PGA Tour rejects Raytheon Byron Nelson sponsorship due to Saudi missile deals

Golfweek has learned that AT&T has asked out of its sponsorship of the AT&T Byron Nelson after this year.

The title sponsorship carousel continues on the PGA Tour.

On Wednesday, the Tour announced a new event in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, that will debut in July 2024 as an opposite-field event, but more change is coming.

Golfweek has learned that AT&T has asked out of its sponsorship of the AT&T Byron Nelson after this year.

A search for a replacement is well underway to assume the title of the Tour’s long-running Dallas event, which is being played this week at TPC Craig Ranch in the suburb of McKinney, Texas. According to multiple sources, the Tour had Raytheon Technologies, one of the largest aerospace and defense manufacturers in the world, ready to sign on the dotted line but Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan nixed the deal at the last minute because the company sells missiles to Saudi Arabia.

In August, the U.S. State Department approved weapon sales to Saudi Arabia, who were expected to buy 300 Raytheon Technologies-made MIM-104E Patriot missiles for more than $3 billion.

Much of the public outrage over the launch of LIV Golf, the upstart league which has signed several prominent Tour pros and is playing 14 events this year many of them in the U.S., has been that it is almost exclusively funded by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund. The wealth fund, organized in 1971 as a means for the Saudi Arabian government to invest in various projects and companies, has been estimated to be worth over $650 billion.

The Saudi involvement had led to accusations of “sportswashing,” a term used to describe the use of games and athletes to cleanse an image and launder the reputation of a country while cloaking repression and authoritarian rule. For the Tour to knowingly jump into bed with Raytheon given their business dealings with the Saudis would have left the Tour open to a public relations hit.

A general view of the 18th green during the second round of the AT&T Byron Nelson golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: Raymond Carlin III-USA TODAY Sports

“The optics were not good,” said one tournament director who spoke on the condition of anonymity. “I give Jay credit for stepping in and making the right call.”

When asked last week at the Wells Fargo Championship in Charlotte to comment on his role in the title sponsorship search and squashing a deal, Monahan said that the Tour doesn’t comment on potential sponsors.

“That would be a no comment,” he said.

A call to AT&T Byron Nelson tournament director Jon Drago was not returned.

AT&T has been a major backer of golf in the U.S., currently sponsoring the Pebble Beach Pro-Am, the Masters and Jordan Spieth. AT&T became the Nelson’s title sponsor in 2015, replacing printer-maker HP, at which time it gave up its title sponsorship of the AT&T National at Congressional. Randall Stephenson was AT&T chairman and CEO at the time and also an independent director on the Tour’s policy board, but Stephenson stepped down with the company in 2021.

If a new sponsor comes on board for next year, it will mark the tournament’s sixth title since 2000 to share the marquee with Nelson, a member of the World Golf Hall of Fame and local legend.

Since 1968, the tournament, which is operated by the Salesmanship Club, has raised $172.5 million for Momentous Institute, making it the most financially successful charity on the Tour.

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PGA Tour adds new event, the Myrtle Beach Classic, to its 2024 schedule

The host site of the Myrtle Beach Classic features one of the most extreme doglegs in tournament golf.

The PGA Tour announced Wednesday it will in 2024 launch a new full-field tournament, the Myrtle Beach Classic in South Carolina. An opposite-field event to be played the same week as one of the Tour’s designated events, the new tournament will be played at the Dunes Beach and Golf Club.

Visit Myrtle Beach will sponsor the new event and offer a purse of $3.9 million with 300 FedEx Cup points going to the winner. A four-year agreement was announced, but the dates of the event were not. The full 2024 Tour schedule is yet to be determined.

“We are thrilled to announce the debut of the Myrtle Beach Classic, an exciting new playing opportunity for our members in one of our country’s most recognized and visited destinations,” PGA Tour President Tyler Dennis said in a media release announcing the news. “With its incredible passion for golf, the Myrtle Beach community is a natural fit to bring this tournament to life. We look forward to partnering with Visit Myrtle Beach for a first-class tournament at a championship venue in Dunes Golf and Beach Club.”

