Rory McIlroy tops Tiger Woods in Player Impact Program standings as top 20 share $100 million in PGA Tour bonus money

“This is an absolute kick in the face to the rest of the PGA Tour players,” said one veteran pro.

Rory McIlroy may not have ended his major-less streak in 2023 but he did end Tiger Woods’s reign as the winner of the Player Impact Program.

In a memo sent to PGA Tour membership on Wednesday, McIlroy was revealed as driving the most engagement this season, banking $15 million out of a pot of $100 million distributed to the top 20 finishers.

The PIP was first introduced in 2020-21 and designed to reward members who – through objective measurement criteria – are shown to generate the most positive interest in the Tour. “The scoring model for the program is intended to be as objective as possible with the goal of quantifying the impact each player has on the PGA Tour,” Jason Gore, the Tour’s executive vice president and chief player officer, wrote in a memo.

Woods, who had won the PIP in the two previous years despite hardly playing at all, earned $12 million for finishing second and Jon Rahm, the winner of the Masters, finished third and made $9 million. Collin Morikawa, who had finished 11th in the previous two years, dropped to No. 14 but still made the same amount as No. 11 ($3 million). See the full list below.

Players will receive the first 75 percent of their money with their Sentry purse payment in January, and the remaining 25 percent will be distributed once a player completes his Player Impact Program Service Fulfillment, according to the memo.

For the 2022-23 season, MVP Index and Q-Score were removed and replaced by MARC General Population Awareness and MARC Golf Fan Awareness survey data in determining the rankings. The PIP was administered by and the results were certified by Grant Thornton.

The Tour announced in March that next year’s PIP will be reduced to $50 million, paid to the top 10 players, down from $100 million and 20 players, with the difference to be reallocated to the FedEx Cup bonus, Comcast Business Tour Top 10 and other player programs.

None of this sat well with Tour veteran Nate Lashley, who posted the memo on social media and wrote, “How many golf fans actually know what the PIP on the PGA Tour is? Would love to hear from golf/PGA fans if they think this $100 million was spent well? There’s 150-200 members of the PGA Tour and they just spent $100 million on 20 players. Seems a little ridiculous. Time for new leadership on the PGA Tour. This is an absolute kick in the face to the rest of the PGA Tour players.”

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2022-23 PIP standings and earnings

  1. Rory McIlroy — $15 million
  2. Tiger Woods — $12 million
  3. Jon Rahm — $9 million
  4. Jordan Spieth — $7.5 million
  5. Scottie Scheffler — $6 million
  6. Rickie Fowler — $5.5 million
  7. Viktor Hovland — $5 million
  8. Justin Thomas — $5 million
  9. Tommy Fleetwood — $5 million
  10. Max Homa — $5 million
  11. Xander Schauffele — $3 million
  12. Jason Day — $3 million
  13. Tony Finau — $3 million
  14. Collin Morikawa — $3 million
  15. Matt Fitzpatrick — $3 million
  16. Wyndham Clark — $2 million
  17. Cameron Young — $2 million
  18. Justin Rose — $2 million
  19. Patrick Cantlay — $2 million
  20. Brian Harman — $2 million

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Rory McIlroy to lose $3 million for skipping RBC Heritage, per report

It appears McIlroy’s decision to withdraw is going to cost him.

Rory McIlroy’s wallet will take a hit since he is not in Hilton Head Island, South Carolina, this week, according to a recent report.

He is set to lose $3 million of his Player Impact Program payout this year for skipping this week’s RBC Heritage, Sports Illustrated reported Thursday morning. McIlroy is being docked a fourth of his $12 million payout because he opted out of his second designated event of the season. He didn’t play in the first one, the Sentry Tournament of Champions in Hawaii, and all players are allowed one opt-out.

McIlroy withdrew from the RBC Heritage at Harbour Town Golf Links on Monday, coming on the heels of him missing the cut at the Masters last week.

