These five golfers – four of them Aussies – earned 2024 PGA Tour Champions tour cards at Q school at TPC Scottsdale

TPC Scottsdale’s Champions Course was host for the 72-hole qualifying tournament.

The PGA Tour Champions had five tour cards for 2024 up for grabs at TPC Scottsdale’s Champions Course this week.

The final stage of Q School for the senior circuit provided 78 golfers 72 holes to snag status for next season.

By Friday, 73 of those golfers came up short, including Baseball Hall of Famer John Smoltz (dead last by eight shots at 22 over), 72-year-old Dick Mast (who shot or beat his age two times this week), Notah Begay, Shaun Micheel, Ted Purdy, Carlos Franco and Bryan Hoops, the lone amateur in the field who missed out on a playoff by a stroke.

All is not lost for those who finished sixth through 30th, as they will be eligible to apply for PGA Tour Champions Associate Membership for 2024, which would then get them into qualifiers.

But for those lucky top five, they are now fully exempt into all open, full-field events for the 2024 season on the PGA Tour Champions.

Here’s a closer look at what turned out to be an Aussie takeover, with Australian golfers earning four of the five cards.

Epson Tour’s Arizona tournament is moving to TPC Scottsdale, will have largest purse on tour

The LPGA’s developmental tour will have a new Arizona home in 2024.

The LPGA’s development tour keeps getting bigger and better.

The Epson Tour announced Monday the elevation of the purse at the Carlisle Arizona Women’s Golf Classic to $400,000, making it the largest on the circuit. The first-place check will be $60,000.

The event will also have a new home, as it has pulled up stakes from Longbow Golf Club in Mesa and will head to the TPC Scottsdale Champions Course. While the TPC Scottsdale Stadium Course is the longtime home of the PGA Tour’s WM Phoenix Open, the Champions Course will once again host the final stage of the PGA Tour Champions Q School in December. The Champions Course has also hosted the Advocates Professional Golf Association Tour. The Champions Course will host the Epson Tour May 9-12, 2024.

Furthermore, Epson and the Carlisle Companies announced a contract extension for the tournament, which is one the few 72-hole events on the tour, through 2026. Carlisle came on as title sponsor in 2021.

“We are constantly seeking partners who share our goal of giving our athletes the best opportunities to succeed and pursue their dreams of playing on the LPGA Tour, which is exactly what Carlisle has consistently done from day one of this great event,” said Jody Brothers, Epson Tour Chief Business and Operating Officer.

The Carlisle Arizona Women’s Golf Classic held a spot in March on the schedule when it was at Longbow. Previous winners of the Carlisle are Gabriela Ruffels (2023), Fatima Fernandez Cano (2022) and Ruixin Liu (2021).

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Check the yardage book: TPC Scottsdale’s Stadium Course for the 2023 WM Phoenix Open on the PGA Tour

StrackaLine offers hole-by-hole maps of TPC Scottsdale’s Stadium Course, including its famous 16th that becomes the scene of a giant party.

TPC Scottsdale’s Stadium Course, site of the 2023 WM Phoenix Open on the PGA Tour, was designed by the team of Tom Weiskopf and Jay Morrish and opened in 1986. It was renovated in 2014.

The Stadium Course has been the site of a Tour event since 1987. It will play to 7,261 yards with a par of 71 this week.

The layout ranks No. 4 in Arizona on Golfweek’s Best list of top public-access layouts in each state. It ties for No. 75 on Golfweek’s Best list of top resort courses in the U.S., and it ties for No. 94 among all public-access layouts in the U.S.

Thanks to yardage books provided by StrackaLine – the maker of detailed yardage books for thousands of courses around the world – we can see exactly the challenges the pros face this week at TPC Scottsdale’s Stadium Course.

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Shaun Micheel, Bob May, Tim O’Neal headline list of interesting names at 2023 PGA Tour Champions Qualifying Tournament

There are 78 different stories in Scottsdale this week. Here are a few of the interesting ones.

The final stage of the 2023 PGA Tour Champions Qualifying Tournament is this week at TPC Scottsdale.

The Champions course will host 78 players in four rounds concluding on Friday. The field includes a major champion and an NCAA champion.

