James Hahn is mad as hell about the changes coming to the PGA Tour and he isn’t afraid to tell you why

“They’re just covering their ass and saying everything that the PGA Tour basically has trained them to say”

James Hahn is mad. Like the TV newscaster in the classic movie “Network,” Hahn is mad as hell except he’s mad as hell about the changes coming to the PGA Tour in 2024.

“I mean, I hate them,” Hahn said during a phone interview with Golfweek that interrupted his gym workout. “I’m gonna say exactly what 99.99 percent of fans said about players leaving for the LIV Tour. If our players just said, ‘We’re doing this for the money,’ I would have a lot more respect for them. But how they’re covering up what they’re doing and trying to make it a thing about sponsors and fans and saving opposite-field events. I think that’s all BS.

“All the big names that are talking about this ‘new product,’ if you just came out and said, ‘Hey, we’re doing this for the money,’ they want more guaranteed money and this is another way to funnel more money to the top players in the world, I’d have a lot more respect for them.

“Right now, they’re just covering their ass and saying everything that the PGA Tour basically has trained them to say, have taught them to say and try to make it not about money when everyone knows 100 percent it’s about more guaranteed money being funneled to the top players in the world. We’ve been talking about money for the last two years and for them not to say that that’s not the No. 1 reason why they’re making these changes —it’s very, very hypocritical.”

Hahn, a 41-year-old two-time Tour winner, was just getting warmed up. His fellow Cal alum Max Homa on Wednesday during his pre-tournament press conference said he might go on a rant about the changes and then did for more than 4 minutes. Hahn had a lot on his mind and spoke for more than 45 minutes on Thursday, touching on a wide array of topics. So, let’s get after it.

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What you missed from a busy Sunday at the 2023 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

Who’s ready for a Monday finish?

Who’s ready for a Monday finish?

Gusting wind and rain on Saturday at the 2023 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am forced tournament officials to call play early, pushing the PGA Tour’s annual stop on the Monterey Peninsula to a Monday finish, the first at Pebble Beach since 2019.

After the third-round action finished early Sunday afternoon, the final round began at 3:20 p.m. ET. Each player completed the front nine, and of the 75 players to make the cut, 16 completed their round.

If you weren’t watching, here’s what you missed from Sunday and what you need to know for the Monday finish at Pebble Beach.

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Wind wreaks havoc as Viktor Hovland chases: Here’s what you missed Saturday at the suspended AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

Can the low amateur at the 2019 U.S. Open catch Peter Malnati?

Viktor Hovland, aside from the No. 10 Matt Fitzpatrick, is the highest-ranked player (11th) on the Monterey Peninsula this week for the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

And it looks like he’s going to be part of the conversation when it’s crunch time.

Hovland, who won the 2018 U.S. Amateur at Pebble Beach and claimed low amateur at the 2019 U.S. Open, opened the event with a 2-under 70 at Spyglass Hill before firing a 4-under 67 at Monterey Peninsula Country Club.

Due to the weather, Hovland’s day was done Saturday after making the turn with a 2-under 34 at Pebble Beach.

He’s four back of the lead, tied for sixth.

The man he’s chasing is Peter Malnati, a player whose one and only win on Tour came all the way back in 2016 at the Sanderson Farms. Before a solid week at the Farmers Insurance Open (T-20), Malnati had missed five cuts in seven events this season, including four straight.

The 35-year-old, like Hovland, played Pebble on Saturday and had himself a round (or, at least, part of one). Starting on No. 10, Malnati birdied Nos. 11-13 and turned with a 3-under 33. He then birdied Nos. 1-3 and was 18 feet away from another birdie on No. 4 when the horn blew.

Sandwiched in between Malnati and Hovland (T-6) are Joseph Bramlett and Keith Mitchell at 10 under, and Hank Lebioda and Kurt Kitayama at 9 under.

If you missed Saturday’s half day of action, no worries, we have you covered. Find a recap of day three at Pebble below.