He and Tiger Woods were two of the main figures who spurred the PGA Tour to change its scheduling and make designated events a focal point of the schedule. The changes were to try to get the top players together more often.

The RBC Heritage is the sixth designated event of the season, not including the Players or Masters. The PIP is a bonus pool, which was $100 million in 2022, based on numerous on- and off-course factors. Last year, Tiger Woods was in the top spots and pocketed $15 million. McIlroy was second and rewarded $12 million.

The PGA Tour said players would have to play in all designated events, with the ability to skip one, to receive full payouts.

Next year, the PIP will be reduced to $50 million paid to the top 10 players. That’s a reduction from $100 million to the top 20, and a return to the original amount from the PIP’s inaugural year. But that $50 million isn’t disappearing. Instead, the remaining funds will be distributed via the FedEx Cup Bonus Program and Comcast Business Tour top 10, which rewards the top finishers on the regular season points list.

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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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PGA Tour’s PIP money to get a hair cut in 2024, $50 million reallocated to performance rather than reputation

The Tour’s story noted that “further details will be shared with the membership in the coming weeks.”

Buried in the very last bullet of PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan’s memo to members on changes coming to the PGA Tour schedule is this news: The Resource Allocation Plan for 2024 has also been adjusted.

You know, the RAP?

In short, the PGA Tour’s Player Impact Program will be reduced to $50 million paid to the top 10 players. That’s a reduction from $100 million to the top 20, and a return to the original amount from the PIP’s inaugural year. But that $50 million isn’t disappearing. Instead, the remaining funds will be distributed via the FedEx Cup Bonus Program and Comcast Business Tour top 10, which rewards the top finishers on the regular season points list.

The Tour’s PIP is a way of rewarding players who generate the most positive interest in the Tour. In other words, this is how the Tour through “objective measurement criteria” pay Tiger Woods and Rickie Fowler and those who deserve the bulk of the credit for the eyeballs on the sport for their loyalty.

Woods has won each of the last two years, banking a combined $25 million despite hardly playing. While Woods likely will continue to be rewarded for what he’s done for the game, it turns out that more of the players would prefer to play for the money rather than have it be based on reputation. As Patrick Cantlay famously said at the 2021 Tour Championship, “I won’t take any of the PIP money. I think it’s kind of ridiculous.”

The Tour’s story on the changes noted that “further details will be shared with the membership in the coming weeks.”

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Will Tiger Woods be docked PIP money for missing designated events? PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan weighed in with the answer

“I think it’s hard for me to say what’s going to happen until it actually happens, OK?”

KAPALUA, Hawaii – Call it the Tiger Woods rule.

When PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan announced in August that the PGA Tour would institute 13 designated events with elevated purses between $15 million and $25 million this season, he pointed out that the top players would commit to play in them and would be allowed to skip only one of the events. It would be a requirement for top players to earn their bonus money in the Player Impact Program.

But what does that mean for two-time PIP champion Tiger Woods? Woods banked $15 million for ranking first in the PIP standings despite playing only nine official rounds last year. As he’s pointed out numerous times in the past few years, most recently at the Hero World Challenge and again at the PNC Championship in December, Woods is unlikely to play even a handful of the designated events. During a media roundtable on Sunday at the Sentry Tournament of Champions, Monahan was asked how Tiger’s limited schedule would impact his bonus money.

“Tiger isn’t going to get a decrease,” Monahan said. “I think it’s hard for me to say what’s going to happen until it actually happens, OK? But I don’t see that happening.”

Monahan’s response begged the question, what happens if other top players elect to skip more than one event? Given that Rory McIlroy passed on the first designated event here in Maui, a writer asked what happens if McIlroy skipped another event this year.

Again, I think when that happens you would go…” Monahan said before being interrupted.

“Do you have a policy outlined already?” someone blurted out.