In all, five players will earn their 2023 tour cards and be fully exempt into the 16 open, full-field PGA Tour Champions events (which do not include the majors).

Those who finish in spots six through 30 and ties are eligible to apply for PGA Tour Champions Associate Membership, which allows them the chance to enter 2023 event qualifiers.

There are 78 different stories in Scottsdale this week. Here are a few of the interesting ones.

Michael Herrera wins Advocates Professional Golf Association event at TPC Scottsdale

Michael Herrera, a former basketball player at Riverside City College, now has two victories on the APGA Tour.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Michael Herrera’s strategy for the Advocates Professional Golf Association event at TPC Scottsdale was simple.

Keep the ball in play. Find the middle of the green. Try to sink a 10-foot putt.

At the 18th hole, Herrera followed the first two steps by firing his tee shot in the short grass and landing his next attempt in the middle of the green. Preparing for his third shot, he read the green shifting right 1 ½ inches and on a downward angle.

With wind in his face, he hit the putt firm. The ball eventually rolled to the hole and fell in, achieving the third step of his strategy with one key difference: his attempt was from 30 feet away.

That successful birdie putt ended up winning him the APGA event.

“It means a lot,” said Herrera, who finished the 36-hole tournament at 4 under. “It’s my first two-day win, so it feels great.”

After finishing Monday’s first round down four strokes to leader Daniel Augustus, Herrera sparked his victory Tuesday by notching four birdies to finish his second round at 3 under. For APGA Tour CEO Ken Bentley, watching Herrera’s win was a rewarding experience.

Before Herrera turned professional in 2019, he was a basketball player at Riverside City College in California. Coach Philip Mathews noticed his golf skill and called Bentley, his best friend and college roommate, and said he believed Herrera could be a good fit on the APGA Tour.

When Bentley later played a round with him, he quickly noticed Herrera’s talent. As a result, he recommended to Mathews that Herrera shift his focus to golf. The coach then encouraged Herrera to switch sports and told him his decision was rooted in “thinking about your future.”

“Mike (will) tell you it’s the best thing that ever happened to him,” Bentley said. “He was disappointed at first because he loved the game, but you could see immediately the raw talent. The guy hits it long. He’s got good hands.”

When Herrera officially joined the APGA Tour, he received a new set of clubs and lessons from golf instructor Dana Dahlquist, who coached players including current DP World Tour member Robert Rock.

Herrera’s first win came in January 2021 at the Crossings at Carlsbad in California. It would take more than year for his next one, but Herrera has enjoyed his golf journey so far. Additionally, he appreciates the APGA’s work to increase diversity in golf.

“It’s huge, the APGA putting minorities out there to succeed and to come out here and play the best they can. (It’s) just all inspiration. Little kids see us play. It’s a big deal for me and I think it’s a big deal for a lot of people to see minorities out there play.”

This week’s tournament at TPC Scottsdale marked the sixth stop of the APGA Tour’s Lexus Cup, a series that will resume on May 6 at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida.

According to APGA Tour Executive Director Cole Smith, the two-day event represented the successful continuation of the organization’s mission.

“Each event that we play and these guys perform at this level and caliber of play, it just shows you that we’re headed in the right direction,” Smith said. “We’re actually gaining ground on accomplishing what our mission is.”

Five things on No. 16 at TPC Scottsdale: The details, the party and more

If you’re not one to hush up for golf, check out five thoughts on the 16th at TPC Scottsdale’s Stadium Course.

A party. A par-3. The loudest scene in golf. A chance to cut loose and show a very different side of golf, where pros can interact with fans in ways not seen anywhere else. A chance to elicit wild cheers, or maybe lose a tournament to the sound of boos late in the final round.

Called the Coliseum, No. 16 at TPC Scottsdale’s Stadium Course is many things to different people. What the atmosphere is most of all, especially to those who attend, is unforgettable ­­­– assuming they haven’t been overserved.

Dubbed the People’s Open, the WM Phoenix Open – rebranded this year to condense Waste Management to WM ­– has been played at the Stadium Course since 1987. And it has become for many the can’t-miss event on the PGA Tour calendar.

