Monday, March 16, 2026

Weekend Wrap - Young Guns Edition

You know the drill....  A player that struggles to get his first win finally breaks through, and the chattering classes on cue predict that the floodgates will open.  Which never happens..... yanno, except when it does.

I'm not gong to bother with a subheaders today, as all eyes are on Ponte Vedra Beach.

We'll avail ourselves of Shack's lede:

Better than most!

Twenty-five years since Gary Koch’s iconic call, we may have the fifth-of-four’s perfect slogan.

The 2026 edition really was better than most, minus the top two players in the world contending. Several rising talents and other accomplished veterans made a run at the Players title played under conditions that turned downright U.S. Open-from-the-90s-tough over the weekend, as rough grew to absurd heights, and the rules staff unearthed crazy old hole locations.

Cameron Young (mercifully) won this one with clutch shots down the stretch to hold off final round playing partner Matt Fitzpatrick by a stroke.

I'll deem that lede to be, how shall I put it, better than most, deftly tweaking Rolapp's tone-deaf misstep with Koch's enduring moment, which works all the better with Gary back in the booth.

It is better than most, although I need you to hold that thought for a bit (and your humble blogger needs to remember to circle back in that direction).

Both players thrive at big-time venues playing tough, but Young tends to embrace a wider variety of tests, while Fitzpatrick rarely likes much of anything unless it has high rough and flat, narrow fairways. Either way, it was fitting that they came to the 18th, where Young’s gift for power and accuracy seen down the stretch at the 2022 Open appeared again. He struck a resounding 375-yard drive while Fitzpatrick dealt with oaks and pines, only to eventually bogey the finisher to Young’s par.

The 28-year-old from the meanest New York streets earned just his second win on Tour in his 104th start. The Players is by far his biggest title he’s captured in the game (with all due respect to the New York State Open or the 2025 Wyndham Championship that came after an excruciating seven runner-up finishes for the son of the longtime Sleepy Hollow pro).

OK, but the quintessential SoCal incel beclowns himself speaking of the mean streets of....checking notes, Sleepy Hollow.

Lot's of bullet points equals anaerobic blogging, so what's not to like?

With this win…
  • Young figured something out about TPC Sawgrass given how his four previous appearances hardly suggested this was coming: T51 (2023), T54 (2024) and T61 (2025).
  • Young’s four-stroke comeback matches the fifth-largest final-round comeback in Players history.
  • Became the first Players Champion to birdie No. 17 in each of the final three rounds. His Sunday tee shot finished 9’7” Sunday after tee shots of 21’ and 24’ the second and third rounds.
  • Moved up to the top of Masters contenders list thanks to a field-leading proximity on approach shots (28’ 1”). Only five times in the ShotLink years of the Players has someone averaged less than Young did approaching the green.
  • Given the design, the firmness of the surfaces, and the sheer difficulty of hitting many of Pete Dye’s tiny targets, that’s a remarkable proximity average for the 51 of 72 greens hit.
  • Following the win, Young has moved to the eighth choice in the 2026 Masters at 27-1.
  • To show how much he’s rounded out his game in two years, Young gained nearly the same number of strokes approaching TPC Sawgrass’ greens in 2024 when he finished T54 (6.76 to this year’s 7.08 SG approach).
  • Young got up and down 16 of 21 times, which was, oddly, only T44 in Strokes Gained Scrambling. (Maybe Strokes Gained isn’t always telling us the full story since 16 of 21 around those crazy firm, fast greens with high rough is an absurdly good performance.)Young’s 375-yard drive on No. 18 was the longest drive on that hole by any player in the ShotLink era (since 2003). It was also the fourth-longest drive on any hole at TPC Sawgrass in that time.
  • He played the par-3s five-under-par, tying the best performance on one-shotters by a champion with Scottie Scheffler (2024), Rory McIlroy (2019), and John Mahaffey (1986).

Regular readers of these musing know my opinion of sports journalists is, well, mixed at best, but props to James Colgan for posting this on Saturday evening:

Ludvig Aberg has a superpower. Could it also be his kryptonite?

Hmmmm, do tell:

Aberg has looked like the best player in the loaded Players field by a wide margin. If he plays
with a three-shot lead on Sunday the way he has while leading on Friday and Saturday, he might cruise his way right into a career-altering win without even breaking a sweat.

But that’s where Aberg’s story gets tricky, because it’s the speed that could trip him up.

“Yeah, whenever I get in a stressful situation I have to slow myself down because I get really fast,” he said Saturday. “I start talking fast, I start breathing fast, and I kind of get, like, a little worked up like that. So I just have to really calm myself down, try to walk slow, talk slow, make everything just a little bit slower, which is a challenge.”

Aberg’s tendency to rush can be a dangerous trait for a golfer with a need for speed, especially at TPC Sawgrass, where mistakes happen quickly and multiply.

Aberg said that he has worked out a system with caddie Joe Skovron to help him navigate the stressful moments when his efficiency tips into hurriedness. Skovron has been instructed to walk behind Aberg — physically forcing him to slow down — but also to call Aberg off a shot if he feels like the decision has happened too quickly.

“I feel like I’ve had enough experiences where I’ve seen it work,” Aberg said. “I’ve seen big events where it’s happened and I kind of calm myself down a little bit. But yeah, for me it’s just the pace of everything just goes up.”

Speed Kills! At least it does so quickly....

But James left it to Alan Bastable to perform the post-mortem:


Then came the par-5 11th.

After blistering his drive, Aberg didn’t have to think long about whether he’d attack a green
guarded short and right by sand and water. Out came the 7-wood, and with it, something you don’t see often from Aberg: a momentary lapse of tempo. Aberg’s ball never had a chance. It started right and stayed right. Splash. He escaped with a bogey, but the loose swing from the fairway might have done more damage to his psyche than it did to his scorecard.

That much became clear on the next tee when Aberg uncorked another clunker: a hard pull into the water that lines the left of the par-4 12th. The misfire left Aberg, after a drop, with 181 yards in from the rough, from where he failed to hold the green. A chip and two putts later, he’d made a double — and, with Cameron Young and Matt Fitzpatrick trading highlights ahead of him, effectively played his way out of contention. For a player who, for 64 holes, had exhibited such mastery over his ball, it was a shocking turn of events.

Aberg’s diagnosis?

“I would imagine if I look at those swings on sort of 11, 12, they probably were quick swings,” he said after he’d signed for a four-over 76 that dropped him to nine under and into a tie for 5th. “Takeaway got really fast and then the rest of it kind of spirals from there. That’s something that I should have been aware of, now looking back. But yeah, that’s the way it goes.”

 Seems like a pretty horrible decision on No. 12, no?  

Shall we dip into the Tour Confidential panel?  Yes, still rhetorical:

Cameron Young shot a four-under 68 to win the Players Championship by one over Matt
Fitzpatrick, while 54-hole leader Ludvig Aberg shot 76 and faded on the back nine. Did Young win this? Or did Aberg lose it?

Dylan Dethier: Both, I guess? It felt like about a dozen guys “lost it” at various points throughout the day, Aberg chief among them. But Young went and got it, too; his 17th and 18th holes were championship-worthy.

Josh Schrock: Yes? Cameron Young had to play excellent golf on a windy track with trouble everywhere to even have a chance to take this home. And yet, he still needed Ludvig to let go of the wheel. If Ludvig gets around in even par on Sunday, Young has to do what he did just to force a playoff. Ludvig opened the door and Young walked through and slammed it shut with his play on the final two holes.

Josh Berhow: It’s both. Aberg had the chance to win it but when you shoot 76 from the final pairing on Sunday, you let the tournament slip away. But it works both ways. Take 17 for example: Fitzpatrick played to the middle of the green with a one-shot lead, while Young attacked the pin, stuck it to 10 feet, made birdie and then won the thing on 18 (and with the best drive of the day on the finishing hole). That’s going out and winning it.

Of course both are true, but the other guy that should have won it was Fitzpatrick.....

Up until late last summer when he won his first PGA Tour event, Young was known as the tough-luck loser who had yet to win on the big stage. Now he’s got his second victory and a Players title. What’s changed?

