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2018–19 PGA Tour

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(Redirected from2019 PGA Tour)
Golf tour season

2018–19PGA Tour season
DurationOctober 4, 2018 (2018-10-04) – August 25, 2019 (2019-08-25)
Number of official events46
Most winsUnited StatesBrooks Koepka (3)
Northern IrelandRory McIlroy (3)
FedEx CupNorthern IrelandRory McIlroy
Money listUnited StatesBrooks Koepka
PGA Tour Player of the YearNorthern IrelandRory McIlroy
PGA Player of the YearUnited StatesBrooks Koepka
Rookie of the YearSouth KoreaIm Sung-jae

The2018–19 PGA Tour was the 104th season of thePGA Tour, the mainprofessional golf tour in the United States. It was also the 51st season since separating from thePGA of America, and the 13th edition of theFedEx Cup.

Changes for 2018–19

[edit]

Schedule

[edit]

The schedule contained 46 events, two fewer than the previous season. The schedule was shortened in an effort to complete theFedEx Cup Playoffs by the end of August.

As announced in2017, thePGA Championship was moved from August to May on the weekend beforeMemorial Day, starting in2019. ThePGA of America cited the addition of golf to the Summer Olympics, as well as cooler weather enabling a wider array of options for host courses, as reasoning for the change. It was also believed that the PGA Tour wished to re-align its season so that the FedEx Cup Playoffs would not have to compete with the start offootball season in late-August. Consequently,The Players Championship was moved from May back to March for the first time since2006.[1][2][3][4]

New exemption

[edit]

The PGA Tour added a one-time exemption for those who made 300 career cuts.J. J. Henry was the first to take advantage.

Events

[edit]

On hiatus: TheHouston Open andGreenbrier Classic were not included in the shortened season, but they did return in the autumn of 2019 as part of the 2019–20 PGA Tour schedule.[5]

New: Two new events were added to the schedule: theRocket Mortgage Classic, played atDetroit Golf Club inDetroit, Michigan, and the3M Open, played at theTPC Twin Cities inBlaine, Minnesota.

Relocations: TheWGC Invitational was relocated fromAkron, Ohio toMemphis, Tennessee whenFedEx took over sponsorship of the event.[6]

Canceled: TheFedEx St. Jude Classic ceased due to the WGC event; theWGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational, was played at the Classic's former location in Memphis. TheQuicken Loans National; played in theWashington, D.C. area, no longer appeared on the PGA Tour schedule. The FedEx Cup playoff event; theDell Technologies Championship, was also removed from the schedule with the number of playoff events reducing to three.The Northern Trust alternated betweenNew Jersey, andBoston (the site of the Dell Technologies Championship).[7]

Rules

[edit]

From January 1, 2019 onwards, tournaments followed the new rules released by theUSGA andThe R&A which were designed to speed up the pace of play. The most noticeable changes included golfers being able to putt on the green with the flag remaining in, and drops being made from knee rather than shoulder height.[8]

Prize money

[edit]

As well as changes to individual tournament prize funds, the FedEx Cup postseason bonus money increased by $25 million to $60 million, with the FedEx Cup champion getting $15 million. The winner of theTour Championship will be the FedEx Cup champion. The Tour Championship begins with each player having an adjusted score relative to par which relates to the amount of FedEx Cup points accumulated (previously the Tour Championship was structured similar to other tournaments, and awarded FedEx Cup points). The Tour Championship no longer have its own separate prize fund.

In addition, the Wyndham Rewards Top 10 was introduced, a $10 million bonus to be divided among the FedEx Cup top 10 regular season finishers.[9]

The tour also introduced theAon Risk Reward Challenge. In most tournaments, a single hole is allocated to contribute to the challenge. A player's best two scores from every participating event a player competes in throughout the season is used. The player with the lowest average to par score wins $1m. The initiative is replicated on theLPGA Tour.[10]

Schedule

[edit]

The following table lists official events during the 2018–19 season.[11][12]