What will the PGA Tour’s fall events look like in 2023? No one seems to know

“We’re picking from the bottom of the barrel. It doesn’t actually make our product better. It makes it worse.”

NAPA, Calif. – Thanks to Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy (and Greg Norman and Phil Mickelson to some extent), change is coming to the PGA Tour.

While the best players have agreed to play against one another in a minimum of 20 events between January and August starting in 2024, the Tour’s nine official fall events are about to receive a demotion, beginning in 2023.

The top 70 in the FedEx Cup regular season points race will qualify for the playoffs and retain their cards for the next season. Numbers 71-125? They will have to duke it out during the fall to retain their playing privileges in what will essentially become eligibility events. Without FedEx Cup points at stake or any punishment for not playing during the fall, the top players have been given the option of an extended vacation from September through December. It’s the off-season some of them have long been asking for, but PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan and his business development team have their work cut out explaining to title sponsors why fields will be watered down.

“The Tour knows this isn’t awesome for the sponsors of the fall events to tell them that the guys who finish top 70 don’t have to play your events and probably won’t,” said Tour veteran Peter Malnati, co-chairmen of the Player Advisory Council. “They say they are going to make them stronger and I’m just taking them at their word for now.”

Malnati said he spoke to Monahan at the RBC Heritage.

“He looked me right in the eyes and said these events are going to be stronger,” Malnati said.

Fall events have always been the red-headed stepchildren, airing exclusively on Golf Channel during a time of year when college football and the NFL rule the roost. That’s baked into the sponsorship price. But current sponsors, such as Fortinet, which this week drew five of the top 30 that made it to the Tour Championship including Hideki Matsuyama, have to be wondering whether that will ever happen again. What is the future of the fall events?

“I had that same question myself,” said Stewart Cink, a former PGA Tour policy board member. “It’s hard for them to thrive if they’re not getting top players. We’ve been down this road before. There’s a reason we went to the wrap-around schedule.”

A veteran Tour pro, who asked for anonymity, didn’t mince words, saying that the fall events are going to become a glorified Korn Ferry Tour Finals.

“The Tour’s top question to us is always would you rather not have an event? It’s a pretty fair question now because it might not be a good idea to have an event,” he said. “Some events are going to go so far down the (player priority) list that it’s going to be embarrassing. We’re picking from the bottom of the barrel. It doesn’t actually make our product better. It makes it worse.”

Webb Simpson, the other co-chairmen of the PAC, also expressed concern that the number of fall events could be impacted.

“I don’t know how far the Tour is going to go with the plan that Tiger and Rory proposed. I just don’t know. I hope they don’t go away,” he said of the fall events. “I love the opportunities to play.”

How many of the nine fall events would he likely play next year if he were to finish in the top 70?

“Probably two or three,” he said. “I don’t want to take four months off after Atlanta, not everybody does. Playing two or three still feels like downtime.”

One tournament director, who asked for anonymity, said purses likely will flatline and expected more tournaments to follow the RBC and Zurich model of signing top-ranked players as ambassadors in which part of the deal will require tournament participation.

“What I don’t want to see is us lose title sponsors. If we start to lose titles in certain cities, LIV is going to go in behind them,” said the tournament director, noting LIV already laid down roots in Boston, Chicago and NY/NJ metropolitan area, cities where the Tour no longer has annual events.

Both the Fortinet Championship and Cadence Bank Houston Open are rumored to be angling to move into the main portion of the schedule, but there may not be room for them. Could a Tour event jump ship to LIV?

“God, I hope not, but it could happen,” said the tournament director. “Tournaments now have another option.”

As the final year of the wraparound season kicks off, it’s worth noting that the fall events have factored into determining the FedEx Cup champion: Of the last six Cup winners, four have won a tournament in the fall portion of the season before going on to win the season-long race. (Most recently, Rory McIlroy won the CJ Cup last fall.)

Agents and their players are still waiting to understand exactly how the fall series events will work.