The course at Dunes Golf and Beach Club was designed by Robert Trent Jones Sr., and nine holes (the back nine) opened in 1949. It was renovated by Jones’ son, Rees Jones, in 2013. It is ranked by Golfweek’s Best as the No. 4 public-access layout in the state, and it comes in at No. 143 on Golfweek’s Best list of all classic courses in the U.S. The course is best known for its brilliant, often elevated and tilted greens, many of which feature brisk runoffs in multiple directions, confounding players on approach shots.

The layout also features one of the most extreme examples of a dogleg in golf. The par-5 13th boomerangs around a lake, almost turning back on itself as it juts to the right. Jones Sr. called it one of his best examples of “heroic architecture,” and it will be interesting to see how Tour pros tackle the hole.

The club hosted the PGA Tour Champions’ season-ending Charles Schwab Cup Championship from 1994 to 1999, and it was the site of PGA Tour Q-School Finals in 1973, with Ben Crenshaw taking the medalist spot. Among other top-tier events and national championships, it also hosted the 1962 U.S. Women’s Open, won by Murle Lindstrom.

The Tour noted that the Myrtle Beach Classic will be one of its two stops in the Palmetto State in 2024, along with the RBC Heritage at Harbour Town Golf Links, an event that made its debut in 1969.

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Dell Technologies Match Play officially off 2024 PGA Tour schedule; no match play events slated

The Dell Technologies Match Play is dead, at least for the foreseeable future.

AUSTIN, Texas — It’s official. The Dell Technologies Match Play is dead, at least for the foreseeable future.

Jordan Uppleger, vice president and executive director of PGA Tour championship management, made the announcement to the media on Monday at Austin Country Club.

“We’re formally announcing today that the 2023 World Golf Championship Dell Technologies Match Play will be the final playing of the event here at Austin Country Club, and not be included on the 2024 calendar or moving forward,” Uppleger said.

“The event has had an incredible run here at Austin Country Club.”

MORE: Now’s the time for a match-play major open championship for men and women

“I was told you had to have three main components to have a successful event, you had to have an active title sponsor, an engaging country club and a supporting community and client base,” he added. “And there is no doubt that this event has exceeded all of those expectations as we’ve been here since 2016.”

As part of the announcement, Uppleger added that no match-play event will be included on next year’s PGA Tour schedule.

In February, Golfweek reported that the event would be shuttered after this year’s playing. Its spot in the 2024 schedule, which is typically in late March on the back end of the Florida Swing, is expected to be filled by the Cadence Bank Houston Open, unless it prefers a date in the late April/early May timeframe instead as part of a shuffling of events.

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On Monday, Uppleger said the Tour would look to Austin again if the situation was right in the future. During the tournament’s seven-year run, the WGC event has been one of the hottest tickets on Tour, and with the picturesque Pennybacker Bridge framing the Colorado River, the setting at Austin Country Club has become among the circuit’s most indelible.

ACC has hosted the Match Play since 2016 when Dell became the title sponsor. At the time, the World Golf Championships were considered the highest-ranking tournaments in golf behind the four majors and the Players Championship, the Tour’s flagship event.

“I think you’ve seen this throughout our history. Look at the markets we’ve been in, and we’ve had to exit markets for certain reasons,” Uppleger said. “And obviously, we would look at Austin, Texas, in the future. It’s not on the ’24 calendar, but clearly look at the success that we’ve had here. There’s no doubt that our team would be looking at that.”

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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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Lynch: PGA Tour changes offer carrots for excellence, but why spare the stick for mediocrity?

Rock stars are driving the PGA Tour bus these days, and they want fewer seats for roadies.

Social media’s cesspool of consensus is invariably miles wide and a millimeter deep, so it’s unsurprising that changes to the PGA Tour’s structure announced on Tuesday were breezily compared to that of LIV Golf. It’s a correlation that extends only so far before it veers into lazy and specious.