Dethier: There’s a bigger-picture answer to this question — he seems to have found some winning mojo — but there’s a more specific answer, too. What changed is his putting. He has credited a caddie switch with changing his perspective on the greens, too; when he hired his college teammate, fellow Wake Forest Demon Deacon Kyle Sterbinsky, ahead of the Truist Championship last May, they found something right away. He’s been on an upward trajectory since.

Schrock: Agreed, Dylan. Young going from a poor putter who routinely missed short-range looks to one of the better putters on Tour has been the key. I do think that finally getting it across the line at the Wyndham and then backing it up by being the United States’ best player at Bethpage has also given him some added confidence.

Berhow: It’s a little mix of everything. The putting is obviously huge but the superpower so many of these guys have is that they think their best can beat anyone. You need that to be elite in any sport. And after he won the Wyndham Championship it had to feel like the monkey was off his back. That led to a huge week at the Ryder Cup and, now, his second win. Those little victories along the way can lead to big things in no time.

It'll be interesting to see how his putting holds up over time.  Can he sustain the higher level or will he, like Scottie, have those good weeks and not-so-good weeks?

Here's where they try to paint with a broad brush, imputing cosmic significance to the randomness of a given PGA Tour week:

What was your biggest Players Championship takeaway?

Dethier: The PGA Tour has been looking for its third star — non-Scottie-and-Rory division — for a while now. I’m not saying Cam Young is there, but he’s certainly entering the conversation. Also, let the Players be! It’s not a major. It’s its own thing. That thing is big and fun and important and chaotic. I enjoyed this edition.

Schrock: Ludvig will win a major this year and be the third star Dylan mentioned by year’s end. He played brilliantly for the first two days, was smooth on Saturday and things got away from him on a course where this is carnage all around. That has happened to countless people at Sawgrass. He clearly found something at Pebble and I think he’ll knock off a few big events this summer. Honorable mention to Brooks Koepka, who is trending and was a couple scruffy holes on Friday away from being in the mix on Sunday.

Berhow: Watching Ludvig struggle on the back nine on Sunday made me think I might like him even more for the Masters. Sometimes it’s good to get this stuff out of the way, learn from it and move on. And I agree with Dylan. We can have four majors but also have a Players Championship, which is a very good tournament! Few things are more exhausting than this major/non-major conversation, but of course we will just have it again next year.

 Really, Josh, you think the Tour will make us go through that again?  I'm hoping they took notes...

But funny that they all want to talk about that elusive third star, when neither of the first two is much in evidence.  

I've no intention of blogging the LIV event.  Not sure which is the more humiliating, that the event swung on a missed two-footer, or that it swung on a missed two-footer by a player of whom none of us have ever heard.  

More noteworthy weekend result with the Masters one month away: an up-and-down T22 finish for Scottie Scheffler, who seemed off his game at TPC Sawgrass; or Bryson DeChambeau winning overnight at LIV Golf Singapore?

Dethier: Scottie’s the bigger deal because we expected DeChambeau to come into major season in good form regardless. It seems likely that Scheffler will, too — but he has a few fixes to find between now and then. Scheffler pounding balls in the rain after Thursday’s round will be one of my enduring images from the week. It’ll be fun watching him find what’s next.

Schrock: It’s Scottie. There’s clearly something going on between the driver and the dip in approach play. It’s officially a concern with a month to go. My only note on LIV Singapore is that the sun sleeves have got to go.

Berhow: Let’s go with both, because Scottie has not played to his Scottie Scheffler standards lately, but here’s what’s crazy. For as “off” as he has seemed the last month, his finishes this year are (starting with the most recent): T22, T12, T4, T3, 1. The takeaway is that this version of Scottie is still really good, and as soon as he gets his driver sorted I imagine he’ll be back to the guy we know well. He’s got a little time off now to work on some things. As for Bryson, it’s not nothing! DeChambeau playing well in the lead-up to the Masters is good for the sport, and he’s finished in the top six in his last two Masters starts. Bryson contending at Augusta would be a lot of fun.

I'm going to go with neither..... Not sure what to make of Scottie, though he could obviously turn it around on a dime.   Bryson has been jinxed ever since he called ANGC a Par-67, and I don't see the gods letting him off the hook on that one anytime soon.

Udder Bits - I don't know that I'll pay off the use of the plural there, but we'll see.  The Tc gang jumped in on this:

In a much-anticipated State of the PGA Tour press conference during the Players Championship, new Tour CEO Brian Rolapp announced his six pillars for a foundation of a new Tour (with nothing yet finalized). In short: a two-track competition system, a splashier starting event, bigger markets, promotion/relegation, match-play potential and more. (You can learn more about it here.) What were your initial thoughts regarding the pillars? And what bit specifically was most interesting to you?

Dethier: They sound good to me! But Sunday had me reflecting on one thing: for all the talk of finding bigger markets — which I support, to be clear — there’s still a lot to be said for leaning into the greatness of a mid-sized city. Jacksonville is the fourth-biggest metro area in Florida and a medium-sized TV market, but the Players is the event in town. I’m sure being outside New York can help sell corporate hospitality, but there’s a happy medium there, too.

Schrock: The biggest thing to me was Rolapp leaning into a lot of what golf fans and golf media have been clamoring for. I love that the idea is 120-man fields with cuts. The PGA Tour should lean into the cutline drama and build that up, especially on this two-track system. Sign me up for promotion and relegation as well. I still have a lot of questions about the two tracks and the money and how it all works. I like going to big media markets but also don’t want to see the PGA Tour completely abandon smaller cities with history. On paper, what Rolapp laid out sounds great but I will await the next address in June before really getting out over my skis.

Berhow: Overall it’s a big step forward. I love that match play might be involved in the playoffs, because switching the format every couple of years like we have isn’t the answer. I guess one lingering question I have is about the two-track system with the Korn Ferry Tour also still existing. I know we want to condense the golf schedule and make events mean more, but when you think about two leagues playing above the Korn Ferry… that’s still a lot of golf, even though one is obviously the top league. I guess my point is we need to miss golf to really have people fall in love with it. I’m skeptical this will do that, but I’ll wait to learn more before I lose sleep over it.

I've had more thoughts, but first I'd like to remind all that these are just Rolapp's fever dreams.  In a prefect world they'd have been run by the Pac and other parties-in-interest, but in no way are these done deals.

Secondly, it's far from the most significant of items, but that bit about match play in the FedEx Cup demands a healthy dose of cold water, as at least two of the key parties, the players and the networks, are likely to be in opposition.  And, to be fair, I'm not sure it's a s good as it sounds.  Remember, while we love match play events, they tend to work better early in the week and disappoint on the weekends?  Of course, given the obscenity that is the FedEx Cup, you'll argue that there's no downside, and I've no rebuttal for that.

The most significant and welcome step from Rolapp is to expand the A-Tour's field sizes from 70 players to 120, not quite a full field, but much improved.  :Let's take a moment to understand the depravity of the Jay Monahan-Patrick Cantlay ierregnum, in which golf could only be saved by putting more money in Cantlay's pocket.  To save the game the PGA's premiere events needed to be turned into glorified exhibitions, with only guaranteed match-ups of name-brand layers deemed acceptable for the discerning golf viewership (yeah, both of them).

Ironically, this was all done by those that know our game best, so we might conclude that their interests are not our own.  But there is one catch, to wit, that they stealthily reduced the Players' field size to that 120 players, ostensibly due to the lack of daylight (more accurately due to their dreadful pace of play).  

So, next year, when they try to convince us that March is Major, let's remind them that, in their own estimation, the Players is no different than any other Tour event, i.e., hardly major.

Given the last few years, this is a shockingly stupid way of asking a good question:

If you’re a member of the Tour, what about this plan might you love? And what might you not be a fan of?

Stupid because the underlying text of the last few years is the successful coup by the elite players, in which the interests of the Tour Rabbits have been sacrificed to the gods of....well, Patrick's bank account.  The real answer is it depends what kind of member you're asking...

Dethier: If you’re a member of the Tour I think you’d generally be in favor of these changes; the fact that the Tour is sticking with 120-player fields instead of chasing further reductions (like some of the current Signature Events, which feel empty by comparison at 70-something) is a welcome compromise. But there will be players who resist change, who are skeptical that fewer tournaments will yield greater attention, who feel like there are fewer seats at the big table. But the Tour is leaning into meritocracy. That’s a good thing for whoever is playing the best.