DateTournamentLocationPurse
(US$)
Winner(s)[a]OWGR
points
Other
tours[b]
Notes
Oct 7Safeway OpenCalifornia6,400,000United StatesKevin Tway (1)28
Oct 14CIMB ClassicMalaysia7,000,000AustraliaMarc Leishman (4)48ASALimited-field event
Oct 21CJ CupSouth Korea9,500,000United StatesBrooks Koepka (5)54Limited-field event
Oct 28WGC-HSBC ChampionsChina10,000,000United StatesXander Schauffele (3)66World Golf Championship
Oct 28Sanderson Farms ChampionshipMississippi4,400,000United StatesCameron Champ (1)24Alternate event
Nov 4Shriners Hospitals for Children OpenNevada7,000,000United StatesBryson DeChambeau (5)40
Nov 11Mayakoba Golf ClassicMexico7,200,000United StatesMatt Kuchar (8)40
Nov 18RSM ClassicGeorgia6,400,000United StatesCharles Howell III (3)24
Jan 6Sentry Tournament of ChampionsHawaii6,500,000United StatesXander Schauffele (4)56Winners-only event
Jan 13Sony Open in HawaiiHawaii6,400,000United StatesMatt Kuchar (9)50
Jan 20Desert ClassicCalifornia5,900,000United StatesAdam Long (1)42Pro-Am
Jan 27Farmers Insurance OpenCalifornia7,100,000EnglandJustin Rose (10)60
Feb 3Waste Management Phoenix OpenArizona7,100,000United StatesRickie Fowler (5)56
Feb 11AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-AmCalifornia7,600,000United StatesPhil Mickelson (44)46Pro-Am
Feb 17Genesis OpenCalifornia7,400,000United StatesJ. B. Holmes (5)64
Feb 24WGC-Mexico ChampionshipMexico10,250,000United StatesDustin Johnson (20)72World Golf Championship
Feb 24Puerto Rico OpenPuerto Rico3,000,000United StatesMartin Trainer (1)24Alternate event
Mar 3The Honda ClassicFlorida6,800,000United StatesKeith Mitchell (1)48
Mar 10Arnold Palmer InvitationalFlorida9,100,000ItalyFrancesco Molinari (3)64Invitational
Mar 17The Players ChampionshipFlorida12,500,000Northern IrelandRory McIlroy (15)80Flagship event
Mar 24Valspar ChampionshipFlorida6,700,000EnglandPaul Casey (3)50
Mar 31WGC-Dell Technologies Match PlayTexas10,250,000United StatesKevin Kisner (3)76World Golf Championship
Mar 31Corales Puntacana Resort and Club ChampionshipDominican Republic3,000,000Northern IrelandGraeme McDowell (4)24Alternate event
Apr 7Valero Texas OpenTexas7,500,000CanadaCorey Conners (1)40
Apr 14Masters TournamentGeorgia11,500,000United StatesTiger Woods (81)100Major championship
Apr 21RBC HeritageSouth Carolina6,900,000TaiwanPan Cheng-tsung (1)58Invitational
Apr 28Zurich Classic of New OrleansLouisiana7,300,000United StatesRyan Palmer (4) and
SpainJon Rahm (3)
n/aTeam event
May 5Wells Fargo ChampionshipNorth Carolina7,900,000United StatesMax Homa (1)50
May 12AT&T Byron NelsonTexas7,900,000South KoreaKang Sung-hoon (1)40
May 19PGA ChampionshipNew York11,000,000United StatesBrooks Koepka (6)100Major championship
May 26Charles Schwab ChallengeTexas7,300,000United StatesKevin Na (3)54Invitational
Jun 2Memorial TournamentOhio9,100,000United StatesPatrick Cantlay (2)68Invitational
Jun 9RBC Canadian OpenCanada7,600,000Northern IrelandRory McIlroy (16)48
Jun 16U.S. OpenCalifornia12,500,000United StatesGary Woodland (4)100Major championship
Jun 23Travelers ChampionshipConnecticut7,200,000United StatesChez Reavie (2)58
Jun 30Rocket Mortgage ClassicMichigan7,300,000United StatesNate Lashley (1)46New tournament
Jul 73M OpenMinnesota6,400,000United StatesMatthew Wolff (1)44New tournament
Jul 14John Deere ClassicIllinois6,000,000South AfricaDylan Frittelli (1)24
Jul 21The Open ChampionshipNorthern Ireland10,750,000Republic of IrelandShane Lowry (2)100Major championship
Jul 21Barbasol ChampionshipKentucky3,500,000United StatesJim Herman (2)24Alternate event
Jul 28WGC-FedEx St. Jude InvitationalTennessee10,250,000United StatesBrooks Koepka (7)72World Golf Championship
Jul 28Barracuda ChampionshipNevada3,500,000United StatesCollin Morikawa (1)24Alternate event
Aug 4Wyndham ChampionshipNorth Carolina6,200,000United StatesJ. T. Poston (1)44
Aug 11The Northern TrustNew Jersey9,250,000United StatesPatrick Reed (7)76FedEx Cup playoff event
Aug 18BMW ChampionshipIllinois9,250,000United StatesJustin Thomas (10)72FedEx Cup playoff event
Aug 25Tour ChampionshipGeorgian/a[c]Northern IrelandRory McIlroy (17)60[d]FedEx Cup playoff event

Unofficial events

[edit]

The following events were sanctioned by the PGA Tour, but did not carry FedEx Cup points or official money, nor were wins official.

