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HOW DOES YOUR GAME COMPARE?
Here is why the World Ranking system is so critical to LIV Golf's longterm viability
Charl Schwartzel after winning the LIV Golf Invitational on June 11.
Montana Pritchard/LIV Golf
For now, the threat of the upstart LIV Golf series to golf's status quo seems to center around a seemingly endless supply of money that it can throw at prospective players. But there is one thing the Saudi-backed tour currently does not have, and likely needs, to disrupt professional golf further: Official World Golf Ranking points.
LIV Golf CEO Greg Norman said the upstart tour backed by Saudi Arabia and offering huge purses, plus bonuses for signing up, has applied for OWGR points. More than two dozen tours are integrated into the OWGR universe, and LIV Golf seeks the same authentication. It's a long shot, and the history and mechanics of the OWGR offer clues to the challenges confronting Norman's enterprise.
The Official World Golf Ranking debuted in April 1986, but arguably the most momentous event in its history—and probably the most consequential in the current chaotic environment that is professional golf—occurred in 2004. IMG founder Mark McCormack had died the previous year, and in due course the administration of the men’s ranking system passed from IMG to an entity known as OWGR Limited. Seven organizations, the prime stakeholders in men’s golf, founded this institution. That group consisted of the PGA Tour, European Tour, International Federation of PGA Tours and the organizations that run the men’s major championships—Augusta National Golf Club, the PGA of America, the R&A and the USGA.
The forerunner of the OWGR was something McCormack created in 1968 and which he published annually in his book, “The World of Professional Golf.” The rankings he compiled, at first based primarily on earnings, took into account results from golf tours around the world but served no specific purpose such as shaping eligibility in major championships. That changed in 1986 when the R&A adopted McCormack’s system to help it determine exemptions for The Open for golf’s top players. The PGA Tour got on board in 1990 with what was then known as the Sony Rankings, and by 1997 all the major tours recognized the system.
Fast forward to 2004 and Alastair Johnston saw a problem. The new co-CEO of IMG was increasingly uncomfortable with the thought of IMG continuing to oversee the rankings. After all, IMG managed dozens of golfers, including perennial World No. 1 Tiger Woods.
“The rankings had become incredibly important with the respect to the landscape of golf,” Johnston recalled this week. “It was tied to exemptions for the majors and World Golf Championships and bonuses in equipment contracts, etc. etc., and we couldn’t be seen as having a conflict of interest and be exposed to potential legal liability that we could be favoring our clients in some way.”
Eventually, a deal was struck, a commercial arrangement in which the consortium of tours and major organizations became the proprietor of the rankings in exchange for certain financial reimbursements related to maintaining the system and continually updating the formula. “There was a lot of trial and error for the first 20 years or so and a lot of complaints as a result,” Johnston said, “and the one thing that I don't hear anymore is noise about it being biased or unfair.
“Today, you can make the argument that it has become everything.”
Today, the argument over the direction of professional golf seems to hinge on the rankings. In the confrontation between the PGA Tour and LIV Golf, which has poached several of the tour’s more recognizable names—among them Phil Mickelson, Dustin Johnson, Bryson DeChambeau and Brooks Koepka—the OWGR represents the stamp of legitimacy for the new enterprise that for now can be dismissed as a collection of exhibitions.
The OWGR question looms large, and thanks to sponsorship from the Asian Tour, LIV Golf has applied for OWGR points for its 54-hole events. DeChambeau, a former U.S. Open winner who joined LIV two weeks ago, told reporters at the U.S. Open in Boston that LIV Golf “has got that covered” in regard to OWGR accreditation.
Overconfidence? Or a foreshadowing of things to come? Time will tell. Here are some of the more pertinent questions about the OWGR and its outsized influence on the current proceedings as the LIV series moves to Portland, Ore., for its second event next week at Pumpkin Ridge Golf Club.
Why are OWGR points important to players who compete in the LIV Golf Invitational series?
The OWGR is one determinant for eligibility into golf’s four major championships. At the moment, several players who have moved over to the new tour are exempt into majors solely based on their respective world rankings. Others have exemptions as past champions, such as Masters winners—at least for the time being; Augusta National hasn’t decided if it will continue to invite its winners to compete. If LIV golfers can’t earn points, their rankings will slip and eventually they will lose their entrée into majors, which could diminish the league’s allure, no matter how massive the purses.
Who runs the OWGR?