Schrock: Rolapp seems to have done a good job of appeasing all segments of the membership. As Dylan noted, some of the guys will not be thrilled about fewer tournaments but I think expanding to 120-man fields is a big win for the “middle class” of the Tour. If the second-track or PGB Tour gets similar purses to what standard PGA Tour events get now ($8-10 million) it should keep almost everyone happy.

Berhow: The elite guys will play a little less and for more money, which I think they’ll like. If there are any players who might not be thrilled it’s probably the guys who are used to being in the top 100ish but who might be playing out of the second track, which could be a little hit to the ego (and bank account). But it’s also guaranteed playing privileges? So who knows.

C'mon, you have to know that there's a pretty dramatic shrinkage of playing opportunities involved.....  And about those sponsors of the second tier events, do we think when they signed their contracts it called the events "second tier"?  Yeah, everyone is just completely happy.... At least he's making noise about shutting down the sponsors' exemption scam, so Adam Scott might be hardest hit, if it isn't Peter Malnati.  yanno, whoever's vote they need.

If Average Joe Fan is sitting at home and wondering what all these proposed changes mean for them, what would you tell them?

Dethier: If I’m optimistic it means you’ll get some clarity about which tournaments are actually top-tier PGA Tour events and which ones aren’t. I’m hopeful that this is the PGA Tour schedule coming together in its final form, at last. For now. Maybe. We’ll see.

Schrock: I’d say we’re tracking toward getting a schedule that gives you a group of events with all the big-name players that should come with bigger stakes than the current PGA Tour delivers. You’ll also get some extra golf on the second track if you’re interested. But we’ll see if Rolapp can make all of this come together. It always looks good on the PowerPoint. Execution is sometimes much harder, especially with so many stakeholders at the table.

Berhow: There’s still lots of golf on TV every weekend but one tour will be better than the other?

To me, the biggest takeaway of the PGA Tour-LIV pillow fight is how insignificant both tours are.  The only four events that matter are the same four events as ever, and I offer thanks that the PGA Tour can't screw those up.

On that cheerful note, have a great week and we'll catch up down the rad.


Thursday, March 12, 2026

Thursday Themes - Visionquest Edition

For the record, this is my second keyboard visit of the week....  Does that say "Commitment", or what?

Predictions Are Hard... - So, Brian, what do you want to be when you grow up?  NFL Commissioner?  Sorry about that, but the issue with the Tour hiring from the NFL is that you're inevitably getting the guy who realized the big chair isn't in his future....

So, where to start with his Tate of the Tour?  I guess here:

Opening with a bang, a match-play postseason and a two-track system: 12 revelations about the PGA Tour's (still uncertain) future

At the risk of whiplash, here's Shack's amusing cold open:

Over the course of 30 meetings held by the PGA Tour’s FCC—the august Future Competitions Committee—only one group conclusion could be revealed at Wednesday’s Players Championship press conference.

The concept of “scarcity” has been, uh, well, re-scarcified.

“Ultimately, scarcity is not about the number of events we have, but rather scarcity is about making every event we have matter,” PGA Tour CEO Brian Rolapp said during his televised Global Home address.

To his credit, Rolapp freely answered questions but curiously came armed to a grander setting than usual minus a single announcement—other than to confirm the precise number of meetings held to decide the Tour’s future.

“We have had more than 30 meetings across the Future Competition Committee, our working groups, player meetings, Player Advisory Council discussions, and board sessions,” he said in prepared remarks. “We have had more than 40 conversations with PGA Tour corporate partners, many of whom are in the room today. We have engaged extensively with current and prospective media partners, and we have retained experienced outside experts to help us evaluate competitive models and long-term economics.”

Apparently the key to the NFL's global dominance is endless meetings at which nothing is decided.... At least we have that going for us, but not a single firm announcement?  

The PGA Tour is splitting in two

As Golf Digest reported earlier this year, the tour’s Future Competitions Committee is deep in discussions on creating a two-track competition system. Rolapp said the first track is expected to double the current eight signature events to 16 tournaments, alongside the four majors, the Players and the postseason. Running from late January to early September, the schedule will span 21 to 26 competitions. The second track will function as a promotion-and-relegation tool, with events spread across the calendar year and into the fall. This system does not replace the Korn Ferry Tour and other PGA Tour feeder circuits, which remain intact.

"We are evaluating the role of promotion and relegation across our competitive model," Rolapp said. "We are further strengthening our merit-based system and leaning into what makes professional golf so compelling: players earning their way to the top, with every event having greater meaning."

It always has been two-tier, it's just experiencing dramatic shrinkage....  One can see the logic thereof, but it's a massive reduction of playing opportunities, which may well create a void for others to fill.

Honda will be amused by this:

One of the recurring talking points of Rolapp's tenure has been “scarcity,” widely interpreted in the industry as the elimination of events. As Golf Digest has learned, the endangered events will likely be repositioned to the second track rather than cut entirely. The system essentially formalizes what has effectively been a two-tier structure for years.

Good times.  Rolapp will need sponsor commitment, which is great as long as they didn't notice what was done to Honda.  Its reward for fifty years of sponsorship was the have the Tour put two Signature events befire it and two right after, thereby ensuring that no top 100 player could possible make it to Palm Beach Gardens.   I would have suggested a nice watch, but that's a good present as well....

Lord knows I'd hate to see them leave Memphis in August:

The tour may have new playoff sites

East Lake has hosted the season-ending Tour Championship for decades. The club has history, but it has never quite captured the imagination of the broader golf public. Rolapp was careful to say the club has been a strong partner and that the tour will likely return to Atlanta—but the finale's long-term future there is less certain.

"What we do with the postseason, we're still figuring out," Rolapp said. "There's clearly high demand in some of the discussions we've had. Some of these bigger markets would really like a postseason event. So I think everything is really on the table."

That includes the venue itself. Sources tell Golf Digest that Riviera and Pebble Beach are among the possibilities for a more recognizable final stop.

The sites are quite dreadful, but I'm thinking there's a higher priority....

This is certainly music to my ears, though deviancy has most certainly been defined downward:

No more limited fields, no cut events

One of the signature event series’ most persistent criticisms—from fans, media and players alike—has been its small-field, no-cut format, which drew unflattering comparisons to LIV Golf. Rolapp said the new top tier will feature more players and a cut.

"Our best events will have larger fields. Ideally, we are targeting something closer to 120-player fields with a cut," Rolapp said. "That consistently matters. It helps fans know who they will see and showcases who they want to see—the most competitive players. It helps partners know what they're investing in, and it helps players better understand the competitive landscape in their schedules, all while embracing meritocracy."

Yes, but they stealthily reduced this week's Players' field to that 120....That's not a full field, although 120 is a damn sight better than 70.  Maybe structuring the Tour for the benefit of Patrick Cantlay wasn't the best move....

Sponsor exemptions may be on the outs

Another source of fan frustration—one that cuts against the meritocracy ethos Rolapp keeps invoking—is the sponsor’s exemption system, along with the politics surrounding it. Rolapp appears to recognize the tension.

"It is my opinion we need a better competitive model because we should be delivering fields to the sponsors," he said. "We shouldn't make them work hard to put together a field. We're delivering them something, and they're supporting that. I think we need to be better partners in that. I also have an appreciation for the fact that professional golfers are independent contractors. So their level of job security is in some part tied to the exemptions they have earned. It's a balance. Those are all discussions we're having with the committee—to provide for those things but also deliver the purest competition that fans want."

Peter Malnati hardest hit.

Seriously, the use of the sponsors' exemptions to reward PAC members has been quite the disgusting spectacle.  Adam Scott should be ashamed of himself....

And this teaser that will never happen:

Possible match play in the playoffs

Adding match play to the Tour Championship is hardly a new idea, particularly after the tour eliminated the WGC-Match Play, yet the concept has historically been vetoed by broadcast partners wary of late-round matchups between non-marquee players. Rolapp said match play is back on the table, and possibly for the entire postseason.