“Guys are going to play the events. So that’s the policy,” Monahan responded. “I have discretion, OK? This is something we haven’t done before. So ultimately, if that happens, then that’s, going back to your earlier question, at the end of the day I’ll work with our team, I’ll understand the situation, and we’ll make a decision.”

In other words, the Tour is making up the rules as it goes along and all we know for sure is Tiger can play as much or as little as he wants and he won’t be docked a percentage of his bonus money. If anyone has a problem with that, take it up with the Commish.

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Which PGA Tour Player Impact Program recipients were searched the most in 2022?

With the year coming to a close, which of the PIP recipients were searched the most in 2022?

The purse for the PGA Tour’s Player Impact Program continues to swell, but as with everything, the added cash has brought added strings.

For example, at the Tour Championship, commissioner Jay Monahan explained that players would be eligible for their share of the $100 million in bonus money only if they played in the 13 elevated events plus three more of their choosing during the upcoming 2023 season.

Of course, a key component of the Tour’s PIP is engagement, or using social media to keep one’s name relevant.

That got us thinking, with the year coming to a close, which of the PIP recipients were searched the most in 2022?

Overlooking the possibility of a late push (these numbers are from Jan. 1 to Dec. 17), here’s the list of PIP recipients who fans Googled over the past 12 months.

What will the PGA Tour look like in 2023?

While the tournaments and courses are largely the same, the PGA Tour will have three big changes in the coming year.

Change is coming to the PGA Tour in 2023 – for better or worse.

The three biggest changes for the coming year will be the debut of elevated events, the end of the wrap-around season and a re-invented fall season that ends with a Q-School with PGA Tour cards on the line.

Let’s start with the elevated events, which is a direct response to the challenge put forth by LIV Golf. When the top players on the PGA Tour met at the BMW Championship in Wilmington in late August, they came to the conclusion that the best players need to play more often against each other. As a result, they agreed to commit to play in 13 elevated events in 2023 plus the four majors – they are allowed to miss only one if they want to receive their Player Impact Program bonus money.

The Tour always has had a tiered system, where certain tournaments were already elevated in the minds of the players and attracted better fields – due to larger purses or FedEx Cup points, limited fields/no cuts, better courses, prestige, etc. – but now it is more clear cut in black and white. The RBC Heritage knows it will have its best field – probably ever in 2023 – the Honda Classic? Not so much.

Having the best players committed to playing in the same events is pretty much the dream for Tour commish Jay Monahan, TV execs and tournament directors at the elevated events, who can now promote their presence. Fans will be delighted to see the best going at it more often. But on the flip side, the job just got much tougher for the tournament directors of non-elevated events and there could be some weeks that fields may be even more watered down than in the past.

The 2022-23 wrap-around season will end as usual with the FedEx Cup being handed out in late August at the Tour Championship. But instead of the top 125 qualifying for the first playoff event in Memphis, only the top-70 players on the Fed Ex Cup points list after the final regular-season event (the Wyndham Championship) will advance to the playoffs. That’s a significant change and will force players to play more if they are on the outside looking in. In previous years, 70 was the cutdown for the BMW, the second playoff event, but that one will be reduced to the top 50 in 2023. No change for East Lake: the top 30 from there move on to the Tour Championship in Atlanta.

It’s still unclear how the fall portion of the schedule will work, but there will be no FedEx Cup points for the new season. This should appease exempt players for the 2024 season and allow them to take time off or compete elsewhere such as the DP World Tour without fear of falling behind in the FedEx Cup race.

Those that don’t qualify for the playoffs will have to play in the fall – it’s still unclear how many events will constitute the fall schedule – and battle it out for position Nos. 71-125. Expect weaker fields but also great theater as players fight to regain playing privileges for the 2024 year, which will run from January through the Tour Championship in late August. Expect the Tour to lay out how this is going to work sometime in the first quarter of 2023.