The OWGR operates out of the DP World Tour offices in London and is run by a governing board consisting of many of the founding tours and major championships. That means that among the board members are Jay Monahan (PGA Tour), Mike Whan (USGA), Seth Waugh (PGA of America), International Federation of PGA Tours official Keith Waters, Martin Slumbers (R&A), Keith Pelley (DP World Tour) and Buzzy Johnson (Augusta National). It is chaired by Peter Dawson, former chief executive of the R&A. In other words, stakeholders in the status quo are in control here.
How does the OWGR work?
There have been constant changes to the algorithm that determines how points are distributed to come up with the ranking of the world’s best men’s golfers. Currently, without getting too far into the mathematical weeds, a player's World Ranking is based upon accumulating OWGR points over a two-year rolling period. The number of points is determined by his finishing position in a tournament and that tournament's strength of field. This system has a flaw in that its strength of a field includes artificial valuations and doesn't accurately reflect the value of the 5,000-plus players eligible for points.
But isn't the formula about to change?
Strangely, it's a pure coincidence that the timing of a major change to the computing of the World Ranking arrives in just a few months after three years of research. Again, it's best to boil it down to the fact that on Aug. 14, the World Ranking of each player will be calculated using a new "strokes gained world rating" based on actual scores in stroke-play events adjusted for the relative difficulty of each round played. That rating impacts a tournament's field rating, which in turn determines the number of points distributed to players making the cut. (In the previous system, players who made the cut might not collect any OWGR points.) The new system is designed to better evaluate the skill level of every player in a tournament. It's not likely to have a dramatic impact at the top of the rankings or even among the top 50. Real changes won't be realized for two years.
What is the process for applying for OWGR points?
LIV had to be sponsored by another member tour, in this case the Asian Tour, with which it is aligned. Norman said LIV applied, but the OWGR wouldn’t confirm that, and the process is a mystery. “The OWGR does not comment on the application process, nor on any applications it may or may not have received,” Ian Barker, chairman of the OWGR Technical Committee, told Golf Digest.
What are some potential sticking points in the LIV application?
It is believed that the OWGR would have trouble weighing results in LIV Golf’s 54-hole format that features a shotgun start. That alone could be reason enough to not include the series in the OWGR. Another could be its limited field of 48 players, though PGA Tour events with fewer players—like the Tour Championship and the Sentry Tournament of Champions—award World Ranking points. Limited-field tournaments are approved by the governing board on an individual basis. Then there’s the all-invitational aspect of the LIV series. Critics of the current OWGR argue that players invited to an exclusive series of events are automatically rewarded with ranking points, which skews the system.
What if LIV met all the criteria for inclusion? Wouldn’t that mean the board has to grant its approval?
Not necessarily. There are reports saying that the OWGR’s constitution gives the governing board latitude to approve or deny points whether an applicant meets all, some or none of the criteria it uses for such decisions. The board also can amend its list of criteria.
What tours currently are eligible to receive world ranking points?
Here’s the full list of tours in the OWGR system (via the OWGR website): Abema TV Tour, All Thailand Golf Tour, Alps Tour Golf, Asian Development Tour, Asian Tour, Big Easy Tour, China Tour, EuroPro Tour, European Challenge Tour, Japan Golf Tour, Korn Ferry Tour, KPGA Korean Tour, MENA Golf Tour, Nordic Golf League, PGA European Tour, PGA Tour, PGA Tour Canada, PGA Tour China Series, PGA Tour Latinoamérica, PGA Tour of Australasia, ProGolf Tour, Professional Golf Tour of India and Sunshine Tour.
How could it be that LIV Golf, with several major champions, won’t eventually join that large group and become an eligible golf tour?
Several longtime golf observers believe that it is inevitable that the LIV series will gain accreditation, though it might have to amend its current format. The two major players, LIV Golf and the PGA Tour, likely would have to learn to co-exist, though what that ultimately might look like in terms of schedules, major events and prize money is anyone’s guess.
Is the OWGR really that important to LIV Golf’s long-term success?
Just listen to Norman, who said in a recent television interview that, “OWGR points should be granted, and if we get the OWGR points, then everything else takes care of itself.”
Yeah, it’s a very big deal.
John Huggan contributed to this story.
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12 golfers to watch at PGA Tour's Cognizant Classic 2024
The first Cognizant Classic in the Palm Beaches starts on Monday, Feb. 26, with qualifying and there's a Pro-Am Wednesday, Feb. 28, but the real golf runs Thursday, Feb. 29 through Sunday, March 3.