“I think a lot of the motivation comes from our fans and our partners who want to see more drama in the events that they attend,” Rolapp said. “I mean, again, the sports business is not that hard; just think like a fan, and 9½ times out of 10, that's probably the right answer.”

Really?  Because its hard to intuit a focus on the fans from the Tour's last few years of changes....  But they do focus like a laser on their core business of screwing sponsors.

This whole bit of going outside the game is to me a curious thing, as Geoff had this on major-gate:

Rolapp addressed The Players-as-a-major debate, joking that his marketing department did a good job creating a conversation even if it almost unanimously produced an “are you kidding, not again” response. But he also indicated that the marketing department wasn’t exactly acting without some inspiration from the CEO.

“I’m not entirely sure how majors become majors,” he said. “The history is really interesting to study. There used to be more majors. There’s fewer majors. I think what’s important, that’s not for us to decide.”

Excuse me, exactly when were there more majors?   And, while we can agree that it's not for you to decide, it seems that you did try to decide and folks weren't amused.....Maybe you should study some actual history?  Can I suggest you start with the Western Open?  What you'll see is the organization that you now run had no respect for its own intellectual property, tossing the second oldest professional tournament in the U.S. out with the bath water.....

See if you enjoy his flailing over the essential "Tour about nothing" nature of the PGA Tour:

When answering a question about the Tour not owning any of the five biggest properties in golf, and whether any ownership stakes are in the Tour’s future, Rolapp suggested he’d like to see more “collaboration” with Augusta National, PGA of America, USGA and R&A.

“I think if you look at all of those golf organizations, at the end of the day, they are entirely financed by professional golf and professional golfers,” he said,. “So the entire ecosystem is funded by the success, or quite frankly—it wouldn’t be successful without the success of professional golf. That to me just lends that there should probably be more collaboration in that regard.” 

Collaboration sounds like someone wanting to be paid for the right to welcome his independent contractors into major championships, which (A) are totally optional to participate in, (B) are capable of raising the profiles of players more than any event owned by the PGA Tour, and (C) kindly offer exemptions to Tour players.

Yes, I'm sure Fred Ridley will appreciate the lecture.   But you need him more than he needs you.....

The one thing everyone can agree on is the hostile media environment.  Here's Rolapp:

"I've read the same reports you have—that they would like to go to the media market earlier. The U.S. media rights market is $30 billion. The NFL currently accounts for $12 billion of that. They have made their public intentions clear; they would like to double that," Rolapp said. "So if you start doing that math and you're anyone other than the National Football League, you ask yourself: Next time I go to market, how do I make sure I have the most compelling product so that we can compete in what is a very complicated media ecosystem that's changing all the time? You see fans changing their habits—television versus streaming. You see the companies and the economics of the industry changing. So it's a very dynamic time in media.

"If you are in the sports business, it behooves you to put your house in order as much as possible. That is a significant part of the work that the Future Competition Committee is doing, and it's one of the reasons why it's so important."

What a perfect fit.  The NFL wants and seems able to double their rights fees, and the PGA Tour is helpfully halving the value of its properties.  Talk about synergy....Or, dare I say, These Guys Are Good!

Jay did well to renew those contracts when he did, but next time tees up as substantially more difficult.

And can this help?

Don't expect a new schedule for 2027

There had been hope in the industry that changes would arrive as soon as next year. Last month at the Genesis Invitational, Tiger Woods moved to temper those expectations. Rolapp echoed the sentiment. Expect some adjustments in 2027—not a wholesale transformation.

"Once decisions have been made and finalized, changes will be implemented through a rolling approach," Rolapp said. "As Tiger has said recently, some elements could be addressed sooner for next season, with more significant change likely implemented for the 2028 season, pending the necessary work with our partners and other operational considerations.

"This is a complex process with many constituencies impacted. We will continue to move with urgency, but we are focused on getting it right."

No hurry, boys.

In a separate post, Geoff gives Rolapp a To-Do list, including this bit:

Acquire the Ryder Cup. The Tour has never been in a better position to strong-arm the PGA of America into selling the event. Or at the very least, increasing the Tour’s ownership stake. The Ryder Cup needs the PGA Tour’s players who’ve already shown they’re willing to take a PR hit over money. So a sell-or-boycott threat might not be the disaster it seems. Especially if it leads to a huge acquisition and more autonomy.

So Rolapp wants to simultaneously declare the Players a major (thereby devaluing the least valuable major, the PGA Championship, demand more cooperation from the PGA of America and force it to divest the Ryder Cup?  Good luck with all that.... Yes, they need the PGA Tour players, but I'm sure the LIV guys would be willing to step in.   I mean, what's a Ryder Cup without Talor Gooch?

Wither Tiger - Color me surprised that Luke Donald is up for the hat trick, but is Tiger not the biggest of all possible dicks?

From that first Shack post, let's lede with what he caused in 2025:


“Two years ago, long before Keegan Bradley was called up out of the blue and offered the US captain’s role, Woods publicly pontificated before delivering the slow ‘no’,” he writes. “Nothing much went right for the PGA of America thereafter. Bethpage was a calamity for the hosts on and off the course.”

But Murray also provided Tiger with a dose of Stephen Ames-adjacent bulletin board inspiration.

“Woods’s procrastination does not bode well for the US. Far from providing dramatic effect, it makes their Ryder Cup cohort look unsure. It also makes little sense. This fuels the theory that Adare Manor and an away Ryder Cup (a domain in which Americans have a dismal record) holds little appeal to someone so obsessed with winning. Woods will be well aware he could be shown up by the detail-obsessed Luke Donald.”

Well, it's a little hard to understand what the man wants, because the lack of appeal of Adare should have motivated him to take the captaincy at Bethpage, no?

My thoughts are more along the lines that his relationship with JP McManus makes him want the Aare Manor gig, but of course there needs to be something special in it for him.  More to the point, even if he isn't captain, why wasn't he at Bethpage?  The obvious answer is telling, that he's not a team player and he holds himself apart and above the other guys.  

Your country needs you, Tiger.  Can you fit it into your schedule, or are those LIV negotiations still all-consuming?

What an all-time, self-important D**k!

This was the amusing to-and-from JT's presser:

Q. Curious, have you had any formal or official discussions with anyone about being the next Ryder Cup captain? And specifically I guess along those same lines, would any of them have been Tiger?

JUSTIN THOMAS: Have I personally?

Q. Right. I mean, with the group or what you, just I don’t even know if there is a formal thing that would occur, but...

JUSTIN THOMAS: Yeah, I’m on the Ryder Cup Committee, yeah. Yeah, we’ve had some conversations, but those are all personal within the Committee.

Q. What are you expecting as far as when there might be a resolution, if you can even say?

JUSTIN THOMAS: Yeah, I think it’s just kind of wait. We wait and see.

That has to be weird.  JT is still all-in on the Ryder Cup, but his a******e buddy just can't be bothered..... And he won't even show up.

Wither Rory - Yeah, it was just precautionary, until it wasn't:

The reigning champion of The Players Championship has officially made it to the PGA Tour's
flagship event during the afternoon of March 11.

McIlroy was spotted by Golfweek's Adam Schupak arriving at The Players Stadium Course, fewer than 24 hours before his scheduled first competitive round. He was heading into the clubhouse.

He withdrew from the Arnold Palmer due to a bad back, marking only the second WD in his PGA Tour career.

McIlroy is set to tee off at 1:42 p.m. ET Thursday off the first, playing alongside Xander Schauffele and Hideki Matsuyama. It's hard to imagine McIlroy not giving it a go this week, but if his back doesn't cooperate, he may not be able to defend his title.

It's being characterized as a game time decision....

Should be a great week, with or without Rory.  Enjoy, and I'll look forward to wrapping it with you on Monday. 

Monday, March 9, 2026

Weekend Wrap - Where You Been Edition

 Well, the easy answer is British Columbia.....

And, in case you're interested, it was unbelievable.  In general, the ski world has endured the Season From Hell this year, and we should anticipate all sorts of water-related issues this summer, not least wild fires.  But, unlike last year, the heli really delivered, three magical days that salavaged our ski season.

