Daily Times (Primos, PA)

New format for FedEx Cup brings clarity and curiosity

- By Doug Ferguson

ATLANTA » Justin Thomas has a two-shot lead, and the Tour Championsh­ip hasn’t even started.

If that seems difficult to fathom, consider that someone could win this week without having the lowest 72-hole score.

And remember, such a radical change was to make the FedEx Cup finale easier to follow.

The first staggered start in PGA Tour history — Thomas begins at 10-under par, the bottom five players are at even par — unfolds Thursday at East Lake when 30 players who reached the final stage of the FedEx Cup playoffs chase the $15 million prize, the biggest payout in golf history.

“I could see a scenario where come Sunday, 15 guys might have a chance to win the entire thing,” Rory McIlroy said Wednesday. “It will be exciting. It will be different. But at the same time, you’ve just got to go out there and try to play some good golf and not look around at what other guys are doing, and trust that by the end of the week things will hopefully even out.”

The idea behind the new format was to bring clarity to the FedEx Cup by having only one winner Sunday.

Each of the last two years, one player won the Tour Championsh­ip and another player won the pointsbase­d FedEx Cup. It was especially awkward last year because while Justin Rose won the FedEx Cup, all anyone cared about was seeing Tiger Woods in his red shirt celebratin­g a two-shot victory, his first in five years.

“My bank manager didn’t mind,” Rose said.

One function of the FedEx Cup hasn’t changed: It was designed to give an advantage to players who had the best season, and who played their best golf in the postseason when the points were valued four times higher.

Now, the advantage is strokes to par.

Thomas, who won the BMW Championsh­ip last week to become No. 1 in the FedEx Cup, tees off Thursday already at 10-under par. Patrick Cantlay is No. 2 and will start at 8 under, followed by Brooks Koepka at 7 under, Patrick Reed at 6 under and McIlroy at 5 under.

The next groups of five players in the standings will be at 4 under, 3 under, 2 under, 1 under and even par.

The leaderboar­ds on the course, online and on television will show only the score to par, not what was shot each day.

“The FedEx Cup is not a tournament. The Tour Championsh­ip is now for the FedEx Cup,” PGA Tour Commission­er Jay Monahan said. “So when you make that transition, you have to recognize there are 45 tournament­s that precede it.”

If nothing else, the new format eliminates the kind of math that would give even Bryson DeChambeau a headache, computing where players needed to finish to earn points to win. Last year for example, Rose was the No. 2 seed and his birdie on the last hole gave him a three-way tie for fourth, enough points to win the cup. Dustin Johnson was the No. 4 seed and finished third. If he had finished in a two-way tie for second, he would have won the cup.

Using this year’s format, Rose would have won the FedEx Cup by one shot over Woods because as the No. 2 seed, Rose would have started six shots better.

Now it’s time to see if it will work.

“I think it’s hokey,” Cantlay said. “It’s weird to have a format no one has ever seen. And I think it’s a shame we lose the Tour Championsh­ip. I haven’t gone through it. No one has. I’m going to reserve final judgment until I’ve gone through the week.”

Whoever finishes with the lowest score to par wins the FedEx Cup and gets credit for winning the Tour Championsh­ip, even if he doesn’t have the lowest score in the Tour Championsh­ip. Meanwhile, the tour will keep track of convention­al scoring — everyone will the first year — to award world ranking points.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON — ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON VIA AP ?? Justin Thomas, left, shares a laugh with Rickie Fowler as they prepare to play a practice round for the Tour Championsh­ip golf tournament in Atlanta, Wednesday.
CURTIS COMPTON — ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON VIA AP Justin Thomas, left, shares a laugh with Rickie Fowler as they prepare to play a practice round for the Tour Championsh­ip golf tournament in Atlanta, Wednesday.

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