The last change to look forward to is that starting in 2023, the top five finishers and ties at Q-school will now earn PGA Tour status for the following season. This marks the first time since 2012 that Q-school will provide a path directly to the big leagues. This should be attractive to top collegiate talent that turn pro and will provide another route to playing for Tour riches without spending time on the Korn Ferry Tour.

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Max Homa, as only he can, compares the LIV Golf rumors to finding out about a high school fight in math class

Homa counted himself among the “fortunate,” who didn’t get caught in the rumor mill.

NASSAU, Bahamas – Max Homa experienced pangs of guilt as he left his wife and newborn son, Cam, to compete in this week’s Hero World Challenge at Albany Club.

“Didn’t expect it to be this kind of difficult,” he said. “I feel guilty being in beautiful Bahamas while my wife’s grinding changing diapers, but here I am so might as well play well.”

Homa, who has ascended to No. 16 in the Official World Golf Ranking and won the Fortinet Championship to start the 2022-23 PGA Tour campaign, took time during his pre-tournament press conference to reflect on the year that was and compared the LIV-PGA Tour drama to being in high school all over again.

“Every week was kind of fun in a way, or funny. It got old, but every Monday, Tuesday was, ‘Did you hear so-and-so is going? Is that true? Did you hear this about this tournament? Is that true?’ It felt like you were in high school again in a way and you just got out to lunch and you got a text while you were in math that somebody got in a fight with somebody and now you’re going to go figure out what part of that was true, and rarely any of that was true, which is exactly how this season was for us. So, I think part of it is just like enjoying the little noise.”

HERO: Tee times, TV info | Yardage book | Merchandise

Homa counted himself among the “fortunate,” who didn’t get caught in the rumor mill and have to field a steady diet of questions of whether they were going to be the next player to jump to LIV.

“You know, hearing stories about certain guys saying, ‘Oh, I hear he’s gone.’ and then I’ll talk to them and they’ll say, ‘I haven’t talked to them in months,’ so this is just made up. I feel bad for them, I feel that’s a much harder gig.

“Obviously what Rory’s been doing and playing so well, kind of feels like two jobs, is tricky. Mine was just the fun end of it. Hear a rumor, joke about the rumor, forget about the rumor and move along, so it wasn’t so bad for me.”

Yet in a twisted way, Homa said he tried to insert himself into the conversation “just for the fun of it,” and cracked that it was “a huge insult” that his efforts to do so went unnoticed.

“I guess it would have been cool to be a part of that so I could live the life of, you know, it felt like a reality TV series for a bit,” he said. “I guess I tried. I changed my bio on Twitter once when I think Brooks changed his bio and everyone figured out he was going or something like that. I was like, ‘Oh, I’m going to get in on this and see if people catch on,’ but didn’t realize that my Twitter bio doesn’t get a ton of traction, so that was news to me.

“The craziness of all of this was I feel like a little more outside than it was inside. Inside, like I said, I thought it was funny and fun, we were just trying to make light of it. It’s people’s lives, they can do what they want to do. I don’t know, I feel like a lot of us had fun with it. I had fun with it. It was taken as, like, slights to the LIV Tour, but I never meant, I just make fun of everything that I do and other people do. So it was funny. I would have liked to be caught in the rumor mill so I could have run with it for a little while, it would have been good for that PIP thing, but was not lucky enough to be caught up.”

As for the ‘PIP thing,’ Homa banked an additional $3 million for finishing 14th in the standing but was none too happy to finish one spot back of Kevin Kisner, his partner in the 2021 QBE Shootout.

“I’m not quite sure how that happened. Played better than him, carried him at the QBE last year, so not sure how I lost to him, so that was disappointing,” he said. “Just back to the drawing board, got to figure out more ways to impact the golfing world. I am surprised that I’m 16 in the world and I was 14 on the PIP. I always thought I was significantly more popular than I was good at golf, so it feels nice that those things are aligning, so that’s a little mini bonus, but at the end of the day I’ll take 14th is pretty good.”