No one has yet looked at our primary video, taken on this fancy camera, but I have a couple of cellphone videos to give you a sense of the scale: 

No need to watch the skier, just focus on where I'm skiing....

And here's one of a typical pick-up.  The Ubers come in hot:


The issue is the vulnerability of the helos when on the ground.  All is done to limit that duration.

I feel that I should try to get back to this blogging thing, especially as it's fifth-of-four week once again.  I'll throw some words up today, and commit to a return visit later in the week as well.  It can't be Wednesday, so circle Thursday or Friday on your calendars.

The Arnie - It was Daniel Berger's week, at least until it wasn't, quite the shame given that it would have been a great moment for a Jewish winner on Tour.  Of course, golf remains hard and winning on Tour nearly impossible, so let's see what Shack has to say:

Turns out, the demise of Bay Hill’s greens was greatly exaggerated.

The TifEagle Bermuda complexes were as fast as Riviera’s a few weeks ago, minus the ocean influence and subtle pitches. Still, the overseed-free surfaces in Orlando served up a combo
platter of speed, firmness, and life-support yellow to demonstrate—yet again—how much more fun golf viewing is when there’s a little sizzle offsetting the power of today’s pasture-raised, lean-chicken eating superheroes.

Akshay Bhatia and Daniel Berger were up to a task that felled bigger names, setting up Sunday’s two-man battle for the Arnold Palmer Invitational Presented By Mastercard. The two feistiest players of the week ended up in the tournament’s first playoff since 1999. There, they decided who’d be putting on the red cardigan, and it was ultimately Bhatia overcoming a five-stroke deficit with nine to go. He won with a two-putt par on the first hole of sudden death.

Yeah, they whined up a storm about those greens.  What does this portend?  Well, Christmas notwithstanding, it so happens that red and green don't mesh all that well:

I’m not sure if Bhatia’s performance portends to amazing things in Augusta since Bay Hill has never been a great predictor of Masters fate. But you can’t discount what Bhatia did on such firm, fast greens that had bigger names shaking their heads and waving white flags under “major-like” conditions.

The same goes for Berger, who almost had the first wire-to-wire win at the API since Jason Day in 2016. He performed far better in Strokes Gained tee-to-green (10.804/1st) and Strokes Gained: Approach the Green (7.914/1st) and would have grabbed an automatic invite into the Masters had he won. As a consolation prize, the 32-year-old receives the Open Qualifying Series spot into the 154th at Royal Birkdale. He will also jump from 61st in the world into the top 50, improving his chances of reaching The Masters via the March 30th OWGR top 50 cutoff.

It's supposed to be one of the Tour's most important events, yet its significance seems limited to seeding the field for April.  

In fact, the events was of such import that it fails to gain a mention in this week's Tour Confidential roundtable.  Mr. Rolapp will not be pleased.  At least Shack has a little more that highlights pre-Augusta form (or the lack thereof):

Also…
  • Ludvig Ã…berg (T3/-12) recorded his best finish since winning the 2025 Genesis at Torrey Pines and his first top-10 since the 2025 BMW Championship (T7). He was strong in all statistical categories, including gaining 5.361 strokes approaching the greens as he heads to TPC Sawgrass and next month, The Masters. Look out.
  • With a final round 73, Scottie Scheffler (T24/-2) recorded his first finish outside the top 20 since the 2025 WM Phoenix Open (T25). For those with Magnolia Lane in mind, Scheffler’s approach play struggles continued: he lost nearly three strokes at the API approaching the greens, hitting just 44 of 72 greens and averaging a mediocre-by-his-standards 39’4” on his approaches (31st).
  • Rory McIlroy withdrew ahead of the third round due to a back injury. “While warming up in the gym this morning, I felt a small twinge in my back,” he said in a statement. “As I started hitting balls on the range before the round, it worsened and developed into muscle spasms in my lower back. Unfortunately, I’m not able to continue and have to withdraw. I was excited to compete this weekend. I wish the Arnold Palmer Invitational a great finish and look forward to being back next year.”
McIlroy was T9 (72-68) after 36 holes. It was just the second time he’s withdrawn from a PGA Tour event. The last time was in 2013’s Honda Classic. He is still scheduled to defend his title at this week’s Players Championship.
  • Jim Furyk had a strong four days as the lead analyst on Golf Channel’s coverage of the API. The former U.S. Open champion and Ryder Cup captain has an easy-on-the-ear approach and was not shy about offering insights, opinions, and background on players without trying too hard to show he came prepared. If he wants to do it more often, he’s got a nice future in broadcasting. Furyk will again work this week’s Players.

 That's OK, JT, we didn't miss you either....

Scottie seems quite off his feed, and crankier than I can remember seeing him.  As for Alas, Poor Furyk, I can only assume that Geoff listened in at different times than your humble blogger.  What I heard was hesitating and trite, not that we should overinterpret his first week's work.  I just didn't sense anything deeper, and he's hardly the guy that will amuse us....

Red On Red - Strange times, my friends.... Jon Rahm, in a prior lifetime, was one of the more thoughtful and historically-knowledgeable players on Tour.  He made the most lucid argument for not cashing the LIV check, then did just that apparently under the influence of mushrooms or the like, deluding himself that his defection alone would require the tours to reunite.  How's that working out, Jon?

Then the DP World Tour offers LIV defectors a deal to reclaim their Euro Trash membership, thereby ensuring 2027 Ryder Cup eligibility.  Eight of the nine players eligible immediately accept said offer, you'll quickly have sussed out the one outlier.  One assumes reasonable folks can disagree, but is Mr. Rahm being reasonable?

‘They’re extorting players’: Jon Rahm slams DP World Tour over demands he refused

Extortion?   You work for folks that settle minor disputes with bonecutters, but those guys in Virginia Water are beyond the pale?  

I'll allow the aforementioned TC panel to pick things up here:

Rory McIlroy sounded none too impressed by Jon Rahm’s decision to decline a DP World Tour deal that would have given Rahm a path back to DP World Tour membership and
2027 Ryder Cup eligibility. Rahm maintained that he should not be forced to play more than four DP tournaments this season instead of the six the tour is mandating (“I think we should be able to freely play where we want and have the choice to play where we want and not be dictated what we do,” Rahm said). But McIlroy countered that the tour’s offer was generous, and “there’s a reason that eight of the nine [LIV players] took it, because they probably think the same thing. And one guy thinks a little differently, and that’s a shame.” Who’s right here?

Sean Zak: McIlroy is right. The DPWT offer is plenty generous. But if we really look at Rahm’s commitment to that tour over the years, it hasn’t been six events. It has often been three or four non-major events each year. I think we’re just learning he isn’t that crazy about helping the DPWT in ways his platform could, which is entirely his right. But the DPWT is also within its rights to uphold its rules and withhold its Ryder Cup if necessary.

Dylan Dethier: Yeah, to Sean’s point, Rahm has the right to protect his time, he has the right to spend off weeks at home and he has the right to try to outmaneuver the DP World Tour, knowing what he brings to the table. But Rahm’s suggestion that the DP World Tour should just let LIV guys come and go as they please, all while LIV continues to double down as a direct competitor for DPWT’s players and markets? I don’t think that checks out. There’s a collision coming here that’s bigger than just Rahm, but this may accelerate the clash.

Josh Sens: Rahm has the right to his choice and Rory is right to call it “a shame.” So many of the tensions and troubles in professional golf have to do with balancing the rights of the individual against the collective good. What Rahm is being asked to sacrifice seems, from the outside, to be minor in the grand scheme. But he sees it as “extortion.” It goes to show that when you are accustomed to extravagant privilege, reasonable requests seem like an imposition. It’s a bummer for fans. And not great for Rahm’s reputation either.

Sure, he's got a right to protect his valuable time, but he's so excessively entitled that he refuses to acknowledge that the Euro Tour has a business to protect.  It's the anger that's so off-putting, making it easy to conclude that maybe he's been spending too much time with Phil.

There's a zero probability that Rahm wont be at Adare Manor.  The players just seem committed to ensure that we hate each and every one of them before the game gets reunited.  You know who's looking good these days?  Yup, when Patrick reed is the adult in the room....

Venue Musings -  JT had a great thought..... I mean, great as long as you don't inconvenience yourself with reality.....

