The PGA Tour’s schedule highlights new reality

Irish Golfer & GOLF.com
|
|

Lucas Glover (Photo by Keyur Khamar/PGA TOUR via Getty Images)

Irish Golfer & GOLF.com

Feature Interviews

Latest Stories

Lucas Glover won’t join the PGA Tour’s Policy Board as a player director until 2027, but the former U.S. Open champion is already aware of the conversations underway about the reshaped schedule that CEO Brian Rolapp just revealed.

At last week’s Travelers Championship, Rolapp unveiled the sweeping changes that were ratified by the membership. The changes are set to begin in 2028. (GOLF.com’s Sean Zak has a detailed breakdown that you can find here.) The PGA Tour will adopt a two-track system in 2028. Track 1, the Championship Series, will have roughly 130 players who will play for $20 million purses. Track 2, the Challenger Series, will have substantially more players competing for purses of around $4 million. Which tournaments will be Tier 1 and which will be Tier 2 are still being ironed out, but the changes come with a number of sticking points depending on which part of the PGA Tour membership you are talking to.

One of the biggest is the expected rule that players on the Championship Series will not be allowed to drop down and play in Challenger Series events. Jordan Spieth said that would create a “strange” situation in which players who win Challenger Series events would likely be unable to defend their titles the following season after being promoted to Track 1.

Glover knows there are many players, including himself, who will want to play in Track 2 events because of their location or their personal connection to the tournament.

“That was a very, very, very hot topic on the PAC and amongst the [policy board] from what I understand,” Glover said on Thursday at the John Deere Classic. “I don’t go on the board until next year. I’m used to having a home tournament. So many guys live in the West Palm area. So many guys live in Scottsdale. So many guys live in Dallas. That was a tough one.”

Glover is referring to The Cognizant Classic (West Palm), the CJ Cup Byron Nelson (Dallas), the Charles Schwab Challenge (Fort Worth) and the WM Phoenix Open (Scottsdale) as tournaments that have a large number of PGA Tour pros living in their areas. World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler makes the CJ Cup Byron Nelson an annual stop. A number of PGA Tour stars used to make the Cognizant Classic, formerly the Honda Classic, a regular stop before the Signature Event model and schedule alterations post-LIV’s arrival made it a tough tournament to play in. Those thin fields have left the Cognizant in a precarious position as the new schedule arrives in 2028.

Glover and many other pros would be more than willing to forgo playing in a big-money Tier 1 event for the ability to play in a Tier 2 event that is meaningful to them. However, after talking with members of the current board and others around the PGA Tour and PGA Tour Enterprises, Glover understands that the reality is unlikely to come to pass, given how much money companies sponsoring Tier 1 events are putting up to have the top 130 players in their fields.

Stay ahead of the game. Subscribe to our newsletter to get the latest Irish Golfer news straight to your inbox!

More News

Leave a comment


The reCAPTCHA verification period has expired. Please reload the page.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy & Terms of Service apply.