The Scotsman

Rahm feels no guilt as golf ’s finest battle for eight-figure prize fund

● World No 2 says players donate to help communitie­s ● PGA Tour proves recession proof despite pandemic

- By PHIL CASEY

World No 2 Jon Rahm will feel no guilt about competing for the $15 million (£11.2m) first prize at this week’s seasonendi­ng Tour Championsh­ip.

While the European Tour and many other sports have suffered massive drops in revenue due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, the PGA Tour has kept prize funds at the same level since returning to action in June.

That means the winner of the Tour Championsh­ip and overall Fedex Cup title will collect an eight-figure cheque at East Lake on Monday, with Rahm starting two shots behind Dustin Johnson under the controvers­ial handicap system.

Asked if he was comfortabl­e playing for such vast sums of money in the current climate, Rahm told a pre-tournament press conference: “Well we can’t control what happens in the world, and I certainly can’t control how much we play for.

“The truth is the PGA Tour and many PGA Tour players do an outstandin­g job with the platform that we have to help communitie­s all around the country. We play 40- plus weeks a year, and each week we help a community.

“So no, I don’ t feel guilty. I myself have donated a lo t throughout my four years on Tour to survivors of sometimes natural disasters, or sometimes different people might need help, and I think that’ s where the PGA Tour comes in. So I think that’s a bigger picture than just how much money one player gets. And honestly, in my case, if I were to win, yeah, the money is great, but I think we’re all here to try to be the best. That is much more enticing than anything else.”

Star ting in 2019, the player who has the most Fedex Cup points after the BMW Championsh­ip starts the first round of the Tour Championsh­ip in Atlanta on 10 under par, in this case world No 1 Johnson.

As the second-highest points earner, Rahm begins on eight under par, with the thirdranke­d player at seven under and so on, on a sliding scale down to the players in 26th to 30th who start on level par.

Rahm, who holed a 66-foot birdie putt to beat Johnson in a play-off at the BMW Championsh­ip on Sunday, feels it could be to his advantage to be chasing Johnson instead of trying to hold on to a lead.

“There’s a difference, yeah,” the 25-year-old Spaniard added. “You essentiall­y have the pressure of the Fedex Cup on your shoulders four days in a row, even though you still need to play really good golf for four rounds.

“It’s in your mind right? We’re constantly getting reminded, you’re No 1, you’re No 2. I think if you’re behind it almost helps just because you already know where the leader is at.

“In the past with the old format and all the point difference­s and all that, you knew if you were top five you could win, but then you had all these millions of possible combinatio­ns, if this person does this and this one does that. It was a little more confusing for us and for the fans.

“So I think there’s more pressure on whoever is No 1 this way, but the objective and what you need to do is clear.

Whatever score you’re at is where you’re going to finish. It’s as simple as that.”

Defending champion Rory Mcilroy will star t the week seven shots behind Johnson on three under par, although the four-time major winner is ready to quit the tournament at any point if his wife Erica goes into labour with their first child.

● The WGC-HSBC Champions tournament in Shanghai, won last year by Rory Mcilroy, has been cancelled due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The £7.8 million event was due to be held at Shesh an Golf Club from 29 October to 1 November, but the news comes as no surprise after China said it would not host any major sporting events in 2020.

“The truth is the PGA Tour and many PGA Tour players do an outstandin­g job with the platform that we have to help”

JON RAHM

 ??  ?? 0 Jon Rahm won the BMW Championsh­ip at the weekend, beating world No 1 Dustin Johnson in a play-off at Olympia Fields.
0 Jon Rahm won the BMW Championsh­ip at the weekend, beating world No 1 Dustin Johnson in a play-off at Olympia Fields.

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