DateTournamentLocationPurse
($)
Winner(s)OWGR
points
Notes
Nov 23The Match: Tiger vs. PhilNevada9,000,000United StatesPhil Mickelsonn/a2-man match[16]
Nov 25ISPS Handa Melbourne World Cup of GolfAustralia7,000,000BelgiumThomas Detry and
BelgiumThomas Pieters
n/aTeam event
Dec 2Hero World ChallengeBahamas3,500,000SpainJon Rahm48Limited-field event
Dec 9QBE ShootoutFlorida3,300,000United StatesBrian Harman and
United StatesPatton Kizzire
n/aTeam event

Location of tournaments

[edit]
2018–19 PGA Tour is located in the United States
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Location of official tournaments of the2018–19 PGA Tour in the continental United States and Canada.
600-point event (Players &Majors)
550-point event (World Golf Championships)
500-point event (Regular events)
400-point event (Official team event)
300-point event (Alternate events)
FedEx Cup playoff event
2018–19 PGA Tour is located in Earth
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2018–19 PGA Tour
Location of official tournaments of the2018–19 PGA Tour outside the continental United States and Canada.
600-point event (Players &Majors)
550-point event (World Golf Championships)
500-point event (Regular events)
300-point event (Alternate events)

FedEx Cup

[edit]

Points distribution

[edit]
Main article:List of point distributions of the FedEx Cup

The distribution of points for 2018–19 PGA Tour events were as follows:

Finishing position1st2nd3rd4th5th6th7th8th9th10th20th30th40th50th60th
Majors &Players Championship600330210150120110100948882513218106
World Golf Championships55031520014011510595898378513218106
Other PGA Tour events500300190135110100908580754528168.55
Team event (each player)40016310588786859545046175200
Alternate events3001651058065605550454028171053
Playoff events20001200760540440400360340320300180112643420

Tour Championship starting score (topar), based on position in the FedEx Cup rankings after theBMW Championship:

Position1st2nd3rd4th5th6th–10th11th–15th16th–20th21st–25th26th–30th
Starting score−10−8−7−6−5−4−3−2−1E

Final standings

[edit]

For full rankings, see2019 FedEx Cup Playoffs.

FinalFedEx Cup standings of the 30 qualifiers for theTour Championship:[17][18]