Leave aside the fact that PGA Tour events aren’t backed by people in the habit of dismembering critics — a crucial point of differentiation, albeit often conveniently overlooked by LIV acolytes — and the contrasts far outnumber the similarities, which are limited to cuts of another kind and the awarding of vast riches.

Entry to the Tour’s new designated events is earned through accomplishment, not granted by dint of an invitation and wire transfer from Greg Norman. A poor season will see players bounced from the Tour’s elite tier, but some LIV competitors are contractually exempt from demotion, no matter how shoddy their showing. Whatever criticisms might be leveled at these designated events—they create a caste system among tournaments, they diminish the essential appeal of sport by having fewer Davids go up against the Goliaths, they won’t recycle under-performers out of the ecosystem quickly enough, they are tantamount to welfare for the already wealthy—the reality is that they’re still meritocratic. LIV’s structure is inherently autocratic.

The PGA Tour has always been hostage to its rank and file, with every commissioner handed a mandate that lacks ambition or discretion: provide playing opportunities for the membership. That dusty directive is a recipe for diluting a product, not driving a business. And it’s why the smaller field sizes announced for designated events in ’24 will rankle the lower orders who are convinced their opportunities are dwindling.

But sport is not a democratic endeavor; trophies, like winners’ checks, are not halved for fairness. The most radical shift we are witnessing on Tour is one of behind-the-scenes influence as the pendulum of power swings hard from peasants to princelings. Rock stars are driving the bus and they want fewer seats for roadies.

These structural changes are about providing guarantees to two constituencies. Until this year, the PGA Tour could not guarantee its product to sponsors, unable to vouch for who would show up to compete. With the elevated events in ’23, it can offer that guarantee, but only for two days. Removing the cut in ‘24 turns those two days into four. The other guarantee being delivered is to players. They want a bigger slice of the pie—with fewer also-rans nibbling at the edges—and to reduce the times when they’re not paid at all. So the cut gets cut.

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No-cut events are not a novelty concept—a healthy chunk of the record-breaking 142 tournaments in which Tiger Woods didn’t miss a cut didn’t actually have a cut to miss. The absence of a one-way ticket out of town for under-performers after 36 holes isn’t necessarily reductive to the integrity of a competition, but it reinforces a perception that right now the PGA Tour is too fond of the carrot and too afraid of the stick.

If fields at designated events are capped at 80, there’s no reason not to dispatch a couple dozen guys on Friday night. If the issue is paying players, send them home with a check. But world ranking and FedEx Cup points are another matter. Anyone who makes the weekend at the Arnold Palmer Invitational will earn both. The key qualifier is “earned,” as in not handed. Next year, when the API is a no-cut event, the same dispensation applies. Points will be awarded, regardless of performance.

In designated events, there ought to be a line below which players leave with just a check and not valuable points that can help them retain a spot in the upper-tier. Performance relative to the field must remain a metric for how a player is rewarded, even absent a cut. Lousy play should have consequences beyond the battered psyche of a luckless caddie and the amount of the Monday morning bank deposit.

Sources I’ve spoken to say the Official World Golf Ranking is reviewing how to handle smaller, no-cut events and whether points should to be taken from the bottom finishers and redistributed at the top. The PGA Tour can make a more immediate call on how it disburses FedEx Cup points in limited-field events. A player who can’t finish top 50 in an 80-man field should have no expectation of receiving points that might keep him in those fields.

We’ve seen an emphasis on rewarding fine play—bigger purses, more elite events, greater bonuses—but the Tour can’t lose sight of the other end of the performance spectrum: punishment for poor play. If that isn’t to be a cut, then consequences must come in another form.

Like the FedEx Cup, which has undergone more enhancements than the false fronts in the gallery at the Phoenix Open, this plan for designated events is sure to be adjusted in time. As a response to the now flaccid threat of LIV, it satisfies player demands for rewards. Fair enough, those are earned in elite sport. But so too are penalties, and fans should see a lot more of that.