As Jon Rahm’s Ryder Cup situation festers and the European Tour Group tussles with one of their stars, Justin Thomas accidentally reminded the world what we’ve been deprived of in the name of…money.

It’s a touchy one that Europeans never want to hear about. Or worse, turns into a lecture about how the Ryder Cup funds all they do, as if the DP World Tour is primarily a humanitarian operation that just happens to play golf tournaments, too.

“St Andrews, I think, is gold,” Thomas said on the latest episode of The Smylie Show. “I would love—I just don’t see how it’s physically possible—but somehow, someway, for a Ryder Cup at St Andrews,” the two-time PGA champion said.

“There’s no way that could happen, but could you just imagine how sick that would be, and matches somehow coming down the Road Hole and coming down to 18? It would be epic, just so epic.”

It would be and it was for that recent Walker Cup..... 

Actually, as The Quad laid out a few years ago, it can work and work better than a 144-player stroke play event. The hole sequencing, the strategies involved, and the footprint seen during massive Opens in St Andrews prove the Old Course is a better course and likely as lucrative as any course currently scheduled to host the Ryder Cup. The 2023 Walker Cup demonstrated how incredible the Old Course can be when it’s the third protagonist in a high-stakes match.

OMG, it could be so epic my head is about to explode.... Just this reality thing intrudes.

Hope you're in a calm place as Geoff lowers the hammer on our dreams:

Only one thing is preventing epic scenes of watching multiple matches out by the Eden Estuary. Or the dream scenario Thomas outlined: a Ryder Cup coming down to the Road hole on a crisp mid-September day.

Money.

You know, the very thing 2025’s European team did not need to turn up at Bethpage. And the same hurdle that’s driving the stalemate with Rahm. The tour wants its fine money and Rahm to play two events of their choosing because he took LIV money.

Europe’s Ryder Cup model relies on a lavish package of government and course owner incentives to land the event. Typically, a few years of a forgettable DP World Tour stop are thrown in so everyone can study the forgettably overbuilt stinkers that only a Ryder Cup can make people pay to play.

Does anyone really want to go back to The Belfry, K Club, Celtic Manor, the PGA Centenary at Gleneagles, or in 2031, a real estate development called Camiral Golf & Wellness? (At least Versailles’ Le Golf National and Rome’s Marco Simone were redesigned with match play in mind, while 2027’s Adare Manor exudes none of the commercial desperation seen with past rich-guy places.)

All we need to remind ourselves is that they've taken the event to Ireland twice  in recent years, but haven't sniffed the coast.

Here's Geoff's rousing Coda:

St Andrews lacks a wealthy benefactor looking to juice real estate sales or fill up a resort by hosting a Ryder Cup. The town already has a DP World Tour stop, the annual Alfred Dunhill Links. Its Links Trust operation has a full tee sheet, thriving golf economy, and a date with The Open every five years.

So if the Europeans want to prove that they’re not about the money, how about a 2035 Ryder Cup in St Andrews? It would fall between Opens in 2032 and 2037. Even better, Justin Thomas will be 41 and probably ready to accept an inevitable Captaincy. He’ll sing the praises of St Andrews and the European Tour Group for prioritizing venue over vig.

Otherwise, spare us the lectures next time there’s the temptation to jump on those high horses and single out Legion XIII’s Jon Rahm.

Before LIV, there was perhaps a chance that this could have happened.  But now the Euro Tour is such a weakened entity that they not only need the cash, they need it years in advancew.

But let me cheer you up.  There's a non-trivial chance that the Saudis end up controlling the Euro Tour, so that 2035 Ryder Cup is less likely to be on the Old Course and more likely to find a home at Saudi Greens.

But lest you spiral into a profound depression, here's some venue news to cheer our souls.  In a separate post, Geoff informs us of this recent USGA venue update:

Inverness will host the 145th U.S. Open in 2045. It will be the first U.S. Open at the Toledo, Ohio gem since Hale Irwin’s win in 1979. Designed by Donald Ross, the club was already scheduled to host the 2027 U.S. Women’s Open Presented by Ally and the 2029 U.S. Amateur. Inverness was also awarded the 2033 U.S. Girls’ Junior and the 2036 U.S. Women’s Amateur.

National Golf Links of America will host the 2040 Walker Cup, a decade after hosting the previously-announced 2030 Curtis Cup. NGLA most recently hosted the 2013 Walker Cup.

Cypress Point Club has been awarded the 2042 Curtis Cup and 2048 Walker Cup after successfully hosting last year’s incredible Walker Cup.

Seminole Golf Club will host the 2046 Curtis Cup and 2052 Walker Cup following 2021’s mostly incredible, non-Breakers food-for-the-teams, Walker Cup.

Inverness is great, but those following three take your humble blogger's breath away.

Let you heart be light feasting on these names:

Future Curtis Cup Sites
2026 – Bel Air Country Club, Los Angeles, Calif.
2028 – Royal Dornoch, Dornoch, Scotland
2030 – National Golf Links of America, Southampton, N.Y.
2034 – Pine Valley Golf Club, Pine Hills, N.J.
2038 – Bandon Dunes Golf Resort, Bandon, Ore.
2042 – Cypress Point Club, Pebble Beach, Calif.
2046 – Seminole Golf Club, Juno Beach, Calif.

Future Walker Cup Sites
2026 – Lahinch, County Clare, Republic of Ireland
2028 – Bandon Dunes Golf Resort, Bandon, Ore.
2030 – Prince’s Golf Club, Kent, England
2032 – Oakmont Country Club, Oakmont, Pa.
2036 – Chicago Golf Club, Wheaton, Ill.
2040 – National Golf Links of America, Southampton, N.Y.
2044 – Pine Valley Golf Club, Pine Hill, N.J.
2048 – Cypress Point Club, Pebble Beach, Calif.
2052 – Seminole Golf Club, Juno Beach, Calif.

I can't find a clunker on that list..... Dornoch?  Pine Valley?  geez, be still my foolish heart!

That will have t be it for today.  Do we think I'm showing any skill at this blogging thing?  Shall I give it another go later in the week?

Have a great week and I'm glad to be home and back with you.

 

Monday, February 9, 2026

Weekend Wrap - Gotterdämmerup Edition

Hey kids, did that header pun work for you?  I haven't been much of a blogger recently, but one does like the cheap puns, no?

Shall I give you the bad schedule news now, or save it for the close?  Yeah, no sense depressing you before its necessary.

Wasted Words - I went with Norse Mythology above and an Allman Brothers reference here, hope you've kept up.  Maybe we'll get to some golf as well.  Golfweek played it thusly:

With late birdie binge, Chris Gotterup steals Phoenix Open in playoff

He finished on a heater, yet that somehow isn't the image we're all left with.  Golf Digest apparently can handle the truth:

Chris Gotterup benefits from Hideki Matsuyama’s meltdown in Phoenix, collects second win of season

Hey, Hideki might have coughed up the win, but that was the best 18th tee Mito Pereira impression evah!

Since we're in dueling header mode, my sense is that Geoff worked a little too hard for this one:

Weekend: Gotterup Continues To (Phoenix) Rise

A little from that Golweek game piece:

Chris Gotterup birdied five of the six last holes on Sunday and added one more for good measure in a sudden-death playoff to win the WM Phoenix Open over Japan’s Hideki Matsuyama.

"To come out on top and do it the way I did in the playoff was awesome," he said.

Gotterup closed in 7-under 64, making nine birdies on the day at TPC Scottsdale’s Stadium Course to win for the second time on the PGA Tour in the first four tournaments of the season. Less than a month ago, he won the season-opener, the Sony Open in Hawaii.

It happened because Matsuyama fought a two-way miss with his driver in the final round, failing to hit a fairway on the front nine. Asked earlier in the week why he loved the TPC Scottsdale course, he said, "I like this course because even if I miss a fairway, I can still find my ball. Unless it's in the cactuses."

The cactuses or the Church Pews or the Agua....

I watched a bunch of it, flipping back and forth to catch the Quad God and the like.  I'm not sure how much of that fast finish CBS actually showed, as Gotterup was well out of the mix, until he wasn't.