“I don’t think it’s a lack of transparency, I don’t think they know what they’re doing,” said an agent of multiple players. “They’re making decisions by the seat of their pants. You could ask 10 people out here from players to reps to agents what’s happening in the fall, and you’d get seven different answers. That’s not good.”

“I honestly don’t know,” said Kevin Streelman, a Tour board member from 2017-19 and who was added to the Player Advisory Council for the remained of the year in an August vote to replace a player that went to LIV Golf. “The storyline will be the top 125, but we’re going to have to do something to incentivize the top players to show up.”

Malnati is trusting that Monahan will be good to his word and that the fall events will find a way to be stronger.

“Change is never easy. It always feels difficult. A lot of times it works and it’s great but right now it’s a wait and see for me,” he said.

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Max Homa highlights group of additions to 2022 PGA Tour Player Advisory Council

The PAC is increasing from 16 members to 17 for the rest of the year.

The PGA Tour Player Advisory Council is growing for the rest of the year.

On Monday the PGA Tour announced the additions of Max Homa, Brandt Snedeker, Keith Mitchell and Kevin Streelman to the Player Advisory Council (PAC) for the remainder of 2022. Homa and Snedeker will take the vacated places held previously by Brooks Koepka and Graeme McDowell, who joined the LIV Golf Invitational Series. Mitchell and Streelman tied in a separate election to fill the space vacated by Paul Casey, who also joined LIV Golf, and both players have been added to the PAC, which increased from 16 to 17 members.

Streelman served as PAC co-chairman in 2016 and then served a three-year term as a Player Director on the Policy Board from 2017-19. Homa, Snedeker and Mitchell will be PAC members for the first time.

Peter Malnati and Webb Simpson will start their three-year terms as Player Directors on the PGA Tour Policy Board next year, replacing James Hahn and Kevin Kisner. Last season’s PGA Tour Player of the Year Patrick Cantlay will also join the board in the 2023.

The PAC advises and consults with the PGA Tour Policy Board and commissioner Jay Monahan on issues affecting the Tour.

2022 Player Advisory Council

Patrick Cantlay (Player Director appointee 2023)
Austin Cook
Joel Dahmen
Harry Higgs
Max Homa
Billy Horschel
Russell Knox
Justin Lower
Peter Malnati (Co-Chairman)
Maverick McNealy
Keith Mitchell
Trey Mullinax
Jon Rahm
Webb Simpson (Co-Chairman)
Brandt Snedeker
Kevin Streelman
Will Zalatoris

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Webb Simpson, Peter Malnati named PGA Tour Player Advisory Council Co-Chairmen

The PAC has 16 members and works with the PGA Tour’s Policy Board and Commissioner Jay Monahan.

Webb Simpson and Peter Malnati were elected Co-Chairmen of the Player Advisory Council for the PGA Tour by Tour membership.

Voting ended Monday. The two will serve in these roles for the 2022 calendar year. They will then succeed Kevin Kisner and James Hahn as Player Directors on the Policy Board, serving three-year terms starting in 2023. They will join Charley Hoffman (2021-23) and Rory McIlroy (2022-24) on the Policy Board.

The PAC has 16 members and works with the PGA Tour’s Policy Board and Commissioner Jay Monahan on issues affecting the Tour.

PAC membership:

Patrick Cantlay

Paul Casey

Austin Cook

Joel Dahmen

Harry Higgs

Billy Horschel

Russell Knox

Brooks Koepka

Justin Lower

Peter Malnati

Graeme McDowell

Maverick McNealy

Trey Mullinax

Jon Rahm

Webb Simpson

Will Zalatoris

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PGA Tour announces 2022 Player Advisory Council

The PGA Tour has announced the 16 golfers who will make up the Player Advisory Council for 2022.

The PGA Tour has announced the 16 golfers who will make up the Player Advisory Council for 2022.

The PAC advises and consults with the PGA Tour Policy Board as well as PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan on issues affecting the Tour.