And the field for the Cognizant Classic 2024 is strong.
No. 3 in the world Rory McIlroy and No. 9 Matthew Fitzpatrick , both of Jupiter, have committed. They are among the 19 top 50 golfers in the field. Also confirming they will play the event at PGA National starting Feb. 29: Jupiter's Daniel Berger, who played in his first PGA Tour event in January after missing 18 months because of back issues; Delray Beach's Gary Woodland, who has returned after underdoing surgery on his brain in September to remove a lesion; Jupiter's Shane Lowry; Justin Rose; Billy Horschel; and 2023 U.S. Ryder Cup captain, Zach Johnson.
12 golfers to watch at the 2024 Cognizant Classic in the Palm Beaches, formerly Honda Classic:
Daniel berger.
Best Honda Classic finish: 2nd in 2015 (lost playoff to Padraig Harrington) Berger, the Jupiter resident and Dwyer High graduate, returns to Cognizant after missing two of the last three events because of injury. Once No. 12 in the world rankings, Berger was forced to take off 19 months because of back issues, returning in January. Since, he has played in three events, surviving the cut in two, the American Express and Phoenix Open. Berger is a four-time winner on the PGA Tour. He has played here seven times with three top 4 finishes, including his runner-up in his first time playing the event and placing fourth in 2020 and 2022.
Best Honda Classic finish: 2nd in 2023 (lost playoff to Chris Kirk) Cole, 35, won the PGA Tour Rookie of Year after a breakout season in which he had 14 top 25s and twice was runner-up, including his debut here. Cole, who lives in Tequesta, shot a 266 on the Champion Course to force a playoff with Chris Kirk. Cole and Kirk carded the lowest scores since the tournament moved to PGA National in 2007. Cole qualified for the FedEx Cup Playoff and earned his way in the 2024 signature events. He has played in seven tournaments this year with five top 25s, including a T10 at the Genesis Invitational.
Matthew Fitzpatrick
Best Cognizant Classic finish: 68th in 2017 Fitzpatrick is making his third start here, first since 2017. Since, he has risen to become one of the best in the world. The Jupiter resident is ranked No. 9 and been in the top 10 every week since winning the RBC Heritage in April, his second PGA Tour win to go along with the 2022 U.S. Open. Born in England, Fitzpatrick has played five events this season, missing two cuts, including the limited field Genesis Invitational. He best finish is T14 at Sentry. He was a member of the winning 2023 European Ryder Cup team.
Rickie Fowler
Best Cognizant Classic finish: Champion in 2017 Fowler snapped a streak of 13th consecutive Cognizant starts in 2023. The Jupiter resident won in 2017 and has three other top 10s, including runner-up in 2019, one shot behind Keith Mitchell. Fowler has played in four PGA Tour events this season, missing two cuts. His best finish was T35 at Genesis. After a prolonged slump, he rebounded last year with his sixth PGA Tour win (Rocket Mortgage), first in more than four years, and eight top 10s. Ranked No. 30 in the world, his ranking had dropped to 185 late in the 2022 season.
Billy Horschel
Best Honda Classic finish: T4 in 2017 Horschel is among the most popular players on the Florida Swing as a native Floridian who lives in Ponte Vedra Beach, plus being a Florida Gator. He is making his 12th start here and has two top 10 finishes. He is a seven-time winner on the PGA Tour, the most recent the 2022 Memorial, Horschel's world ranking has dropped from a high of No. 11 to 91st. Horschel has played four events this season, missed the cut twice and finishing T18 at the Sony Open.
Best Honda Classic finish: First time in field Kim is No. 16 in the world after starting the year at No. 11. He has won three PGA Tour events, including the 2022 and 2023 Shriners Children's Open, and has seven international wins. Kim, from South Korea, was 21st in the FedEx Cup points list in 2023, making him eligible for the eight signature events. His victory in the 2022 Wyndham Championship made him the first Tour winner born after 2000. He has played five PGA Tour events this season; his best finish 17th at the Phoenix Open.
Best Cognizant Classic finish: Champion in 2023 Kirk went eight years between PGA Tour wins before defeating Eric Cole in a playoff at the 2023 event. That was part of solid season in which he added two third-place finishes and was 31st in the FedEx Cup standings, making him eligible for the signature events. Kirk, a Georgia Bulldog who lives in Athens, won this season's first event, the Sentry. A six-time winner on the PGA Tour, he has two top 10s and four top 25s in 12 previous starts at PGA National.
