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Trackman Tour Averages

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At Trackman, we're dedicated to providing the most accurate and up-to-date data to enhance your golfing experience. That's why we're excited to announce the release of our new Tour Averages, reflecting the latest insights from leading professional golf tours.

How We Gathered the Data

Our team has been hard at work collecting data from a wide range of pro players, utilizing Trackman technology to capture every swing and shot with precision.

Explore the New Tour Averages

Discover the latest numbers for both PGA and LPGA Tours, now presented in a redesigned format for easy reference. To see how the game has progressed over time, check out this link to see what’s changed compared to the last Tour Averages.

What's Changed Since Last Time

Since Trackman last revealed the Tour Averages, certain areas of the game have changed. When driving, for instance, players are now hitting further, with greater ball speed and less spin rate. See how your figures compare to the pros.

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The Impact of Trackman

Trackman's role in driving performance gains cannot be understated. From influencing club manufacture to revolutionizing training methods and making data more accessible, Trackman continues to shape the future of golf. Additionally, integrating Trackman technology with advanced golf simulators offers players an immersive experience, allowing them to practice and improve their skills in a virtual environment.

Stay Informed

Whether you're a seasoned pro or a weekend warrior, Trackman is here to help you reach new heights on the course. So stay tuned for more updates and insights from Trackman as we continue to push the boundaries of golf technology.

Get the New Tour Assets

The updated Tour Averages data is available for download here in various formats (incl. in meters or yards), whether you're a coaching professional or simply want them handy on your phone when you're on the range.

Key Insights:

Male data is captured across 40+ different events and 200+ different players.

Data is captured at both PGA TOUR and DP World Tour events with majority coming from PGA TOUR events.

Female data is captured across 30+ different events and 150+ different players.

Data is captured at both LPGA and LET events with majority coming from LPGA events.

Averages are based on data from competition as well as on the range.

There are multiple processes in place to eliminate shots hit with a non-driver during competition.

There could be a small number of non-driver shots in the dataset (less than 0.5 percent).

Official stat holes are picked going in opposite directions to reduce any effects from wind.

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With Partners at the Negotiating Table, the PGA Tour Is Back on Track to Winning Golf’s War

  • Author: Michael Rosenberg

The PGA Tour Policy Board should have quintuple-spaced its memo to players Sunday, so everybody would know to read between the lines. The memo announced plans to “further negotiate with Strategic Sports Group,” one of the private-equity firms bidding to invest in the Tour, and continue discussions with Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund. But it signaled something far more important:

The PGA Tour is back on track to winning golf’s war.

There is still a long way to go, and a lot to figure out. But the Tour is once again in position to secure billions of dollars in PIF money and put the future of LIV Golf in the Tour’s hands.

Strategic Sports Group is a consortium of investors that includes Mets owner Steve Cohen’s Cohen Private Ventures, Brewers owner Mark Attanasio, Redbird Capital’s Gerry Cardinale and Fenway Sports Group. The principals have billions of dollars and a track record of investing in sports teams—and have also shown a willingness and ability to work with PIF and other Middle East investors. Just 10 days ago, there was a report that PIF is interested in buying AC Milan from Redbird Capital. Last spring, PIF hired executives from Cohen’s Point72. Redbird’s media company, Redbird IMI, is based in the United Arab Emirates.

There is now a mutual interest from all parties to get a deal done with PIF:

  • The Tour can bring in billions and neutralize the LIV threat. LIV Golf will likely exist in 2024, and the Tour could incorporate the team-golf aspect in some way down the road if it chooses, but LIV would no longer be a rival tour. The Tour can also work on establishing the $1 billion equalization pool that SI reported was on the table in July .
  • Strategic Sports Group gets to invest in the Tour and form an alliance with the world’s largest sovereign wealth fund. News flash: Rich people like working with other rich people to get even richer.
  • PIF gets a major investment in golf that has a better chance of success than the enormous sum it has spent to get a tiny audience for LIV. PIF also gets to progress toward its overarching goal of diversifying Saudi holdings with investments around the world. Every PIF investment makes the next one more likely, because it leaves other potential partners more comfortable working with PIF.
  • PIF chairman Yasir Al-Rumayyan can get what he wanted all along: A place in golf’s inner circle.
  • The Tour can form PGA Tour Enterprises to expand its reach. The cash infusion would open a wave of possibilities—including, to use one hypothetical example, buying the PGA Championship and Ryder Cup from the PGA of America.