It was all a bit of a yawn.  The best part was watching Scottie work his way back into the mix, missing the playoff by one shot, while playing as sloppily as you'll ever see.  But much as they hype the 16th hole, even on Saturday the party atmosphere is feeling increasingly forced.

The is quite obviously one of the more unique weeks on Tour, though the field seemed even weaker than is typical.  Phoenix and its organizers deserve all sorts of credit for taking on the NFL, making Super Bowl weekend work.  That said, color your Humble Blogger bored....

In the current schedule configuration, they're in a no-win spot, with Signature Events the two succeeding weeks limiting their ability to attract a strong field.  That may well change to their benefit as the Tour contracts further, there was even some chatter about the Wasted being the season-opening event.   Right now, even with the entire East Coast snowed in, it's a big ask getting eyeballs to the broadcast.

There's a wee little story I want to work in, especially since it includes some journalistic malpractice.  Did you happen to see Hideki have to step away a couple of times late Sunday as fans attempted to disrupt him?  

First, this is the header from the Golfweek home page:

To yell at fans?  Does that sound right to you? The article itself makes far more sense:

Influencer ejected from Phoenix Open after paying fan to yell at players

The underlying incident seems to have been directed at Mackenzie Hughes, but the idiot takes some fun incoming.  But, combined with the assault of gambling opportunities, comportment among galleries will not be getting any better soon.

That concludes our obligatory coverage.  Shall we get to the fun stuff?

OWGR, M-O-U-S-E - How great is this story?  They're finally granted OWGR points, and they couldn't be more pissed....  I'll make things easy and just riff off this week's Tour Confidential panel:

After years of battling for valuable World Rankings points, the OWGR announced it had
accepted LIV Golf’s application for membership and the league will receive points effective immediately. Although since the OWGR said LIV fits into the “small-field tournaments” classification, it will only be awarded points for top-10 finishers and ties. In its own statement, LIV said, “a player finishing 11th in a LIV Golf event is treated the same as a player finishing 57th” and that this “disproportionately harms players who consistently perform at a high level but finish just outside that threshold.” How would you untangle this?

Zephyr Melton: Afraid that one is above my pay grade. But I will say that LIV should be ecstatic with this result. The depth of fields has never been the league’s strong suit, but they’ve always had some solid top talent. With this result, the big guns (Rahm, DeChambeau, Hatton, Niemann) will finally get some points and have an easier time getting into majors. Seems like as good a result as they could’ve hoped for.

Josh Schrock: I don’t feel it needs untangling. LIV should be thrilled it got recognition from the OWGR board. It should allow its best players to hoover up the same number of points given out at an opposite-field event. Elvis Smylie received more points for winning LIV Riyadh than Patrick Reed did for winning in Qatar. It seems fair given all of the other things the OWGR board noted, including selecting members for the tour “based on their nationality and not meritocratic reasons.”

Dylan Dethier: These points are a big, big deal. There would be relatively few points available outside the top 10 anyway, so — despite the grievance note — what they got far, far outweighs what they didn’t. LIV’s young stars now have a legitimate pathway to climbing the ranks and playing their way into majors. For the likes of David Puig, Tom McKibbin and Elvis Smylie (plus more established pros like Joaquin Niemann) that’s a potential game-changer.

This to me is delightfully schadenfreudalicious.  They've blamed all their problems on the absence of OWGR points, and now all will see that, even welcomed back into the warm embrace of collectivism, LIV Golf still sucks.  Who could have seen that coming?

World Ranking points are valuable pathways for LIV players to earn entry into major championships. But is last week’s news — and the points distribution — enough to lure players to LIV who were already on the fence about their major eligibility?

Melton: Perhaps, but with the PIF seemingly restricting the LIV budget of late, I’m not sure the massive paydays from yesteryear are still viable. Would a big name be willing to jump to LIV without a Rahm-like signing bonus? I’m not so sure.

Schrock: I doubt it. They might be able to lure one or two younger players who might have been on the fence but I don’t think another big name jumps unless the PIF decides to loosen the belt a bit.

Dethier: If you’re an established PGA Tour star, probably not. But LIV has picked up some young talents from outside the U.S. and that particular profile of player could be pushed over the edge by this decision. LIV and the DP World Tour continue to be on a collision course — competing for players, for regions, for legitimacy as the “World Tour” and now for points, too. More to come on that subject.

It's a big breakthrough for LIV, but the larger context is turning the other direction.  I was horrified by Michael LaSasso's decision to join LIV, which absent this change would have left him likely unable to play in the majors.  That said, it still feels like anyone inclined to that model, would have already cashed a check.  It also doesn't help that so many of those who jumped have appeared to regret their decisions.

Speaking of which, it seems a strange time to be saying things like this:

Bryson DeChambeau offers ominous criticism of LIV change: ‘Didn’t sign up to play for 72’

 If you're a young up-and-comer, do you want to sign on with the tour's biggest star sounding like this:

That new pathway back to the Tour was open only to Koepka and three other LIV stars: Jon Rahm, Cameron Smith and DeChambeau.

While all of them confirmed they would reject the PGA Tour’s offer, DeChambeau’s reaction was notable for its tone and brevity.

“I mean, look, I’m contracted through 2026, so I’m excited about this year,” DeChambeau said at the time. But anyone who watches the video would struggle to describe Bryson’s demeanor as “excited.”

Most striking was what he did not say. He did not offer a fully-throated defense of the league, nor did he commit to playing LIV beyond 2026.

But in his recent interview with Today’s Golfer, DeChambeau went a step further, openly criticizing the league for its recent format change.

He continued: “Look, it’s 72 holes, it’s changed, but we’re still excited to play professionally and play for what we’re doing and go across the world. I think it’s going to be great for our team.”

He then added a second criticism of the 72-hole format shift.

“Is it what we ultimately signed up for? No. So I think we’re supposed to be different, so I’m a little indifferent to it right now. Hopefully it weighs positively on me over the course of time, but you never know,” DeChambeau said ominously, “I’m not sure. We didn’t sign up to play for 72.”

Why wouldn't you sue, Bryson?  It's gonna be the civil rights issue of our era...

Fifth Of Four, Revisited -  There's not much that the PGA Tour has done the last few years that your humble blogger likes, but today's laughs come at the expense of the one event they haven't screwed up... at least not yet.

We haven't had a good belly laugh from Ponte Vedra Beach since they astutely replaced These Guys Are Good™ with the lame Live Under Par™, but see how you react to this:


Again?

Shall we let Geoff run with this?

The PGA Tour signals for The Players to be seen as a major. The move will only backfire and expose a thirst for profit over common sense.

Declaring you’re cool?

You’re not cool.

Reminding people that you’re a major championship?

You’re not a major.

And if you have to unleash an orchestrated ad campaign that’s immediately endorsed by eager-to-shill propaganda partners?

You’re not even close to becoming a major.

Despite a solid start to the 2026 season and one of the PGA Tour’s more iconic events playing out in sunny Scottsdale with a fun Sunday awaiting, the Tour launched a new ad campaign to pimp March’s Players Championship.

One of the risks in bringing in non-golf insiders is that they may not know how prior Tour administrations have embarrassed themselves....

 We'll let Geoff have his fun:

The slogan might have been chalked up to a simple alliterative choice featuring “M” words. But then there were the signs of a coordinated hype campaign, complete with supportive affirmation from Tour toadies that suggested otherwise. The hard sell was all capped off by confirming comments from an unnamed Tour spokesperson in response to Golf Digest’s Shane Ryan.

“Fans and players have long discussed THE PLAYERS Championship’s status as a major. We understand that is not for us to decide. Ultimately it is up to our sport and its fans to recognize what the professionals who play the game already know.”

Yes, everyone knows: The Players is a very fine tournament generally held back by identity issues and deep insecurity from never being considered better than one of the big four.

Also? Real majors never need ALL CAPS to let you know they’re majors.

And he even gets one more dig in at their edifice complex:

Ever since? The vision has been inconsistent. They’ve overseeded the place, then converted the whole thing to modern Bermuda, and are now back to drenching the place with water and ryegrass in a bid to look more like a certain tournament in April. They’ve harvested deep rough, cut it back to get balls rolling into the pine scrub, and seen the effort at restoring some of the crunchiness undone by all the EVP cooks who wanted to see emerald green on TV.

