA Tour board of directors finished a meeting at Bay Hill Club and Lodge on Tuesday night that lasted more than seven hours and transformed the Tour for years to come, Peter Malnati sat down and poured out his feelings in a journal entry.

“I had to get that stuff out of my head,” he said. “I just couldn’t believe how much I had transformed my view on what we were doing.”

Until recently, Malnati, who is one of five player directors on the Tour board, had been adamantly opposed to the concept of instituting eight designated events with no cuts and reduced fields for the best players, which would mean fewer playing opportunities for the rank and file, or as some like to say, the Peter Malnatis of the world.

Malnati knew his 180-flip would also shock many of his brethren so he sent what he wrote to several of his fellow players.

On Friday, he sent a copy to Golfweek and said, “Just print that, print it for me, let the world see that. Because I think everyone thinks that we’re screwing up and I really actually don’t think we are.”

So, here’s Malnati’s journal entry:

After Golfweek had a chance to read his thoughts, Malnati expounded on several of the key decisions and what went into them. (He did podcasts with Fire Pit Collective and No Laying Up that are worth listening to as well.)

“It was the only way to protect the little guys,” he said of supporting the Tour’s vision for the future. “If I fought for 120-man fields, we’re going to end up with eight $20 million events on Tour and however many, you know, 26 $2 million events on Tour; it just wasn’t good. When I saw the numbers, you couldn’t ignore it.

“Like, you couldn’t ignore what the (regular event) fields were going to look like if designated events had 120. Again, we don’t even need to have that good of an imagination. All we need to do is look at Honda this year and see it obviously got screwed with the schedule.”

What has been the initial reaction to Malnati’s journal entry?

“Probably similar to what you might see on Twitter. But it’s amazing how quickly like I got guys that I really thought would firmly hate this and be like, ‘Oh, I get it, it’s actually going to be OK. I thought there were going to be more designated events,’ ” Malnati said. “This is hard to digest because it’s a big departure. And it seems on the surface, like it’s only good for the big guys. And I just think having given it a week to sink in, this helps not just the big guys, this is going to make this Tour stronger from top to bottom. I know people aren’t going to believe that at first, but it took a lot to change my mind.”

Malnati conceded that there might be a different vibe among the rank-and-file competing this week for a purse of $3 million in Puerto Rico at the Tour’s opposite-field event.

“I bet guys there might be a little bit more freaking out because just on the surface of it, you know, taking events that we’ve always played at 120 or bigger – like Travelers – and making them 70, mid 70s-ish fields, on the surface, it can only be taking playing opportunities away, but I think having been exposed now to the data and seeing what playing these eight events as small fields, what that does to the rest of the events on Tour, the events that have been the bread and butter for the middle third and bottom thirds of the membership, it strengthens and allows them to thrive,” he said.

“I want more of the members to be able to play $20 million purses, like that’s the whole point of the PGA Tour to provide opportunities for the membership to earn the financial rewards of playing out here. So I’m like, that’s our mission. Why are we even going to tell 50 guys, you don’t get to play in these $20 million purse events? But it became really clear to me because if we make those events 120-man fields they become the only events that have a chance to grow on Tour.”

Malnati said he argued for there to be some cut at the designated events, but that got shut down.

“I hate no cut,” he said. “I actually even brought it up in the meeting, I said, ‘You’ve sold me on small fields. What if we did small field but cut to 40 and ties or something? Could we do that? And they said that they think it’s hard enough – that that distinguishes them enough from what LIV’s doing, the fact that LIV hand-selected guys and set them in the field.

“The answer from some of the independent directors and the Tour staff is that these events are going to be really difficult to qualify for. So, if you qualify for these events, you have in essence, earned the paycheck you’ll get for last place.”

Malnati noted that the approved changes also created a pathway for players in the regular events to get promoted to the tournaments with the strongest fields and largest purses.

“It’s pretty likely Rory (McIlroy) and Jon Rahm and Justin Thomas are going to be the guys that will end up in the top 50. But it’s not given to them, like, that’s still something they have to earn. There’s really isn’t a handout here. They’re going to be hard to get in. In my nine-year career, I don’t know if I would have ever qualified into one of these events. But if you’re playing well, you always will have access. None are ever closed.

“Is it perfect? No, but I think it’s where we need to go.”

Malnati recalls listening to Monahan’s TV interview with Jim Nantz during the RBC Canadian Open when the Commissioner said the difference between the PGA Tour and LIV Golf League is the Tour is the place for true and pure competition.

“It’s only through true and pure competition that you can identify the top players in the world,” Monahan said.

“It was a hard hurdle for me to get over this idea that a small field with no cut can be true and pure competition,” Malnati said. “But I really appreciate and value the fact that these events are going to be hard to get into, you’re going to either have played super-consistent golf for an entire season in the prior year, or you’ve got to be really, really hot right now. And you’ve got to either have won this season, or played this last little stretch of events really, really well to get into the designated men.”

Of all the reasons that swayed Malnati, none was more convincing than the data that the PGA Tour staff provided that showed there will be more churn among the top 50 than he expected.

“I’ve learned over the years that my guts good on the golf course, but it’s bad when it comes to analytical stuff like this,” he said. “Like my gut would have told me, if you give the top 50 eight events, no cut, slightly increased FedEx Cup points, you know, 42 of them are going to stay in the top 50. In a thousand simulated seasons, the average retention of the top 50 was 64 percent. My gut tells me it’s going to be more than that. But I gotta trust those numbers, that the Tour is not manipulating any of these numbers that they showed us. I mean, they ran it on their software and said in a thousand seasons that the least churn would be 14 guys out and 14 in and the most churn to be 22. Like it’s good, that’s good. Like it’s really good. I wouldn’t have thought that; it seems kind of hard to believe.”

And that’s why he did a 180 and helped make the vote in favor of the Tour’s plan unanimous and the reason that the former University of Missouri journalism major was compelled to jot his thoughts down.

“Because I really didn’t think there was any way I would vote for it,” he said. “They needed two of us to oppose this idea in order for this idea to go back to the drawing board and be discussed more. And I was certain that they had one in me that was going to oppose it.

“And then you just sit there and you look at this data and you think about the events on Tour that you love – John Deere and Valspar and Sanderson Farms – to see how playing the designated events with full fields would decimate the field for an event like John Deere was incredibly powerful.

“Anyone that had voted against it would have been the only one who voted against it, so it wouldn’t have made any difference. But I would have been not serving the people that I promised to serve if I had tried to vote this down. This is going to help keep the events that the middle and bottom third of the PGA Tour play the vast majority of their playing opportunities. It would have made them weaker and going forward with this model is going to make those events stronger. It really is.”

Malnati finished his missive with this profound declaration: “Last week I was scared, today I couldn’t be more optimistic about the PGA Tour for our sponsors, fans, media, partners, and, most importantly, every single member.”

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