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‘Welcome to the future’: LIV Golf takes credit for PGA Tour schedule changes

LIV Golf couldn’t help but comment on the PGA Tour’s plans for no-cut events.

On Wednesday morning, Golfweek was first to report the PGA Tour had approved radical changes to its schedule for 2024, including reduced fields for designated events without a 36-hole cut.

LIV Golf couldn’t help but comment, tweeting in response to the news: “Imitation is the greatest form of flattery. Congratulations PGA Tour. Welcome to the future.”

The upstart circuit led by Greg Norman and financially supported by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund features 48 player, 54-hole events without cuts and often boasts about its “innovative new golf format.” Wonder what the Premier Golf League’s Andy Gardiner has to say about that.

While the emergence of LIV Golf is a reason for the PGA Tour’s changes, stating the Tour is imitating LIV is a bit of a reach. World Golf Championship events didn’t have cuts, neither do current events on the schedule like the CJ Cup and Zozo Championship.

But why let the truth get in the way of a good tweet?

“The only reason no-cut events are a big deal is because LIV has come along,” said Rory McIlroy ahead of this week’s Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill. “So there is precedent for no-cut events. There’s been no-cut events since I’ve been a member of the Tour and way beyond that as well.

“So, yeah, is there maybe going to be a few more of them? Maybe. That’s still TBD by the way. That’s not been decided yet. But if we do go down that path there’s precedent there to argue for no-cut events.”

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PGA Tour approves radical schedule changes, reducing fields in elevated events and ending cuts

The PGA Tour board on Tuesday night ratified a radical new approach for the 2024 schedule, Golfweek has confirmed.

The PGA Tour board on Tuesday night ratified a radical new approach for the 2024 schedule that will see reduced fields in the new designated events and the removal of the 36-hole cut.

Fields in designated events will be reduced to between 70 and 78 players with no halfway cut. The changes will not apply to all of the elevated events— the majors, the Players Championship and the FedEx Cup playoff tournaments will be unaffected.

Two sources familiar with the details confirmed the changes to Golfweek.

Designated events were launched this year in an effort to guarantee the presence of the game’s top stars and to ensure they are paid more, with minimum purses of $20 million in each event. Due to the haste with which the designated events came about — a direct response to the threat posed by LIV Golf — no changes were made to field sizes for 2023. That won’t apply when the Tour returns to a calendar-year schedule in 2024.

Reducing field sizes is sure to cause concern among rank-and-file members who will see it as the denial of playing opportunities. However, one top player who spoke on condition of anonymity says the plan will have opportunities for members to play their way into designated stops and will not create a closed ecosystem for elite stars.

“We want top players and hot players,” the source said.

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Fields at designated events will be comprised of the top 50 players who qualify for the BMW Championship during the previous season’s FedEx Cup playoffs, plus the top 10 players not otherwise eligible on the current FedEx Cup points race. There will also be five places earned through performance in non-designated events.

For example, the goal is to have a cadence to the calendar that would see two designated events followed by three non-designated tournaments, then another two designated. The top five point-earners from the three non-designated stops would earn their way into the next designated events. Any player who wins on Tour would automatically be eligible for every designated event that season.

Other qualification criteria will include consideration of the Official World Golf Ranking, most likely with a focus on the top 30. That is intended to accommodate a top player who may be returning from injury and otherwise ineligible for designated events. Sponsor exemptions will also remain in use, though with more defined parameters on who is eligible to receive one. Such exemptions are a controversial feature of designated events, but that free pass also represents the most obvious way to ensure Tiger Woods can play any event he wishes to.

Tour executives ran multiple data simulations of how a season would play out to ensure sufficient churn in the system. Proposals from top players at their meeting in Delaware last summer called for smaller fields and no cuts, but their criteria would have seen 80 percent of players remain in the elevated events from season to season. The structure ratified by the board projects that only 60 percent of those eligible for designated events would remain so for the following season.