“It is a little confusing how it works, but it does seem to work,” Homa added. “Tiger won again, so as long as he’s winning, it’s not broken, so that’s good.”

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Lynch: Tiger Woods’ $15 million bonus was a bargain — the PGA Tour owes him so much more

Fifteen million doesn’t even begin to cover it.

The only shared commonality between Jay Monahan and Charles Dickens — other than both debuting to American audiences in Boston — is that each created a PIP that inspired great expectations among the lower orders. Dickens’ ‘Pip’ was the protagonist of his exquisite 1861 novel; Monahan’s is more prosaic: the Player Impact Program, his widely-criticized plan to reward those players who most impact the PGA Tour’s business. 

Monahan’s PIP only measures positive impact, so Greg Norman doesn’t number among its beneficiaries. But, like Abel Magwitch in Great Expectations, much of what transpires is due to his unseen hand. 

Depending upon one’s disposition — toward the PGA Tour and LIV, toward meritocratic compensation, or even toward corporate talent-retention policies — the Player Impact Program represents a bribe to secure loyalty, money for nothing, or a commonplace way to bonus high-impact performers. Those sentiments are not mutually exclusive; rather, there’s significant overlap in reasonable judgments about the PIP. 

This week, the Tour announced the final results in the only season-long race whose standings it doesn’t aggressively promote. The PIP pot doubled in 2022 to $100 million, and so did the number of recipients, to 20 (with three more added for reasons too byzantine to bother with here). Tiger Woods collected $15 million to go with the $8 million he received from the inaugural PIP pool last year, despite Phil Mickelson’s Trumpian attempt to prematurely declare a victory he hadn’t earned. 

That’s $23 million just for being Tiger Woods. But then, it took a lot of work to become Tiger Woods, and Tiger Woods adds immense value to the PGA Tour, to a multiple of $23 million. It also took a lot of work to become Rory McIlroy (second, for $12 million in ‘22), Will Zalatoris (9th, $5 million) and Viktor Hovland (20th, $2 million). The respective deservedness of others on the PIP list — everyone below Woods in the mortals division — will be debated. This is a sport where competitors like to boast of eating only what they kill (never entirely true) and because a perception exists that PIP payouts are entirely unrelated to how recipients perform inside the ropes (also not entirely true, but less true this year than it was last). 

The criteria used in ’22 leans toward placing greater value on performance — measuring screen time on weekend telecasts, for example, though carding a comical quad might guarantee a chap plenty of air time too. Other metrics are also impacted by how well someone plays, and how often, so even if PIP bonuses are found money, it doesn’t quite amount to money for nothing. 

If the entire program is, as many suggest, a transparent sop to secure player loyalty against LIV, it has been remarkably ineffective, at least based on season one. Bryson DeChambeau, Dustin Johnson, Brooks Koepka and Bubba Watson all split after receiving PIP bonuses of at least $3 million, though DeChambeau is irked that he hasn’t been paid in full on account of not having completed the necessary obligations to collect before he departed. 

Successful businesses not owned by Elon Musk make good faith efforts to retain talent who add value. Through that lens, the PIP makes sense. Those bonused in ’22 earned it via great play (Scottie Scheffler), exceptional fan engagement (Rickie Fowler), or both (Max Homa). The engagement metric is clearly the contentious one, understandably so since the Tour’s idea of swell engagement gave us “Live Under Par.” But how better to measure the enduring impact of Woods in the waning years of his competitive career? 

In the event of another flow of defections to LIV in ’23, the PIP will not scope the tide. Most of the bonuses paid out are inconsequential compared to what beckons when Saudi oil grants a blank check to a man with a vendetta who is desperate for traction. But what the PIP does accomplish is to highlight just how lucrative life is for those who can still perform and who cherish their reputations. McIlroy didn’t win a major title in 2022, but between prize money and bonuses his “on-course” earnings exceed $40 million, and he didn’t have to brown-nose a butcher to make that money. 