Shane Lowry
Best Honda Classic finish: runner-up in 2022 Lowry, the Jupiter resident, will play here for the fifth straight year, and seventh time overall. He finished one shot behind champion Sepp Straka in 2022, finishing 9-under with three consecutive 67s to close. He followed that with a T5 last year. The Irishman has two PGA Tour titles, including the 2019 British Open, and six DP World Tour wins to his credit. He was a member of the winning 2023 European Ryder Cup team.
Rory McIlroy
Best Cognizant Classic finish: Champion in 2012 McIlroy, the Jupiter resident, returns after a five-year absence. He played nine times from 2009-2018, winning in 2012 and tying for second in 2014. McIlroy's title in 2012 vaulted him to No. 1 in the world ranking for the first time. McIlroy has won 24 times on the PGA Tour, including four majors. As No. 2 in the world, he is the highest ranked golfer in the field since he was No. 1 before the 2015 tournament. He has played just two PGA Tour events this season.
Justin Rose
Best Honda Classic finish: 3rd in 2010 Rose returns for the 11th time, his second since 2015. He had three consecutive top 5 finishes in 2010, 2012, 2013 and missed two cuts. The former No. 1 in the world and 2013 U.S. Open champion has 11 career PGA Tour wins, his last at Pebble Beach in 2023. Rose, a native of South Africa, has played four PGA Tour events this season, his best finish T11 at Pebble Beach. He was a member of the winning 2023 European Ryder Cup team.
Sepp Straka
Best Honda Classic finish: Champion in 2022 Straka's victory two years ago, when he overcame a five-shot deficit on Sunday, was his first on the PGA Tour. He added a second at the 2023 John Deere Classic. Ranked No. 25 in the world, this Georgia Bulldog became the first Austrian to win on Tour. He has played in four events this year, missing the cut twice. His best finish is a T12 at Sentry. He was a member of the winning 2023 European Ryder Cup team.
Gary Woodland
Best Honda Classic finish: 21st in 2017 Woodland underwent surgery in September to remove a lesion on his brain and returned in January. After missing three consecutive cuts, he played into the weekend at the Genesis Invitational, closing T39 with a four-day total of 1-under. The Delray Beach resident and Topeka, Kansas, native, has finished in the top 10 four times in nine starts here. Woodland has four career PGA Tour wins, including the 2019 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach.
PGA Tour widening its gap in world ranking points over European Tour
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Travel and parking
Find out more on getting to the BMW PGA Championship this year
Travelling by train?
Virginia Water Station is the nearest train station.
Please check www.southwesternrailway.com before you travel for up-to-date timings. The station is a five-minute bus ride from Wentworth, and a free shuttle bus located by the station exit will be available during tournament week. Please see below for timings.
Travelling by car?
Please note there is no public car parking onsite at the BMW PGA Championship. Spectators are requested to use the Park & Ride. As you get closer to Wentworth, please ignore your sat nav and follow the yellow event AA signage to one of the two free Park & Ride facilities.
Park & Ride Locations
A free Park & Ride service will be operating for all spectators from two separate sites:
Sunningdale Park & Ride: Broomhall Farm, Sunningdale, SL5 0HD
Ascot Park & Ride: Royal Ascot Racecourse, Ascot, SL5 7JX
Please see the timings for Park & Ride service below.
Premium Ticket Holders
Green on 18, Champions Club and Ballroom guests will receive an allocation of one car parking space per two guests.
BMW Group Owners (Mini, BMW & Rolls Royce) can park on-site for free. No pre-booking is required. Please follow the yellow AA event signage to the BMW Owners Car Park.
Electric Charging Points
Please note that, unfortunately, there are currently no electric charging points at any of the car parks.
Travelling by taxi?
If arriving by Taxi/Uber please ask your driver to follow the yellow AA event signs to the taxi drop-off/collection point.
Travelling by bike?
Bicycle parking will be available on site. Access is from Wellington Avenue onto Wentworth Drive. Bicycles are left at your own risk, please provide your own bicycle lock.
Blue Badge Parking
There will be dedicated parking spaces at the front of the Park & Ride car park for spectators who have a blue badge displayed in their vehicles. All our buses are accessible buses and will drop off at the entrance to the event, and in the same area as Event Mobility.
All Blue Badge holders must email [email protected] to access parking in this area.
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Prize Money€ 6,792,749.44. 2020. Lee WESTWOOD. ENG. R2DR POINTS3,128. Prize Money€ 2,279,736.27. All past champions. DP World Tour Partners. The Race to Dubai is a season-long competition to crown the European Tour's number one player.