A PGA Tour spokesperson declined to confirm any details of the plan to Golfweek. A memo explaining the changes will be sent to Tour members later Wednesday.

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PGA Tour’s World Wide Technology Championship finds new venue south of the border

“Build a bridge?” a PGA Tour tournament director said. “More like they burned a bridge,” on chances of a return to Mayakoba Resort

The World Wide Technology Championship will continue to be played South of the Border.

Golfweek has learned that the tournament, which has been a staple of the PGA Tour’s fall schedule for more than a decade, is maintaining its Mexican roots and moving to Cabo.

Multiple sources say that the move is expected to be approved at the Tour’s board meeting to be held in Orlando on Monday ahead of the Arnold Palmer Invitational. A source says the tournament will be played at Diamante’s El Cardonal, the first course designed by Tiger Woods, which overlooks the Pacific Ocean and is a top attraction at the Cabo San Lucas timeshare community at the tip of the Baja Peninsula.

It’s unclear how much of a role Woods, who serves as tournament host at the Genesis Invitational and Hero World Challenge, will have at the WWTC event.

The World Wide Technologies Championship previously had been played at El Camaleon Golf Club south of Cancun in Mexico’s Riviera Maya. But after 16 years of staging a PGA Tour event, the course jumped ship for LIV Golf, and is hosting the inaugural event of the upstart league’s second season this week.

On Thursday, Borja Escalada, the CEO of RLH Properties which owns the Mayakoba resort, said that he would like to host events with both circuits and help “build a bridge” between the two warring factions. But as one Tour tournament director said, that is unlikely. “Build a bridge?” a PGA Tour tournament director said. “More like they burned a bridge with the PGA Tour, who won’t be back.”

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Jordan Spieth explains the challenges of perfecting his schedule with new designated events

Jordan Spieth has a decision to make.

Jordan Spieth has a decision to make.

The PGA Tour’s renewed schedule has 17 designated events, including the Players Championship, the four majors and three FedEx Cup playoff events, with higher purses and requiring top players to play. However, players are able to skip one of those events, like Rory McIlroy did last week at the Sentry Tournament of Champions.

So, how does a player go about figuring out the proper schedule? Spieth is feeling his way through the new era of designated events, and there are plenty of reasons why a particular player may skip a certain event. Spieth has essentially narrowed his choice down to either the Wells Fargo Championship at Quail Hollow Club, site of the 2022 Presidents Cup, or the Travelers Championship at TPC River Highlands.

“It would be an easy decision if it weren’t for the Presidents Cup last year,” Spieth said, speaking of his 5-0-0 record in Charlotte.

Looking at the schedule, Spieth said he’s going to play four straight events from the second week of May at the AT&T Byron Nelson through the Memorial Tournament, Jack Nicklaus’ event in Ohio. In between is the PGA Championship at Oak Hill and the Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial Country Club, one of Spieth’s favorite courses.

If Spieth were to play the Wells Fargo, it would be the week before the Byron Nelson, which means he would play five consecutive weeks for the first time in his career.

“I’ve always wanted to play Quail Hollow, and it just always would be five in a row,” Spieth said.

Meanwhile, if Spieth were to choose the Travelers Championship, it would mean six tournaments in seven weeks, concluding in Connecticut. The week before? The U.S. Open in Los Angeles, meaning a cross-country trip to conclude arguably the busiest stretch of the season.

“I don’t know yet, but looks like it’s another Quail Hollow or Travelers for me, which I like both,” Spieth said. “That’s tough. But I don’t think I could skip Jack’s event.”

However, Spieth and his family will be traveling luxuriously between all of his events this year.

He was asked during his pre-tournament press conference Tuesday at the 2023 Sony Open whether it was a struggle finding a place to stay in Scottsdale during the WM Phoenix Open, the next designated event in February. The Super Bowl is scheduled for Sunday in Glendale, a neighboring suburb.