Woods’ value to the PGA Tour is diminished only in that he can no longer compete with the consistency and frequency he used to. But a few weeks shy of his 47th birthday, he still draws more eyeballs than any of them. The next three weeks will illustrate that, when he plays at the Hero World Challenge, in a made-for-TV match with McIlroy against Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas, and at the PNC Championship, alongside his son, Charlie. Who else can make irrelevant golf relevant in December? That PIP bonus is a bargain for what he brings, and would remain so even if it were doubled. 

Not everything Woods contributed to the PGA Tour this year is quantifiable, even with opaque metrics. What was it worth when he flew to the player meeting in Delaware to stand with McIlroy and rally support? Or when he incinerated LIV’s competitive integrity at a press conference in St. Andrews, during which he reminded players not only that he has set the bar, but where and how he did so? Woods brought to bear the weight of his record and reputation when it mattered most, and in doing so proved that these days a professional golfer’s value and his values are intrinsically linked as never before. 

Fifteen million doesn’t even begin to cover it.

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Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy lead 2022 PGA Tour Player Impact Program rankings

A total of 23 players were paid out in the second year of the Tour’s lucrative bonus pool.

Rory McIlroy broke the news two weeks ago that Tiger Woods finished first and he finished second in the PGA Tour’s 2022 Player Impact Program. On Tuesday the Tour released the official rankings for year two of its lucrative bonus pool.

Still recovering from a single-car accident that nearly cost him his leg, Woods won the PIP for a second consecutive year to claim the $15 million prize. The 15-time major champion competed in just three events (all majors) in 2022, making the cut at the Masters before withdrawing from the PGA Championship and missing the cut at the Open Championship.

After winning the FedEx Cup for a record third time, McIlroy claimed the PIP’s runner-up prize of $12 million following a three-win season that featured 13 top-25 finishes over 14 made cuts in 16 events.

Here are the full rankings, as well as how much money each player earned:

  1. Tiger Woods ($15 million)
  2. Rory McIlroy ($12 million)
  3. Jordan Spieth ($9 million)
  4. Justin Thomas ($7.5 million)
  5. Jon Rahm ($6 million)
  6. Scottie Scheffler ($5.5 million)
  7. Xander Schauffele ($5 million)
  8. Matt Fitzpatrick ($5 million)
  9. Will Zalatoris ($5 million)
  10. Tony Finau ($5 million)
  11. Collin Morikawa ($3 million)
  12. Shane Lowry ($3 million)
  13. Kevin Kisner ($3 million)
  14. Max Homa ($3 million)
  15. Billy Horschel ($3 million)
  16. Rickie Fowler ($2 million)
  17. Adam Scott ($2 million)
  18. Jason Day ($2 million)
  19. Patrick Cantlay ($2 million)
  20. Viktor Hovland ($2 million)

In its second year, the PIP paid the top 20 players, up from 10 in year one. This year, however, three additional players were also recognized because they would have qualified under the slightly amended criteria that will go into effect in 2023: Hideki Matsuyama, Cameron Young and Sam Burns. Each player earned $2 million.

According to the PGA Tour, “the program is designed to reward members who – through objective measurement criteria – are shown to generate the most positive interest in the PGA Tour.” The 2022 rankings were based on the following:

  • Internet Searches: Number of times a player’s name is searched using Google
  • Earned Media: Number of unique news articles that include a player’s name
  • TV Sponsor Exposure: Duration (time) that a player’s sponsor logo(s) appeared on screen during Saturday and Sunday PGA TOUR telecasts
  • A player’s general awareness score among the broad U.S. population
  • Social Media: Social media score that considers a player’s reach, conversation and engagement metrics

The PGA Tour returns to action in 2023 with the Sentry Tournament of Champions, Jan. 5-8, at the Plantation Course at Kapalua in Maui, Hawaii.

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