The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Poulter’s tour card saved by review

- By Doug Ferguson

WILMINGTON, N.C. — For the second time in 18 months, Ian Poulter was spared at the last minute from losing his tour membership.

Both times, it was an American to the rescue.

Go back to late October in 2015 when Poulter was bumped out of the HSBC Champions at the last minute and there were no tournament­s left for him to fulfill his minimum requiremen­t to keep European Tour membership, which he needed to be eligible for the Ryder Cup.

Rich Beem bailed him out by giving Poulter his sponsor exemption to the Hong Kong Open.

Poulter wound up missing the Ryder Cup because of a foot injury that cost him five months, and that injury ultimately led to his second lifeline.

He had 10 tournament­s on a major medical extension to make enough money (or FedEx Cup points) to secure his full PGA Tour card for the rest of the season. He appeared to come up short in his last event when he missed the cut in the Valero Texas Open.

And then it was Brian Gay to the rescue.

Gay also was playing under a major medical extension (back) and made it with room to spare with a tie for sixth at Hilton Head and the Texas Open, and he figured that would be more than enough money ($626,195) for him to get into The Players Championsh­ip. But when the tour told Gay he was 28 FedEx Cup points short of qualifying for The Players, he started investigat­ing.

Gay remembered that the tour changed its points distributi­on this year to reflect the breakdown of awarding money. The tour had deemed that too many points were awarded lower down the leaderboar­d, particular­ly in the range of 30th to 50th places.

However, because Gay (and Poulter) suffered their injuries before the changes, Gay argued that the old points distributi­on should have applied. He called Andy Pazder, the tour’s chief of operations, and the tour agreed that a major medical extension was essentiall­y about allowing a player the chance to keep his card if he had not been injured. After a quick review, the tour made the change — not just for Gay, but any player affected by it.

“He called me and mentioned Ian,” Gay said. “And I thought, ‘I just got Ian his tour card back.’”

Gay sent Poulter a text that said, “How happy are you?” He said Poulter replied with, “I friggin’ love you,” followed by three hearts.

 ??  ?? Ian Poulter thought he had lost his PGA Tour playing status.
Ian Poulter thought he had lost his PGA Tour playing status.

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