The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Barclays begins title pursuit

Player of year race, Tour Championsh­ip spots up for grabs.

- By Doug Ferguson

FARMINGDAL­E, N.Y. — The Olympics are over. The Ryder Cup in on the horizon.

In between is a $10 million payoff for winning the FedEx Cup, a four-tournament series that starts today at The Barclays. Still up for grabs is who becomes the favorite for PGA Tour player of the year.

Jordan Spieth wasn’t sure who he considered the frontrunne­r, perhaps because the summer has gone by so quickly due to the Olympic schedule. He first thought it would be Henrik Stenson, who won the British Open in that exquisite duel at Royal Troon. Then, he remembered Dustin Johnson winning the U.S. Open and a World Golf Championsh­ip at Firestone in consecutiv­e starts.

Spieth could only say for certainty that he most likely wouldn’t be part of the conversati­on this year.

“I believe the player of the year award should go to someone who wins at the highest level,” Spieth said Wednesday. “Tiger won it in 2013 without winning a major, but he did win The Players, and the other events were all some of the best fields in golf. But I think that it’s hard to not give it to someone who has won a major championsh­ip.”

The next five weeks — there is a one-week break between the third and the final playoff event — figures to go a long way in shaping that race.

Not to be overlooked is Jason Day, whose three victories include The Players and the Match Play.

“I think a couple wins would be nice — a couple more wins should do it, yeah,” Day said. “That should just take everything out, even with what Dustin has done.”

He makes it sound so simple, perhaps because that’s what he did last year.

Spieth was a shoo-in for PGA Tour player of the year in 2015 until Day won The Barclays and the BMW Championsh­ip, and suddenly Spieth’s amazing run through the majors — two victories, a runner-up finish and missing a playoff by one shot at St. Andrews — was in doubt. Spieth took care of that by winning the Tour Championsh­ip and the FedEx Cup, completing the best year in the FedEx Cup era.

It all starts to unfold today at Bethpage Black, a course that makes nothing seem easy.

The Black came into prominence when it hosted the U.S. Open for the first time in 2002, and then seven years later in the rain. It last hosted The Barclays in 2012.

The course is famous for its warning sign on the first tee: “The Black Course is an extremely difficult course which we recommend only for highly skilled golfers.”

“It should say it’s a risk even for really good players,” Spieth said. “The course I’ve played the last two days is up there with the hardest, probably top-five courses I’ve ever played in my life. And it’s Tuesday and Wednesday of this week, and it’s soft.”

Spieth has won twice this year and goes into the playoffs at No. 5. The trick is to stay there. The top 125 players qualified for the playoffs. Four players are not at Bethpage because they want to conserve energy (Sergio Garcia, Danny Willett), play in Europe (Shane Lowry), or are injured (Anirban Lahiri).

The top 100 advance to the Deutsche Bank, and then the top 70 move on to the BMW Championsh­ip. The top 30 get to East Lake for the Tour Championsh­ip. The points are reset so everyone has a mathematic­al chance at the $10 million bonus, and the top five only have to win at East Lake to capture golf ’s biggest payoff.

 ?? DAVID CANNON / GETTY IMAGES ?? U.S. Open champ Dustin Johnson (above, working with coach Claude Harmon III during Wednesday’s pro-am at Bethpage Black) is among the favorites for PGA Tour player of the year entering the stretch run.
DAVID CANNON / GETTY IMAGES U.S. Open champ Dustin Johnson (above, working with coach Claude Harmon III during Wednesday’s pro-am at Bethpage Black) is among the favorites for PGA Tour player of the year entering the stretch run.

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