Austin to lose WGC Dell Match Play after this year, signaling the end of WGC era

Golfweek has learned that the WGC Dell Match Play is down and running out of holes.

Rest in peace, World Golf Championships.

Golfweek has learned that this will be the final year of the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play in Austin. 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.

Efforts to reach Dell Match Play tournament director Jordan Uppleger were unsuccessful. A PGA Tour spokesman sent a statement: “As we navigate the many moving parts related to the structural changes to the 2024 PGA Tour schedule, discussions are ongoing in regards to the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play beyond this year. We remain focused on putting on an incredibly successful 2023 WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play event for our fans and we expect to announce details about the future of the event when they are available.”

Austin Country Club has been the host venue for 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.

Purses for the WGCs, which began in 1999, were elevated, the fields were limited mostly to top-ranked players, and there were no-cut events. (Tiger Woods won 18 WGCs with Dustin Johnson capturing the second most with five.)

In 2021, the number of WGC events was reduced by two with the WGC-Mexico Open being scaled back to a regular PGA Tour event and the WGC-FedEx St. Jude being converted to the first leg of the FedEx Cup Playoffs.

2022 World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play
Scottie Scheffler holds the Walter Hagen Cup after defeating Kevin Kisner in the final of the 2022 World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play at Austin Country Club. (Photo: Erich Schlegel-USA TODAY Sports)

The demise of the WGC Match Play technically leaves the WGC-HSBC Champions as the last WGC standing but the tournament, which is contested in China, hasn’t been played since 2019 due to COVID-19. There’s no indication that the tournament will be able to be staged this year either, and the LPGA just canceled a tournament on Hainan Island in China that was scheduled for March due to “ongoing COVID-19 related matters.”

The Match Play, where Scottie Scheffler won to reach World No. 1 last spring, is one of the Tour’s new designated events this season. It will be contested in March for a tournament-record purse of $20 million, but that is also the same amount as 10 elevated tournaments, which has cheapened the WGC brand. (Having the majority of the events staged in the U.S. also made the name a misnomer.)

The PGA Tour Player Advisory Council met last Tuesday at the Farmers Insurance Open and the 2024 Tour schedule was a topic of conversation. Kevin Streelman, who is a member of the PAC, confirmed that the future of the Match Play was on the agenda.

[the_huddle]

“They talked about that a little bit,” Streelman said. “Hopefully they can save it. It’s a sponsorship issue.”

“It’s pretty common knowledge,” he added, but noted, “there definitely hasn’t been any decision yet.”

However, multiple sources have told Golfweek that a decision has been made and a high-ranking executive that oversees the Tour’s Championship Management department already told the staff in Austin to “start boxing things up.”

Merchandise from the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play at Austin Country Club. (Tim Schmitt/Golfweek)

The Tour sent Austin Country Club a proposal more than four months ago and ACC pushed back hard, countering with an exorbitant increase to its site fee and ticket demands for its members. The Tour balked and for several months there was no communication between the two parties. It didn’t help matters that the membership was split with a sizable camp that thought the event had run its course there. According to one source, ACC came to its senses and tried to re-engage, but the Tour went “radio silent” for four months. Two weeks ago, ACC sent the Tour an unsolicited proposal agreeing to the Tour’s original terms and to extend the deal by an additional two years.

“I heard it didn’t go well,” said a PGA Tour tournament director for another event, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of his relationship with both parties. “They’re out of there.”

It’s not too often that the Tour pulls up stakes and leaves a city unless a sponsor flees and doing so is the last resort. But a source says that in August, the Tour turned down Intel, which Dell wanted as a partner, to serve as the presenting sponsor. The chipmaker was ready to sign on the dotted line for five years for somewhere between $5 million to $8 million per year. But the Tour, perhaps knowing that its schedule must evolve to counter the attack of LIV Golf, the upstart league, would only commit to one year. No deal was made.