1. Champion. Overview. Rankings. News. Past Champions. About. DP World Tour Partners. The Race to Dubai is a season-long competition to crown the European Tour's number one player.
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DP World Tour - European Tour Trophy Day in Bahrain is a webpage that showcases the official website of the DP World Tour, the premier golf circuit in Europe. The webpage features the latest news, rankings, schedule, and highlights of the tour, as well as the history and legacy of the European Tour group. The webpage also reveals the exciting announcement of the new title sponsor of the tour ...
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The European Tour, currently titled as the DP World Tour for sponsorship reasons, and legally the PGA European Tour or the European Tour Group, is the leading men's professional golf tour in Europe. ... in 2015 a majority of the ranking events on the European Tour were held outside Europe, ...
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To give a recent example, from Week 30 in 2021, the winner of the 3M Open in Minnesota received 40 World Ranking points, the winner of the Cazoo Open in Europe received 24, the Korn Ferry Tour ...
Rankings. Search Criteria: Open: All U21: 19-21 U18: 17-18 U16: 15-16 U14: 13-14 U12: 12 and younger. For upcoming events, the points are estimated based upon previous results.
The 2024 European Tour, ... The top 70 in the Race to Dubai Rankings qualify for the playoffs, with the top 50 in the rankings after the first event qualifying for the Tour Championship. ... Fortinet Australian PGA Championship: Australia: A$2,000,000: 3,000: Min Woo Lee (3) 13.51: ANZ: 26 Nov: Joburg Open: South Africa: R20,500,000: 3,000 ...
DP World Tour Rankings: Rory McIlroy: Player of the Year: Ryan Fox: Sir Henry Cotton Rookie of the Year: Thriston Lawrence: ← 2021. 2023 → . The 2022 European Tour, titled as the 2022 DP World Tour for sponsorship reasons, was the 51st season of the European Tour, the main ... As part of a new "strategic alliance" between the European Tour ...
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As we head towards 2021, Rahm is the leading European in the world rankings, slotting in behind only American Dustin Johnson. And he's coming off a 2020 season featuring two PGA TOUR wins ...
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Ranking the top 10 golfers set to compete at the 2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational, a PGA Tour event at Bay Hill Club & Lodge in Orlando, Florida.
The new world ranking is agnostic to tour affiliations and concerned only with the skill of the players in the field. ... events on the PGA TOUR and European Tour can award no fewer than 24 points ...
The latest European tour news, rumors, GIFs, predictions, and more from Pro Golf Now. ... What Parts of PGA Tour Could Be Included in A Future Deal with PIF? ... A New Idea for The World Rankings ...
Age: 25 / OWGR: 362 / '22 FedEx Cup: 111. Cruelly, the former Alabama star was third on the Korn Ferry points list in 2020, but didn't get promoted when the season was extended due to the ...
The PGA Tour got on board in 1990 with what was then known as the Sony Rankings, and by 1997 all the major tours recognized the system. Fast forward to 2004 and Alastair Johnston saw a problem.
Golf for Good. Shop. DP World Tour Statistics. Facts & Figures. Records & Achievements. Career Money List. Non-Member R2D Points List. DP World Tour Partners. Discover the stat leaders on the European Tour, Challenge Tour or Legends Tour.
The PGA TOUR's Florida swing continues at Arnold Palmer's Bay Hill Club & Lodge - an iconic venue for one of the most iconic players of all time. The Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by ...
The Irishman has two PGA Tour titles, including the 2019 British Open, and six DP World Tour wins to his credit. He was a member of the winning 2023 European Ryder Cup team.
The gap continues to widen in the average ranking points for PGA Tour events compared with Europe - up an average of one point this year, two points from 2012. ... The European Tour had six ...
2024 PGA TOUR Champions Eligibility Ranking. Players within the top 54. from the previous year's final Official PGA TOUR Champions Money List, provided they are among the top 50 on such list ...
Race to Dubai Rankings - PGA TOUR Eligibility. The leading ten players (not otherwise exempt) on the season ending's DP World Tour Race to Dubai Rankings will earn PGA TOUR cards for the following ...
Please note there is no public car parking onsite at the BMW PGA Championship. Spectators are requested to use the Park & Ride. As you get closer to Wentworth, please ignore your sat nav and follow the yellow event AA signage to one of the two free Park & Ride facilities.