A group of men dressed like Richard Simmons pose in the birds nest at No. 16 during the 2020 Waste Management Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale. (Nicole Neri/The Republic)

And the 16th is the star of a show that can host more than 200,000 fans in a day. The event no longer offers up statistics on fan attendance since the 2019 event, but on Saturday in 2018, more than 216,000 fans attended the event.

Not to be lost in all the noise and revelry is that the Thunderbirds, the charitable organization that operates the event, has raised more than $160 million and counting for Arizona charities – No. 16 is great and all, but the numbers 1 and 6 look even better when followed by all those zeroes, in this case.

A drone view of the 16th hole at TPC Scottsdale’s Stadium Course in 2020 (Golfweek files)

Also worth noting: The Stadium Course, designed by Tom Weiskopf and Jay Morrish and opened in 1986, ranks No. 5 in Arizona on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list for public-access layouts. It will play at 7,261 yards with a par of 71. And with those details taken care of, check out several of the more-interesting themes of No. 16 – and what comes after.

Check the yardage book: TPC Scottsdale Stadium Course for the WM Phoenix Open

How long is No. 16 at TPC Scottsdale’s Stadium Course, and for that matter, every other hole at the Wm Phoenix Open?

TPC Scottsdale’s Stadium Course in Arizona, home to the PGA Tour’s WM Phoenix Open this week, was designed by the team of Tom Weiskopf and Jay Morrish. It opened in 1986 and was renovated in 2014, and the desert layout has been the site of the Tour event since 1987.

Most famous for its par-3 16th hole, site of a massive party and ringed by coliseum-like grandstands during the Tour event, the Stadium Course ranks No. 5 in Arizona on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list for public-access layouts. It will play at 7,261 yards with a par of 71.

Thanks to yardage books provided by StrackaLine – the maker of detailed yardage books for thousands of courses around the world – we can see exactly the challenges the pros face this week. Check out the maps of each hole below.

Tee times, TV info | PGA Tour Live streaming on ESPN+

Ryan Alford builds on solid first day to win APGA tournament at TPC Scottsdale

Ryan Alford recorded the first professional win in his golf career on Tuesday, taking the APGA Tour Scottsdale at TPC Scottsdale’s Champions Course.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Ryan Alford recorded the first professional win in his golf career on Tuesday, taking the APGA Tour Scottsdale at TPC Scottsdale Champions Course.

It’s the third APGA event in a row that someone new came out on top. Alford, of Shreveport, Louisiana, shot a three-under 68 for a two-day, nine-under 133 to beat Marcus Byrd of Knoxville by 3 strokes.

Alford, 24, said the key for his success was his renewed mental state. He was among the leaders last week in Las Vegas before blowing up with a six-over performance on the back nine.

“I changed my mindset,” Alford said. “Told myself to erase the bad and keep going with the good. Talent is not the issue. It’s just a matter of getting it done.”

Alford entered the second round just one stroke ahead of Byrd. But a tap-in birdie on the 17th hole provided a cushion, and he went on to claim the first-place prize of $7,500 from the $25,000 purse that the APGA offers at every event.

The two-day, 36-hole tournament Monday at the Champions Course was the sixth event on the APGA’s 10-tournament season. The tour’s mission is to bring greater diversity to the sport of golf.

The other first-time APGA winners this year are Jarred Garcia, who took the Black History Month Classic at PGA Golf Club in Port St. Lucie, Florida, and Rovonta Young, who won the APGA Tour at World Golf Village in St. Augustine, Florida.

Tim O’Neal, the 2020 APGA Tour Player of the Year, was third at 5 under, with Tommy Schaff of Ridgeland, South Carolina another stroke back in fourth. Willie Mack III of Flint, Michigan, and Aaron Beverly of Fairfield, California, tied for fifth at 3-under. Mack is headed for Korn Ferry Tour’s Huntsville (Alabama) Championship next week.

Phoenix resident Doug Smith led a group of five players tied for seventh at even par. Kamaiu Johnson of Orlando finished in a tie for 12th (1 over) after winning in Las Vegas last week.

The next stop for the APGA Tour is Valhalla Golf Club in Louisville, Kentucky, set for May 23-25.

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