Rory McIlroy was elected Chairman of the PAC by the Tour’s membership in 2021. He succeeded Jordan Spieth and will serve a three-year term that will run through 2024.

Patrick Cantlay, Billy Horschel, Peter Malnati and Webb Simpson were selected by the Player Directors to run for PAC Co-Chairmen. The election process for that closes on February 14. The top two vote-getters will then replace James Hahn and Kevin Kisner as Player Directors on the PGA Tour Policy Board. They will serve three-year terms starting in 2023. Charley Hoffman is on the policy board through 2023.

2022 Player Advisory Council

  • Patrick Cantlay
  • Paul Casey
  • Austin Cook
  • Joel Dahmen
  • Harry Higgs
  • Billy Horschel
  • Russell Knox
  • Brooks Koepka
  • Justin Lower
  • Peter Malnati
  • Graeme McDowell
  • Maverick McNealy
  • Trey Mullinax
  • Jon Rahm
  • Webb Simpson
  • Will Zalatoris

One of the big issues the Player Advisory Council  recently acted on was the ban on green-reading books, which became official on January 1 and first went into effect at the Sentry Tournament of Champions.

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Why the Sanderson Farms Championship is more than just another PGA Tour event for past champ Peter Malnati

Malnati’s life changed when he arrived for the 2015 Sanderson Farms, both on and off the golf course.

JACKSON, Miss. — Peter Malnati was born in Indiana, grew up in east Tennessee, attended the University Missouri and now lives in Knoxville when he’s not living his dream on the PGA Tour.

So why does Mississippi’s capital city hold such a special place in his heart?

The 34-year-old’s life changed when he arrived for the 2015 Sanderson Farms Championship at Country Club of Jackson, both on and off the golf course. He earned his first win on Tour – a one-shot victory over William McGirt and David Toms in a Monday finish – made life-long new friends and tapped into his charitable side.

“I stayed with a family on the course and they have become my family, too, to my wife and I, now our little boy,” Malnati said on Tuesday ahead of the 2021 Sanderson Farms. “So it’s just feels like we’re among family when we are here.”

Sanderson Farms: Tee times | Power rankings | Odds

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His golf isn’t bad here, either. In addition to his 2015 win, Malnati finished runner-up – also by just one shot – to Sergio Garcia after a 9-under 63 in the final round. Comfort goes a long way on Tour, and the Bermuda fairways and rough have Malnati feeling right at home on, what he calls, some of the best greens not just on Tour, but in the world.

“I would say we are lucky on Tour, we play some of the best golf courses in the most pristine condition all the time, but the greens here are the best greens in the whole world, they’re just impeccable,” said Malnati. “They are flawless and they roll, they’re really fast and I think that’s something that has always benefited me.

“I’m a really good putter, I feel like, and if I get some putts going in early on these greens I just feel really confident and it’s just a really comfortable feeling to be on these greens.”

Malnati returns to Mississippi in good form following a T-25 last week at the Fortinet Championship, the first event of the new season, and he knows the importance of getting off to a hot start and how it can alleviate the pressure to perform to remain on Tour.

“But the other thing it does which is exciting is it opens up the events to which you have access,” explained Malnati. “So last year I got to play in the PGA Championship, which was really cool. I got to play in the invitational events that are hosted by the late Mr. Palmer and Mr. Nicklaus.

“That’s something that as a Tour player I dreamed of, just being on the PGA Tour, but you also dream of getting to play in those kind of events where, you think of the legacy of Mr. Palmer, and then obviously still getting to shake Mr. Nicklaus’s hand at the Memorial every year. So something like that is really cool.”

Even cooler is his work off the course, where Malnati was recently named an ambassador for Play Yellow and works with the Children’s of Mississippi and Children’s Miracle Networks Hospital.

