The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Soft courses, low scores and a need for more variety

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ATLANTA >> Kevin Kisner was one spot out of the top 30 in the FedEx Cup standings going into the tournament that determines who makes it to Tour Championsh­ip at East Lake.

All it took was one shot for him to realize it probably wasn’t going to be him.

“The first day, when my ball plugged on 10, I knew it was going to be a long week,” Kisner said before cleaning out his locker at Caves Valley. “Obviously, I putted awful. But top 20 would be about as good as I could do here.”

Caves Valley was 7,542 yards and played every inch of it on rain-softened turf amid stifling humidity that never allowed fairways or greens to get firm.

Kisner ranks 171st in driving distance. He is not Bryson DeChambeau, on so many levels. As it relates to the brand of golf Kisner plays, a long course with soft greens was always going to present some big challenges.

That’s nothing new. Nearly a decade ago, David Toms contemplat­ed a postseason rotation of Bethpage Black, TPC Boston and Cog Hill — all big, beefy courses in the Northeast and Midwest — and wondered what chance he had of getting to East Lake. He didn’t make it past the second stage.

“The 30 players who made it to the finish line here in Atlanta have all thrived on the biggest stages this season,” PGA Tour Commission­er Jay Monahan said Tuesday.

Big stages and big courses.

That’s why a rotation makes sense, and the BMW Championsh­ip is now the only postseason event that moves around. It goes from Caves Valley outside Baltimore to Wilmington Country Club in Delaware next year (no word on whether President Joe Biden, one of its members, might swing by).

The plan is to go back to Olympia Fields in 2023, and Denver is in the future (Castle Pines is the leading candidate). And now that Northern Trust has ended its sponsorshi­p, the Western Golf Associatio­n is contemplat­ing tapping the New York and Boston markets. There are plenty of choices to provide different tests.

Variety has been lacking this year, mainly due to the weather.

“We’re an outdoor sport. We don’t get to choose our conditions,” Monahan said.

True, and the evidence is Olympia Fields south of Chicago. A year ago for the BMW Championsh­ip, it was firm and fast, crusty and scary, and only five players broke par. Jon Rahm won a playoff at 4-under par.

Remember, though, Olympia Fields hosted a rain-soaked U.S. Open in 2003. Jim Furyk bogeyed the last two holes and still tied what was then the 72-hole scoring record.

What if it rains next time?

The FedEx Cup playoffs will start next year at the TPC Southwind in Memphis, Tennessee, a course that is generally well-received, but certainly will favor certain players. That happens across the PGA Tour schedule.

The TPC Southwind will be the eighth course that has hosted the opening postseason event. The previous locations were three courses in New Jersey, three in New York and one in Boston.

The BMW Championsh­ip already has been held on nine courses since the FedEx Cup began in 2007, four of them in the Chicago area.

That leaves the Tour Championsh­ip at the only site that doesn’t change.

Conversati­ons have started about the possibilit­y of moving around the Tour Championsh­ip, like it briefly did 30 years ago, perhaps with East Lake as the anchor.

It’s too early in the discussion­s to speculate, and whether it’s feasible depends largely on the Atlanta-based support of Southern Company and Coca-Cola, whose deals end in 2022.

Perhaps more important is the relationsh­ip with the East Lake Foundation, which revitalize­d a dilapidate­d neighborho­od around the course. The Tour Championsh­ip has raised some $30 million toward that over the years.

Variety in the most important events can only add spice, if not a sense of equity to the different styles of golf. And with a 30-man field, imagine the historic venues that could be available.

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