When LIV signed Jon Rahm away from the Tour last Thursday, it was not just a major talent acquisition. It was a warning shot. If the Tour does not complete its agreement with PIF, LIV can keep signing stars and weakening the Tour. How much that affected the Policy Board’s meetings Friday and Saturday is open for debate. But it created an urgency to put agendas, grievances and hurt feelings to the side and do what is best for the Tour.

PGA Tour logo during the third round of the Travelers Championship on June 24, 2017, at TPC River Highlands in Cromwell, Conn.

The PGA Tour may now have a path to putting pro golf back together again.

Fred Kfoury III/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The moral and ethical ramifications of dealing with PIF are real. But the reality is that, until PIF is in business with the PGA Tour, it will be a threat to the Tour. Those discussions are expected to heat up very soon. The much-discussed Dec. 31 deadline for a deal is not a deadline at all; yes, the agreement expires then, but the two sides can mutually agree to extend it. The only practical implication of the Dec. 31 deadline was that it ensured LIV could not poach Tour members until then. But once the Tour and LIV agreed to delete the no-poaching portion of the agreement to appease the justice department, the Dec. 31 date was just a target.

The Policy Board took a roundabout path to getting here. When the Tour shocked its members with its framework agreement on June 6, it was a triumph disguised as a failure. The Tour got all lawsuits dismissed with prejudice, and laid the groundwork for commissioner Jay Monahan to decide the future of LIV. But because the negotiations were conducted in secrecy, players and even Policy Board members were angry about being excluded.

What happened next is telling. Former AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson resigned from the Policy Board, citing the Saudi Arabian government’s involvement in the murder of Jamal Khashoggi in his resignation letter. Stephenson has a prior relationship with Spieth, a longtime AT&T endorser, and in his resignation letter, he had also complained about the Tour’s “governance model” that left players and himself out of the loop.

The Policy Board added another seat for the players, giving players six of the 11 seats; that went to Tiger Woods . Board member Patrick Cantlay then led the charge to consider private equity funds as an alternative to PIF; part of the appeal was that this way, players would be the ones deciding the future of their tour. (As Sports Illustrated reported last week, Cantlay has been the driving force behind negotiations, with Woods and Jordan Spieth at his side. Spieth denied that Friday evening to the Associated Press; SI stands by its reporting.)

But all along, there was the possibility of partnering with a firm and PIF. Every group bidding understood that. (An earlier version of this column described Stephenson as part of Acorn Growth’s bid, which has been widely reported. The Associated Press has since reported that Stephenson refutes that he was directly involved with or stood to financially benefit from any bid.) The Cantlay faction spent the fall focused on private-equity firms, which Al-Rumayyan surely did not take well. That put the PIF deal in peril, and Monahan may have some work to do to get Al-Rumayyan to cede power like he was willing to do in June.

But the Rahm signing reinforced the point of having these conversations in the first place. The goal was not to solicit outside investors. It was not to partner with PIF. It was not to give stars control of the tour. It was to put the Tour on firmer footing as the premier men’s golf tour in the world. Jon Rahm is gone, but the Tour just took the first necessary step toward getting him back.

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Monahan preaches patience on deal with LIV's Saudi backers

ATLANTA (AP) — Commissioner Jay Monahan spent 20 minutes Wednesday talking about momentum from a $1.5 billion private equity investment in the PGA Tour at the start of the year. When it came to an investment deal with Saudi backers of LIV Golf, he preached patience.

Monahan said a deal with the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia remains a priority, though he said there was no deadline.

“I don't think we want to restrict ourselves in that way,” Monahan said at the season-ending Tour Championship. “We want to achieve the best and right outcome at the right time.”