As previously reported by Golfweek, Jim Crane, the billionaire owner of the Houston Astros, has been playing hard ball in hopes of getting the Houston stop back into the main schedule, preferably with a spring date. The CJ Cup, which originated in South Korea in 2017 but has been played in the U.S. since the pandemic and was held most recently in South Carolina in October, also is itching to upgrade its dates from the fall schedule. The Tour has yet to release its schedule for next season but the loss of the Match Play could mean at least one less designated event in 2024, or its replacement in the schedule could be elevated.

“The Tour is not going to go away from doing a match play,” a tournament director said. “I wouldn’t be surprised to see it resurface elsewhere.”

But for now, it appears the Match Play is down and running out of holes.

[vertical-gallery id=778256703]

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=]

‘I’m not worried about it:’ World No. 1 Jon Rahm at peace despite putting stats heading into WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play

“It’s not as bad as it looks. It feels a lot better than it looks,” said Rahm.

Heading into Wednesday’s start of the World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play at Austin Country Club in the Lone Star State, world No. 1 Jon Rahm has gone three PGA Tour starts without recording a top-10 finish.

The last time that happened? The Tour was coming out of its COVID-19, 13-week hibernation. In fact, since turning pro in 2015, the Spaniard hasn’t registered a top-10 result in three to five consecutive starts on the Tour just six times.

So Rahm is hardly worried when asked about his current form. In fact, he gets a touch irritated, especially if you bring up his putting.

“I’m kind of getting tired of answering the same question every single week,” Rahm said. “When you’re No. 1 off the tee and top 10 in strokes gained approach, my putting stats are not going to be top 20. It’s absolutely impossible unless I’m winning every single week by eight. Kind of how it goes.”

While the reigning U.S. Open champion ranks No. 1 in Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee, No. 1 in Greens in Regulation (75.74 percent); and No. 4 in Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green, he’s No. 139 in SG: Putting.

“Is it as good as it could be? No, but I think it shows in the stats worse than it actually feels just because I’m hitting so many greens and hitting it so good,” Rahm said. “Again, I feel like I’ve said it a few times. It’s not as bad as it looks. It feels a lot better than it looks.

“Maybe I haven’t gotten the results yet, but I’m not worried about it.”

Why should he be? The last time he went three starts without a top 10 he won the Memorial in his next start. And he loves match play.

In 2020, he teamed with Ryan Palmer to win the Zurich Classic of New Orleans featuring Foursome and Four-Ball play. In the Ryder Cup, he’s 4-3-1 in two contests, including a singles win over Tiger Woods in 2018.

And in four starts in the Dell Technologies Match Play, he lost in the final to Dustin Johnson in 2017 and lost to Scottie Scheffler in the quarterfinals in 2021.

“It’s a tournament I always look forward to,” Rahm said. “It’s a nice break in the thick of the season. When things are starting to get a little bit more intense, to have an event in which it’s match play, it’s fun, it’s a lot more exciting, at least for me.

“A little bit different vibe, where you can just play one-on-one golf and just take care of the guy in front of you instead of a four-day grind.”

Rahm, the No. 1 seed in the tournament, has to get through former U.S. Ryder Cup hero Patrick Reed, Cameron Young and Sebastian Munoz in pool play the first three days of the tournament. After that, the field, which features seven of the top-10 players in the world, including No. 2 Collin Morikawa, No. 3 Viktor Hovland, No. 4 Patrick Cantlay and No. 5 Scheffler, is whittled down to 16 players who will begin single-elimination play on Saturday.

His approach to match play is simple: never give up. Example No. 1: In the 2017 final, Rahm lost five of the first six holes to Johnson and was 4 down with six holes to play. But he won holes 13, 15 and 16 but Johnson held on.

“I know it sounds so cliche, but if you’re 5 down, six holes to play, try to win all six,” Rahm said. “It’s never over until it’s over, and momentum is a massive thing. One swing can change it all, and it can happen. You don’t need to play perfect.

“You don’t need to do anything special; you just need to play golf and beat the man in front of you. If you just keep that mindset of being aggressive and just fighting for every shot, you should probably do fine in match play.”

[vertical-gallery id=778055521]

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]