Tiger’s event needs a sponsor
ATLANTA — The tournament that Tiger Woods launched 10 years ago remains on next season’s PGA Tour schedule.
Still to be determined is where — and if — it is held.
Quicken Loans has not renewed as title sponsor, and the PGA Tour felt it had no choice but to opt out of its contract to play at Congressional in 2018 and 2020.
But that doesn’t necessarily mean the end of the tournament.
For now, The National is scheduled to be played from June 28 through July 1 at a course to be determined.
“We are in discussions with Quicken on extending our partnership, but as we sit here today, we have not concluded those discussions,” PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan said on Tuesday.
The tournament began in 2007 as the AT&T National to benefit the Tiger Woods Foundation, with golf’s biggest name as the host.
It had a military theme and was held around the Fourth of July outside Washington D.C.
Detroit-based Quicken Loans took over as title sponsor in 2015. By then, Woods was struggling with injuries, and the timing of the event between the US Open and British Open meant a weaker field than when it began.
Woods wound up playing just six of 10 years as he coped with injuries and issues off the course.
The tournament was held for two years at Aronimink outside Philadelphia when Congressional was getting ready for the 2011 US Open. Since then, it has been played at the Robert Trent Jones Golf Club in Virginia and this year at the TPC Potomac at Avenel Farm, down the road from Congressional.
Mark Steinberg, Woods’ agent at Excel Sports, said Woods’ foundation is speaking to potential sponsors, including Quicken Loans. One possibility for Quicken Loans to renew is for the tournament to move to Detroit.
“That’s clearly been something that has been discussed, but not in great detail at this point,” Steinberg said.
Even so, he said the goal is to stay in the Washington area.
The PGA Tour season will look much different in 201819 when The Players Championship moves back to March and the PGA Championship is held in May.
The tour also intends to end its FedEx Cup season around Labor Day, meaning that at least two tournaments would have to move to the fall or be eliminated from the schedule.