Pos.PlayerMajors &The PlayersWGCsTop 10s in other PGA Tour eventsRegular
season
points
Playoffs[e]Total
points
Tour C'ship[f]TmtsMoney ($m)[g]
Nat.NamePlyMasPGAUSOOpnWGC ChaWGC
Mex
WGC
MP
WGC
Inv
1234567NTrBMWStartFinalBasicWynd
Top10
FedEx
Bonus
1Northern IrelandMcIlroy1stT21T8T9CUTT542ndT9T4T4T5T4T6T91st2,315T6T192,842−5−18197.791.5015.00
2United StatesSchauffeleCUTT2T16T3T411stT14T24T271stT101,858CUTT162,030−4−14215.611.105.00
T3United StatesKoepkaT56T21st2ndT4T16T27T561st1stT24th2,887T30T243,119−7−13219.682.00[h]3.50
United StatesThomasT35T12CUTT119thT24T12T53rd3rd2nd1,247T121st3,475−10205.01
5EnglandCaseyCUTCUTT29T21T57T16T3T9T272nd1stT4T51,629T241,768−2−9224.260.602.50
6AustraliaScottT12T18T8T7CUTT18T40T102ndT72nd1,1245thT91,874−3−8184.081.90
7United StatesFinauT22T5T64CUT3rd2ndT25T40T272nd1,279T304th1,911−3−7254.341.30
8United StatesReavieCUTT14T3CUTT35T65T56T27T7T3T41st1,309T38T571,394−1−6283.661.10
T9United StatesKisnerT22T21CUTT49T30T271stT27T7T51,098T12T91,639−2−5253.490.84
JapanMatsuyamaT8T32T16T21CUTT30T19T24T43T3T96thT7969T593rd1,821−3243.34
United StatesReedT47T36CUTT3210thT7T14T24T12T57741stT192,946−6253.59
T12United StatesDeChambeauT20T29CUTT35CUTT56T40T481st7thT10T8T21,203T24T481,371E−4213.190.68
SpainRahmT12T9CUTT3T11T22T45T247thT86thT5T10T9T61st1,447T3T52,517−4204.990.50
14United StatesKokrakT47T23T32T9T10T2T7T6721T12T191,254E−3242.330.62
15United StatesWoodlandT30T32T81stCUTT17T17T55T52ndT102ndT9T71,795T52T311,912−3−2245.691.000.60
T16EnglandFleetwoodT5T36T48T652ndT7T19T24T4T32nd1,193T43T111,479−1−1183.850.55
United StatesKucharT26T12T8T16T4150th2ndT431st1stT4T72ndT42,313CUTT522,339−4226.291.20
United StatesSimpsonT16T5T29T16T30T39T562nd3rdT8T22nd1,619T18T241,946−4214.690.55
T19United StatesFowlerT47T9T36T43T6T36T41stT2T41,391CUTT111,637−2E203.950.51
South KoreaImCUTCUTCUTT4T7T3T4T77thT61,097T38T111,407−1352.85
T21MexicoAncerT12T16T49CUTT39T17T5T4T86222ndT281,940−4+1272.690.48
United StatesCantlayCUTT9T3T21T41T7T6T24T122ndT9T31st1,730T122nd3,157−8216.120.85
South AfricaOosthuizenT56T29T60T7T20T25T5T20T5T2754T6T111,355E192.94
T24AustraliaLeishmanCUTT49CUTT35CUTT62T93rd1stT4T3T45th1,415CUTT191,587−1+2213.890.45
United StatesSnedekerT5CUTT1677thCUTT30T24T27T2T4T5934T6T51,709−2273.12
T26CanadaConnersT41T46T64CUTT272ndT31st962T21T71,476−1+3282.920.43
EnglandRoseT8CUTT29T3T203rdT911th1st3rd1,423T10T521,739−2174.36
28United StatesHowell IIIT35T32T41T52T14T24T51stT86thT61,279CUTT371,345E+4273.040.43
T29United StatesGloverCUTT16CUTT20T7T7T4T10T7T10944T43T71,337E+10262.610.40
United StatesD. JohnsonT5T22ndT35T51T301stT40T20T4T9T61,686T24T571,840−3195.530.70
  Win
  Top 10
  Made cut
  Missed cut
 Did not play

Money list

[edit]

Themoney list was based on prize money won during the season, calculated in U.S. dollars.[20][21]

PositionPlayerPrize money ($)
1United StatesBrooks Koepka9,684,006
2Northern IrelandRory McIlroy7,785,286
3United StatesMatt Kuchar6,294,690
4United StatesPatrick Cantlay6,121,488
5United StatesGary Woodland5,690,965
6United StatesXander Schauffele5,609,456
7United StatesDustin Johnson5,534,619
8United StatesJustin Thomas5,013,084
9SpainJon Rahm4,990,110
10United StatesWebb Simpson4,690,572