It was a stark contrast to a year ago at East Lake. Monahan agreed to a stunning deal with PIF on June 6, 2023, to create a commercial arm called PGA Tour Enterprises. The deadline for that deal was the end of year.

Monahan said last year, “As I sit here today, I am confident that we will reach an agreement that achieves a positive outcome for the PGA Tour and our fans — I see it and I’m certain of it.”

So much has changed since then.

The Justice Department asked that an anti-poaching clause be removed from the framework agreement in July. Jon Rahm defected to LIV Golf for Saudi riches in December. And the tour signed on Strategic Sports Group in January for an investment worth as much as $3 billion, which included a first-of-its-kind equity program for players.

“When you look at where we are today and ... what we hear from fans and what we’re hearing from players, ultimately we’re both in a position to bring the best players in the world back together. I think that’s a good and aspirational goal,” Monahan said. “As I said earlier, we're in those discussions. We're at the table. They're complex, and it's going to take time.”

In the meantime, the PGA Tour is wrapping up its first season of eight $20 million signature events, which still produced roughly the same turnover of players who reached the postseason. The tour has announced a similar schedule for 2025, and Monahan made it sound as though that would be the blueprint for the immediate future.

And it still doesn't include players at LIV, some of whom might fall out of the 54-man league depending on the contracts they signed.

There is a road back, although it is a long one.

Tyler Dennis, the PGA Tour president, confirmed that players competing on LIV Golf will have to wait one year from their last competition to be eligible for the PGA Tour provided they were never members.

Laurie Canter of England, who is in good shape to earn a PGA Tour card if he stays in the top 10 on the European tour, played as an alternate at LIV Golf Las Vegas in February. He would not be eligible until Feb. 11.

“Players who were members of the tour also have all of our tournament regulations and conduct policies applying to them,” Dennis said. “I’m not going to get into details about that, but there’s an additional set of guidelines there to consider.”

Monahan was asked about a path back for LIV players and chose to look at some of the younger players who have emerged this year, such as Robert MacIntyre and Matthieu Pavon through the European tour and Ludvig Aberg through the PGA Tour University program.

Another was Nick Dunlap, the U.S. Amateur champion who won The American Express in January, turned pro and won in July and advanced to the second stage of the postseason.

“The system that we have, which extends to the international tours around the world, is really performing at a really high level, and that’s what we’re excited about,” Monahan said.

As for a PIF deal, Monahan said the priority to get it done is still there, without offering details or being willing to discuss any negotiations publicly.

“I think when you get into productive conversations, that enhances the likelihood of positive outcomes, and that enhances the spirit of those very conversations,” Monahan said. “I think that's where things stand.”

AP golf: https://apnews.com/hub/golf

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Golf News Net

PGA Tour purse payout percentages and distribution

pga tour table

The PGA Tour has a standard formula for payout percentages and distribution of its purse and prize money for almost every event. If there's a cut where 65 or more players make the final round or rounds of the tournament, there's standard table of payout percentages and distribution.

The winner of a PGA Tour event gets 18 percent of the purse. Typically, the second place player gets 10.8 percent of the total purse. Then it goes on like that, all the way down to 65th place, which gets 0.215 percent of the total purse.

There are a few situations where the PGA Tour doesn't follow its standard purse payout and distribution formula:

  • If the field has no cut, then the winner still gets 18 percent, but the money that would typically be paid out all the way to 65th place is redistributed to the field, giving them more money
  • If the field has a cut and more than 65 players make the weekend, the PGA Tour throws extra money into the purse to pay out to players who made the cut

Sample purses shown

About the author

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Ryan Ballengee

Ryan Ballengee is founder and editor of Golf News Net. He has been writing and broadcasting about golf for nearly 20 years. Ballengee lives in the Washington, D.C. area with his family. He is currently a +2.6 USGA handicap, and he has covered dozens of major championships and professional golf tournaments. He likes writing about golf and making it more accessible by answering the complex questions fans have about the pro game or who want to understand how to play golf better.

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Golf 2024 PGA Tour Money List

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