It started in 2013 at the Nationwide Children’s Hospital Championship in Columbus, Ohio. Malnati was asked to do a junior clinic the week of the event with patients from Nationwide Children’s

“I was able to connect with the parents of one of the young girls who was there at that clinic and got to know them and their story and hear how the Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, had really honestly saved their daughter’s life. And just the incredible impact that that had on their family,”  Malnati said.

“To know that the golf tournament was supporting that hospital was really cool for me, it was like an eye-opening moment like, ‘Gosh, we really are, we’re doing some good.’ And not just playing golf for entertainment, like we’re actually doing some good.”

After his win in 2015, Malnati came back early in 2016 to do some media for the event and visited the children’s hospital.

“But since then we went to the hospital, I think for a couple years in a row we went and visited some of the patients and just saw how thankful they are for this tournament, how much this tournament really does give back to this community. And so, gosh, to be a part of something that is really making a meaningful impact through this game of golf that I love, gosh, it just means so much and it gives such depth to what we do out here every week.”

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Peter Malnati discusses holding Kids’ Classic at Fox Den

Peter Malnati discusses holding Kids’ Classic at Fox Den.

Knoxville resident and PGA Tour golfer Peter Malnati and his Kids’ Classic is taking place on Monday.

The Peter Malnati Kids’ Classic is being held at Fox Den Country Club in Knoxville.

Ahead of a 9 a.m. EDT start time on Monday, Malnati discussed holding the event with Vols Wire.

He mentioned First Tee director Shawn Mauer and others have been important in helping organize and being able to hold the Kids’ Classic for around 100 participants.

“This is the first year that my wife and I have been fortunate enough to be involved,” Malnati told Vols Wire. “My wife and I are pretty passionate about having more equal access to things like education. I think what golf does, obviously golf has been historically for the upper echelon, socioeconomically, and it has been a pretty exclusive sport. We have never wanted it to be that way.

“I was pretty lucky. I grew up in Dandridge and had access to a place called Dandridge Golf Course. It was very affordable, but still super nice, so I had a place where I could play golf. There are a lot of kids that will never have access to golf because it is too expensive and too exclusive, so the First Tee is just important to us.”

Photo by Dan Harralson, Vols Wire

Malnati resides in Knoxville and played collegiately at Missouri from 2007-10. He went to Missouri after attending Jefferson County High School in Dandridge, Tennessee.

Malnati joined the PGA Tour in 2014 and has one career victory, the 2016 Sanderson Farms Championship.

Photo by Dan Harralson, Vols Wire

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Peter Malnati discusses holding Kids’ Classic at Fox Den

Peter Malnati discusses holding Kids’ Classic at Fox Den.

Knoxville resident and PGA Tour golfer Peter Malnati and his Kids’ Classic is taking place on Monday.

The Peter Malnati Kids’ Classic is being held at Fox Den Country Club in Knoxville.

Ahead of a 9 a.m. EDT start time on Monday, Malnati discussed holding the event with Vols Wire.

He mentioned First Tee director Shawn Mauer and others have been important in helping organize and being able to hold the Kids’ Classic for around 100 participants.

“This is the first year that my wife and I have been fortunate enough to be involved,” Malnati told Vols Wire. “My wife and I are pretty passionate about having more equal access to things like education. I think what golf does, obviously golf has been historically for the upper echelon, socioeconomically, and it has been a pretty exclusive sport. We have never wanted it to be that way.

“I was pretty lucky. I grew up in Dandridge and had access to a place called Dandridge Golf Course. It was very affordable, but still super nice, so I had a place where I could play golf. There are a lot of kids that will never have access to golf because it is too expensive and too exclusive, so the First Tee is just important to us.”

Photo by Dan Harralson, Vols Wire

Malnati resides in Knoxville and played collegiately at Missouri from 2007-10. He went to Missouri after attending Jefferson County High School in Dandridge, Tennessee.

Malnati joined the PGA Tour in 2014 and has one career victory, the 2016 Sanderson Farms Championship.

Photo by Dan Harralson, Vols Wire

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