Awards

[edit]
AwardWinnerRef.
PGA Tour Player of the Year (Jack Nicklaus Trophy)Northern IrelandRory McIlroy[22]
PGA Player of the YearUnited StatesBrooks Koepka[23]
Rookie of the Year (Arnold Palmer Award)South KoreaIm Sung-jae[22]
Scoring leader (PGA Tour – Byron Nelson Award)Northern IrelandRory McIlroy[24]
Scoring leader (PGA – Vardon Trophy)Northern IrelandRory McIlroy[25]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^The number in parentheses after each winner's name is the number of PGA Tour events they had won up to and including that tournament. This information is only shown for PGA Tour members.
  2. ^ASA −Asian Tour.
  3. ^The Tour Championship has no stand-alone purse and does not carry official money; the tournament directly determines the assignment of theFedEx Cup bonus pool money, including US$15,000,000 to the winner.[13]
  4. ^OWGR points at the Tour Championship were awarded based on aggregate scores only (seeTour Championship format).[14] McIlroy had the lowest aggregate score and was awarded with the 60 points.[15]
  5. ^The top 125 point scorers in the regular season retain their tour card for the following season, and qualify forThe Northern Trust. The top 70 points scorers after The Northern Trust qualify for theBMW Championship.
  6. ^The top 30 point scorers after theBMW Championship qualify for theTour Championship. Each player begins with a score adjustment to par determined by their point ranking, the lowest scorers in the Tour Championship in addition to this adjustment win theFedEx Cup.
  7. ^In addition to tournament prize money, the top 10 regular season point scorers receive a share of a US$15,000,000 bonus, and the US$60,000,000 FedEx Cup postseason bonus money is distributed based upon standings after theTour Championship.
  8. ^Koepka also won a further US$1,000,000 by topping the Aon Risk Reward Challenge standings.[19]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Harig, Bob (August 10, 2017)."PGA Championship to move from August date to May in 2019".ESPN. RetrievedAugust 12, 2017.
  2. ^Shedloski, Dave (August 7, 2017)."The PGA Championship is moving to May and players are on board".Golf Digest. RetrievedAugust 8, 2017.
  3. ^"P.G.A. Championship Will Move from August to May in 2019".The New York Times. Reuters. August 8, 2017.ISSN 0362-4331. RetrievedAugust 9, 2017.
  4. ^Herrington, Ryan (August 7, 2017)."The PGA Championship will be moving to May, sources say".Golf Digest. RetrievedAugust 9, 2017.
  5. ^"2018-19 PGA Tour golf schedule sees major changes, including big events being moved".CBS Sports. July 10, 2018.
  6. ^"Senior Players Champ. replacing WGC at Firestone".Golf Channel. April 12, 2018. Archived fromthe original on September 20, 2018. RetrievedOctober 23, 2023.
  7. ^"The Northern Trust to call New York/New Jersey home in 2019, Boston home in 2020". PGA Tour. July 10, 2018. Archived fromthe original on December 20, 2018. RetrievedDecember 20, 2018.
  8. ^Herrington, Ryan (December 3, 2018)."Nine changes in the new Rules of Golf you absolutely need to know for 2019".Golf Digest. RetrievedFebruary 4, 2019.
  9. ^"FedEx Cup Purse Rises to $70 Million, Winner to Take Home $15 Million".Sports Illustrated. September 18, 2018. RetrievedFebruary 4, 2019.
  10. ^"Understand the risk. Realise the reward". Aon. RetrievedMarch 20, 2019.
  11. ^"2018–19 Tournament schedule". PGA Tour. RetrievedOctober 23, 2023.
  12. ^"PGA Tour unveils significantly revamped 2018-19 Season schedule". PGA Tour. July 10, 2018. RetrievedAugust 19, 2019.
  13. ^"How it works: Tour Championship". PGA Tour. August 18, 2019. RetrievedAugust 19, 2019.
  14. ^Smith, Jeff (August 19, 2019)."10 FAQs: Tour Championship, FedExCup Format".Pro Golf Weekly. RetrievedAugust 19, 2019.
  15. ^"Tour Championship - 72 Hole Scores". Official World Golf Ranking. RetrievedAugust 28, 2023.
  16. ^Murray, Ewan (November 22, 2018)."Woods v Mickelson is a $9m vulgar marketing exercise".The Guardian. RetrievedDecember 18, 2018.
  17. ^"2019 FedEx Cup". PGA Tour. Archived fromthe original on September 2, 2019. RetrievedFebruary 24, 2019.
  18. ^Murray, Ewan (August 25, 2019)."Rory McIlroy pockets richest prize of £12m in winning FedEx Cup title".The Guardian. RetrievedOctober 23, 2023.
  19. ^"PGA Tour's Brooks Koepka wins Aon Risk Reward Challenge and $1 million". PR Newswire. August 7, 2019. RetrievedAugust 28, 2023.
  20. ^"2018–19 Official money". PGA Tour. RetrievedOctober 23, 2023.
  21. ^Kelly, Todd (August 21, 2019)."See how much money the top 20 golfers made during PGA Tour 2018-19 season".Golfweek. RetrievedOctober 23, 2023.
  22. ^abWoodard, Adam (September 11, 2019)."Rory McIlroy voted PGA Tour Player of the Year, Sungjae Im named Rookie of the Year".Golfweek. RetrievedOctober 23, 2023.
  23. ^Heath, Elliott (August 27, 2019)."Brooks Koepka Named PGA Player Of The Year".Golf Monthly. RetrievedOctober 23, 2023.
  24. ^"2022–23 PGA Tour Media guide | Awards". PGA Tour. RetrievedOctober 22, 2023.
  25. ^Hoggard, Rex (August 26, 2019)."McIlroy passes Cantlay for PGA Tour's Vardon Trophy".NBC Sports. RetrievedOctober 23, 2023.

External links

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