The Northland Age

Top players to be kept busy in big money ‘elevated events’

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The PGA Tour will have a four-month stretch of 12 tournament­s that are either majors or have $20 million purses in what figures to be a taxing year for the elite players.

The tour was to announce that the WM Phoenix Open, RBC Heritage at Hilton Head, Wells Fargo Championsh­ip and Travelers Championsh­ip will be part of the “elevated events” the top players will be required to play, a person with direct knowledge of the plans told the Associated Press.

The concept of elevated events was first announced in late August as a response to the Saudi-funded LIV Golf league, aimed at bringing the best players together as often as 17 times, including the majors and the FedEx Cup playoffs.

The elevated events average $20 million purses.

Golfweek first reported the addition of four elevated events. It was confirmed to the AP by a person who spoke on condition of anonymity pending the announceme­nt.

The additions create a crowded schedule. Starting with the Phoenix Open on February 9-12, there will be four elevated events in a five-week stretch, followed by the Genesis Invitation­al at Riviera, and then a week later, the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al and The Players Championsh­ip in consecutiv­e weeks.

The odd tournament out is the Honda Classic, and Jack Nicklaus expressed concern in a recent interview it might lead to a two-tiered schedule. “All of a sudden the other tournament­s become feeders,” Nicklaus said.

Two of the elevated events, the RBC Heritage and Travelers Championsh­ip, are the week after the majors. The Wells Fargo Championsh­ip at Quail Hollow is May 4-7. That starts a stretch of five big events in an eight-week stretch, including the PGA Championsh­ip and the U.S. Open.

“I’m not keen on playing after a major, but I’ve seen people do it and I’ve seen people do well, so there’s no reason why you can’t,” Jon Rahm said.

The last player to win a major and the following week was Tiger Woods in 2006, when the Bridgeston­e Invitation­al at Firestone followed his PGA Championsh­ip win at Medinah.

For the Texas-born Jordan Spieth, May becomes a problem. He hasn’t played the Wells Fargo Championsh­ip since 2013 when he was needing sponsor exemptions. Spieth plays the two Dallas-area events, Colonial and the Byron Nelson, which now are sandwiched around the PGA Championsh­ip.

He would be looking at a schedule that takes him from the Wells Fargo Championsh­ip in North Carolina to the AT&T Byron Nelson in Dallas, the PGA Championsh­ip in upstate New York, the Charles Schwab Challenge in Fort Worth, Texas, and the Memorial in Ohio.

After a week off, he would go to the US Open in Los Angeles and the Travelers Championsh­ip in Connecticu­t.

“I don’t particular­ly like doing more than four in a row, but I love my hometown events,” Spieth said. “I’ve been playing them really well as well. Then just played the Presidents Cup well there at Wells Fargo, so with a major in there and then Jack’s event (Memorial) . . . I don’t know what it’s going to look like, but it looks like probably five in a row.”

The concept that came out of a players-only meeting in August was to boost prize money to get the best players in the same tournament­s.

The plan that PGA Tour Commission­er Jay Monahan announced was for top players to commit to a 20-event schedule that would include 12 “elevated events,” The Players Championsh­ip, the four majors and three tournament­s of their choice.

Top players were defined as those who finished among the top 20 in the old and new model of the Player Impact Programme. The PIP offers $100 million in bonus money that can only be paid after a player competes in 16 of the biggest events.

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