Spieth and family didn’t have issues with housing because they have one on wheels.

“We’re doing the RV life,” Spieth said. “Yeah, bought a bus last fall, so we’ll be in that every week.”

Spieth comes in as one of the favorites at Waialae Country Club this week. He missed the cut in his last start in 2019, but he also finished third in 2017.

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Sources: Houston Open making power play for spring date on 2024 PGA Tour schedule

Golfweek has learned from multiple sources that the Houston stop is eyeing a return to the main schedule.

KAPALUA, Hawaii – The 2023 portion of the 2022-23 season is just kicking off and already the talk has shifted to 2024 and beyond.

Changes are coming and one tournament angling for a different future is the Cadence Bank Houston Open.

Earlier this week, Golf Channel reported that the Houston stop, which dates to 1946 and has been played in October since 2019, wasn’t listed as one of the fall events in 2023. Golfweek has learned from multiple sources that the Houston stop is eyeing a return to the main schedule. While it is too soon to know for sure, Houston could take over the date currently occupied by the Mexico Open which in 2023 is set for late April.

But according to Golfweek sources, who spoke under the condition of anonymity, Houston wasn’t listed on the preliminary fall schedule that has been shown to players because tournament organizers don’t want to hold two events within a span of what could be five months, should it join the main schedule.

When asked Sunday at the Sentry Tournament of Champions specifically about Houston’s place on the fall schedule in 2023, PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan said, “The reality is there are a lot of moving parts to the fall schedule and we haven’t finalized the schedule yet.”

Monahan noted that the fall schedule should be announced by the Players Championship in March.

In the meantime, there is plenty of back-room negotiations going on. Jim Crane, who is the owner of the MLB champion Houston Astros, also is believed to be leveraging the emergence of LIV Golf as a potential suitor for a Houston event if Crane doesn’t get the spring PGA Tour date he desires.

Crane is an investor in Escalante Golf, which staged two LIV Golf events in the upstart circuit’s inaugural year – Pumpkin Ridge Golf Club in Oregon and The International in Massachusetts – and is expected to host a third LIV event this season at The Gallery Golf Club in Marana, Arizona. An Escalante Golf representative said the company doesn’t disclose information on its investors.

“He’s not a conscientious observer,” one source said of Crane’s feelings about the Saudi Arabian PIF Fund being the chief underwriter of the upstart league.

Crane, along with Giles Kibbe, senior vice president and general counsel for the Astros and president of the Astros Golf Foundation, played in the pro-am at LIV’s Boston event, the city where Monahan cut his teeth as tournament director of the now-defunct Deutsche Bank Championship.

“When he goes out to play in a pro-am in Boston, he’s sending a message. He doesn’t even play Pebble anymore,” a source said of Crane.

Houston is one of the largest markets in the U.S., and the Tour certainly doesn’t want to lose it. Despite the Houston Open being successful going up against football and on the heels of a steady stream of baseball playoff games in recent years, Crane reportedly is no longer willing to support a golf tournament in the fall.

The Mexico event joined as a limited field World Golf Championship in 2017 and was downgraded to a regular PGA Tour tournament this year as a full-field event. That required a move of the course from Mexico City’s Chapultepec to Puerto Vallarta and Vidanta Vallarta. With Mexico’s best players joining LIV, there has been speculation that the Mexico tournament could pull the plug after this year.

Playing in a LIV pro-am isn’t the only power-play move Crane has made to get the date he wants or potentially take his ball and go home. He also owns the Floridian Golf Club in Palm City, Florida, and Dustin Johnson and Brooks Koepka, who both jumped ship to LIV last year, are among its members. According to a source, Johnson approached Crane about having a LIV tournament at The Floridian with Johnson’s name on it but Crane turned it down.

“If he didn’t get the date he wanted (from the PGA Tour), he might not have said no,” a source said.

Efforts to reach Cadence Bank tournament director Colby Callaway weren’t successful.

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