They also went from a modest, disguised-into-the-landscape clubhouse that put the course and players forward, to a gaudy Mediterranean-ish castle designed by Lord Farquaad.

Google it if you're not familiar with the reference.

The TC gang has thoughts:

The ‘major’ debate surfaced again last week, when the PGA Tour released a Players Championship promotion with the tagline: “March is going to be major.” When asked for comment, the Tour told GOLF.com, “Fans and players have long discussed THE PLAYERS Championship’s status as a major. We understand that is not for us to decide. Ultimately it is up to our sport and its fans to recognize what the professionals who play the game already know.” [Eds note: the Players, by definition, is not a major.] Any thoughts on the peculiar messaging around this?

Melton: The Tour is simply doing its job in promoting its biggest event. Does declaring the Players a major make it one? No — but you can’t fault the Tour for trying.

Schrock: The PGA Tour doesn’t own the five most important events in golf. They are promoting their flagship product. Can the Players be made into a major? Probably not, but the majors as we know them weren’t “majors” until Arnold Palmer basically created the idea in the 1960s. The tournaments existed but the idea of a “major” or the “grand slam” could have meant any number of things until Palmer said he wanted to win the Open Championship and PGA Championship to have a “grand slam” of his own after winning the Masters and U.S. Open. Majors can be created and deleted. The PGA Tour might as well try.

Dethier: I went deep on this exact subject here, but one feeling I can’t shake is that there should be four major championships. Five per year suddenly messes up history and the entire idea of the Grand Slam, which is a big deal in contextualizing great golfers. The Players has hit its stride in recent years as the PGA Tour’s greatest event. If it’s going to become a major it needs to stage a duel to replace one rather than add a fifth.

Zephyr, if the Players is their biggest event, where does that leave the FedEx Playoffs?

To this observer, rekindling this debate only serves to remind us all of the fact that the Tour doesn't own or control the events that folks care most about, so how is that helpful to PVB?  

Dylan, I agree fully, but I'm guessing you have an incoming call from....Evian?  But could there be a another context here.  Riffing on Dylan, which major would the Players most like replace?  Well, there's little doubt which is the weakest, the one that the Players keeps moving to accommodate.  I'm thinking this might be best understood as a warning shot across the bow of the good ship Frisco...

Of course, Brandel has to bloviate:

Days later, Brandel Chamblee created headlines when he said the Players has the best and deepest field in golf and is “the hardest major championship to win,” adding: “the Players, to me, stands alone and above the other four major championships as not just a major, it is in my estimation, the best major.” What is going on here?

Melton: Ok this one was definitely strange. I can see an argument for making the Players a major, but to say it’s “the best” major? Now that’s a hot take. Credit to Brandel for sticking his neck out there, but I’m gonna have to disagree.

Schrock: He honestly kind of lost me with the argument that because “Live From” broadcasts at majors and the Players, it makes the Players a major. I’ll listen to an argument that the Players is more of a major than the PGA, but Brandel lost me with his soliloquy. But it got people talking!

Dethier: Brandel is a provocative thinker and talker. When he’s on TV he has my attention. And some of his nuance got lost with this headline-grabbing declaration. With that said — I think this pretty clearly misses the mark. A better major than the brawny, epic U.S. Open? Than the vaunted, iconic Masters? Than the Open Championship and its 150-year history? The cover ruins the book for me here.

The case that the Players has the best field in golf is a serious one, it just unfortunately is an argument that has been thoroughly adjudicated previously.  There's no new information that's changed its status, except perhaps for its fields getting weaker due to the LIV defections.

But, if we're doing field strength, lets do the Signature Events next, then the Masters.

Eamon Lynch weighs in as well, though his characteristic pyrotechnics mask what I feel is a highly flawed argument:

Lynch: The Players isn’t a major and won’t be, unless the PGA Tour makes a big move — literally

Since they’re new to golf, it’s possible that the PGA Tour’s CEO, Brian Rolapp, and his investors think the “March is going to be major” campaign constitutes artful marketing, rather than pointless pot-stirring that’s wearisome even to golf nerds, a clot usually eager to fight duels over esoterica.

The specific pot being stirred is whether The Players should be considered a major alongside the four accepted championships. If golf was like marathoning, it could be decided by fiat. For many years, the World Marathon Majors included six races: Tokyo, Boston, London, Berlin, Chicago and New York. Then, in late 2024, Sydney was added, a tough pill for runners who’d achieved a lifetime goal of completing the original half-dozen. That change was possible because one entity could make the call.

I might have gone with LPGA, but whatever....

The most compelling rationale for major status is that least frequently offered: the political one. All of the most powerful bodies in golf own a major championship, except the organization that’s arguably the most influential — the PGA Tour. But even that position has a convincing counter argument in this Balkanized era: an event that excludes superstars like Bryson DeChambeau, Jon Rahm and Talor Gooch as a matter of policy has no legitimate claim on major status.

Gee, Eamon, where is Talor Gooch playing these days?

If the Tour and its investors are hung up on not owning any of the sport’s five biggest titles (including the Ryder Cup), there are only two options: they can acquire a major or take steps to make fans concede that they already have one. Buying the PGA Championship might have seemed plausible of late, but less so since the PGA of America has hired a seasoned executive as CEO while simultaneously seeming to enjoin its most buffoonish liability to silence. So, how to convince folks that The Players deserves even greater stature than it already deservedly enjoys? Certainly not via the ham-fisted marketing the Tour has tried for years, which serves only to harden opinion against elevated status.

One move that might possibly sway golf fans on the subject is a literal move: take The Players on the road. The notion of a major that travels to established and growing regions of the world has been mooted for years, usually in the context of wondering how the PGA Championship can escape its standing as the runt of the litter. But the PGA of America is a parochial organization in its membership, culture, ambition and administration. The PGA Tour, on the other hand, has reason to build its business beyond U.S. borders and to better leverage its strategic partnership with the globe-trotting DP World Tour. Instead of quibbling about whether an existing major can be mobile, perhaps the answer lies in The Players becoming a major because it is portable.

 This strikes me as quite silly, but let's let Eamon give the yang to the above yin:

The Tour’s flagship event could go global on alternate years. One year at its traditional home of TPC Sawgrass, the next at Royal Melbourne or Durban Country Club or Koninklijke Haagsche (that’s not an ice cream brand, Brian). Let it be golf’s first truly global competition — two of the last five “international” Presidents Cup venues have been within walking distance of the U.S. border — with an elite, deep field that isn’t dependent on a couple of guys paid appearance fees.

Even cynical fans would see enormous value — perhaps even major value — in an event that takes golf’s gospel to venues, audiences and countries long underserved. Making The Players mobile would come with costs that the Tour would probably be unwilling to countenance, however, like smaller viewership due to time zone changes and the likelihood of reduced revenues.

Like so much else being considered these days in Ponte Vedra, it’s tough to balance tradition, fan enthusiasm, cost effectiveness, revenue generation, investor returns, player entitlement and obligations to the broader golf ecosystem. In which case, the Tour might conclude that the status quo ain’t all that bad.

The status quo is pretty damn good, though the amusement comes from the Tour's unhappiness with this successful event.

To me, the event succeeds for two simple reasons:

  1. It's the Players' Championship, appropriately played at the Tour's home in PVB, and;
  2. The Frigging Golf Course.  The event is the course and the course is the event, and disconnect the two at your peril.
It's a great event, one of the few Tour events that still has merit.  It's just sad the Tour can't be content, given that it doesn't solve all their other problems.  Eamon's arguments work far better if applied to the PGA Championship, which has no compelling reason to even exist.

The Bad News - Is March good for you guys?

For those that remember last winter, it's deja vu all over again.  My brother, nephew and I are headed back to British Columbia for another skiing adventure, one that hopefully will go a little better for your humble blogger than last year.  BC is one of the few places that this winter has actually seen snow, though one senses that our arrival will be the cue to turn off the faucet.

I'll leave you with this video of my hotshot nephew from last winter:


No need to share the video of me.

I get home on March 3rd, and blogging will resume thereafter.  Have a great few weeks.