South China Morning Post

Time ripe for Marty Dou and Kevin Yu to strike

- Chuah Choo Chiang

Asia’s glory-hunters have five tournament­s left in the regular Korn Ferry Tour season, plus the three-event tour finals, as they target places on the PGA Tour.

China’s Carl Yuan and South Korean duo An Byeong-hun and Kim Seong-hyeon are already there, with the top 25 players being awarded PGA Tour cards and a further 25 cards available at the Korn Ferry Tour Finals.

And they may be rubbing their hands in anticipati­on of next season after PGA Tour commission­er Jay Monahan’s announceme­nt last week of “substantia­l changes”, which will include eight tournament­s enjoying greatly enhanced purses, revised field sizes for the FedExCup Play-offs, and an autumn schedule featuring up to three no-cut, limited-field internatio­nal events.

The time is now ripe for the likes of China’s Marty Dou and Kevin Yu of Taiwan to try to secure their cards, with both hovering around the top 25.

The already establishe­d Asian stars have been making their PGA Tour places count, with Japan’s Hideki Matsuyama winning twice so far this season to equal K.J. Choi’s record of eight victories by an Asian golfer, and South Korea’s Im Sung-jae and K.H. Lee each winning once to raise their career tallies to two apiece.

There was also an eye-catching runner-up finish by Anirban Lahiri of India at The Players Championsh­ip in March, for which he pocketed a handsome US$2.18 million, his biggest pay cheque to date.

Kim Si-woo, a three-time tour event winner, and C.T. Pan have also performed well to virtually seal their places in the FedExCup Play-offs this August.

Next year’s FedExCup Playoffs will feature revised field sizes. The top 70 will make it into its first event, the FedEx St Jude Championsh­ip at TPC Southwind in Memphis. The top 50 will qualify for the BMW Championsh­ip, and the top 30, as usual, will compete for the FedExCup at the Tour Championsh­ip at East Lake.

The season-long FedExCup prize pot offers US$75 million in a bonus pool, with US$18 million alone going to the winner.

Although there will be more money than ever to shoot for, Rory McIlroy, a 21-time PGA Tour winner, has said it is about playing to build a “legacy”, as well as to join the lists of winners of decades-old tournament­s.

“It’s very important to me,” the four-time major winner said. “It means a lot, going back to history and tradition and putting your name on trophies that have the legends of the game on them.”

For Yuan, the promotion to the tour brings him a personal reward after he last year cut short his campaign to represent China in the Tokyo Olympics. The 25-yearold needed just seven tournament­s this time around to become the first from the Korn Ferry Tour class to secure PGA Tour status.

“I know I have the ability … I shouldn’t be afraid to dream big,” said Yuan, who won once and posted three other top-10 finishes to surpass the projected points threshold. “I had a pretty good year last year, a few high finishes, played some good golf and gained a lot of confidence. I had no regrets playing in the Olympics. It meant a lot to me personally, because it is every athlete’s goal to be in the Olympics.”

An’s world collapsed briefly when he lost his PGA Tour card last year, but he has since said it was a timely wake-up call. Once ranked as high as 29 in the world and previously a regular name in the top 100, he rededicate­d himself to the game with new coach Sean Foley and in his third start on the Korn Ferry Tour claimed the victory that helped seal a quick return to the main tour.

“The motivation is always in me,” the 30-year-old said. “I always want to be the best golfer in the world. I had a terrible season [last year] and then it hit me and I’m like, ‘OK, let’s try to spend more time [on] golf and see what it feels like to work harder’.”

Monahan revealed plans to return to a calendar-year schedule from 2024, saying: “These changes will further strengthen the FedExCup and create a strong, coordinate­d global schedule, offering a more compelling product for our players, fans and partners.”

Chuah Choo Chiang is senior director of marketing for the PGA Tour and is based in Malaysia

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