FedEx Cup coming into its own

Lumi

LOKI
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In the shadows
FedEx Cup coming into its own
August 25, 2009


JERSEY CITY, N.J. (AP) -For those who don't buy into the FedEx Cup, consider the alternative.


Ten years ago this week, with the majors done for the season, the PGA Tour embarked on a four-week stretch that included the World Series of Golf at Firestone, followed by the Air Canada Championship in Vancouver, the Canadian Open and the B.C. Open.

Tiger Woods, David Duval, Davis Love III and Vijay Singh - the four highest-ranked members of the PGA Tour - played only the first week. Phil Mickelson threw in the B.C. Open that year, mainly to tune up for the Ryder Cup.

The PGA Tour Playoffs begin Thursday at The Barclays with the top 124 players on tour, missing only Paul Casey with a rib injury.

Mickelson was on the practice range until taking a ferry across the Hudson River to his hotel in Manhattan. There was a buzz about the arrival of Woods, competing in the opening playoff event for the first time. The four major champions already were at Liberty National, gearing up for four tournaments that could go a long way toward deciding player of the year.

``This is the third year, and it has developed a different feeling,'' Geoff Ogilvy said Tuesday. ``You can definitely feel it because everybody is here. It's a bit like The Players Championship.''

And that's just a start. The top 100 will be at the TPC Boston next week for the Deutsche Bank Championship, then the top 70 at Cog Hill outside Chicago for the BMW Championship. After a week off, the top 30 meet in Atlanta for a shot at $10 million.

You won't find such a stretch of strong fields at any other time of the year.

Is that such a bad thing?

Perhaps it is time for the FedEx Cup to establish what it is, rather than to defend what it's not.

It is not bigger than winning a major, as Ryuji Imada says in the latest PGA Tour commercial trying to hype the year-end bonanza. Majors define careers. For the moment, the FedEx Cup defines a bank account.

That led to a question, however, that shed some light on what this series is all about.

Would players rather win the FedEx Cup or The Players Championship, the next best thing to a major?

Ogilvy was among those who picked The Players Championship, primarily because it has more than 30 years of history behind it as having the strongest and deepest field in golf on a course that doesn't suit a particular style.

Rick George, the tour's chief of operations, playfully joined the conversation and picked the FedEx Cup for a reason that should not be dismissed. He called it ``the hardest thing to win in golf.''

Tournaments are won over four days. This is an eight-month body of work, followed by three big events when the points are quintupled, and a Tour Championship that should finally have some meaning.

That doesn't make it more important.

``It's harder to win the FedEx Cup than the Masters,'' Ogilvy replied to him. ``But I'd rather win the Masters.''

Give Tim Herron a bonus for honesty.

``Financially? The FedEx Cup with that $10 million pot at the end,'' he said. ``The Players is something that's part of history. But if you win this, you'd have to win two tournaments against pretty strong fields. And two is better than one, right?''

Kevin Sutherland was leaning toward The Players Championship until he thought it through.

``You almost have to do more to win the FedEx Cup,'' he said. ``It shows you've played better than everyone else for an extended period of time. I don't know if you can say you played better than anyone for the whole year, because those last four events are weighted. But you'll have played better than anyone for a month. And that's hard to do.''

It's not hard for someone like Woods, which explains why he won the inaugural FedEx Cup despite skipping The Barclays, and winning so handily he could have skipped the Tour Championship. Even if Woods were to win the next three weeks, he still would not be guaranteed to win the FedEx Cup.

That could be one problem that won't be known until the next month plays out.

The FedEx Cup has changed its points system after each of the past two years. What hasn't changed is the caliber of the winner - Woods and Singh - which leads Paul Goydos to believe this has merit.

He picked the FedEx Cup over The Players Championship.

``You won't have too many fluky FedEx Cup champions, and I almost proved the flukiness of The Players Championship,'' said Goydos, a playoff loser to Sergio Garcia at Sawgrass two years ago. ``You look at major championship trophies and see names on there that make you scratch your head. You won't see too many of those on this trophy.''

Bigger than The Players? Goydos believes so.

Bigger than a major? No.

At least not yet.

``It's an era question,'' Goydos said. ``Who's to say the next generation might be thinking the FedEx Cup is bigger than a major?''

Jim Furyk also chose the FedEx Cup.

The system is not perfect; Furyk was among the first to identify that last year rewarded mediocrity. It might even change again. What he likes is the chance for the best players to compete in four straight tournaments.

Ultimately, that's what the FedEx Cup is all about.

``The idea is to get us all together,'' Furyk said, ``and let us fight it out.''
 

Lumi

LOKI
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Aug 30, 2002
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In the shadows
THE BARCLAYS, Liberty National Golf Club, Jersey City, New Jersey

THE BARCLAYS, Liberty National Golf Club, Jersey City, New Jersey

THE BARCLAYS, Liberty National Golf Club, Jersey City, New Jersey

The 2009 FedEx Cup Playoffs begin this week in the shadow of the Statue of Liberty and the skyline of New York City.

The top 125 players in the FedEx Cup standings -- Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson included -- will be at picturesque Liberty National Golf Club for the $7.5 million Barclays, the first of four playoffs events.

Those staying in Manhattan will arrive to the course by boat, an experience described by LPGA Tour player Morgan Pressel on her Twitter feed as "Truly amazing."

Pressel was at Liberty National two weeks ago for Cristie Kerr's Birdies for Breast Cancer Charity Golf Classic. But this week's Barclays will be the first big-time professional tournament hosted by the three-year-old course, which was built on a piece of contaminated land in Jersey City.

Tom Kite, the golf Hall of Famer who was one of two course architects, "hated the site, but loved the location" when he first visited. The task of building the course included covering the property with something akin to a plastic bag, then several feet of sand on top of that.

It's a one-of-a-kind setting for the tournament that kicks off the third year of the PGA Tour's playoffs.

Steve Stricker won the Barclays in 2007, the first year of the playoffs, but finished second to Woods for the inaugural FedEx Cup and its $10 million annuity.

Last year, with Woods sidelined by knee surgery, Vijay Singh beat Sergio Garcia and Kevin Sutherland at the Barclays and went on to win the FedEx Cup.

The four-tournament playoff swing will take five weeks this year. Next week is the Deutsche Bank Championship, also won by Singh last season, followed by the BMW Championship beginning Sept. 10.

After a rare one-week break in the PGA Tour schedule, the playoffs conclude at the Tour Championship beginning Sept. 24. Camilo Villegas won the BMW Championship and Tour Championship last year.

By the time the Tour Championship begins, the playoffs field will have been whittled down to the top 30 players in the points standings -- a truly elite field of golf's hottest players.

Golf Channel and CBS will split coverage of The Barclays this week.


EUROPEAN TOUR
JOHNNIE WALKER CHAMPIONSHIPS AT GLENEAGLES, The Gleneagles Hotel (PGA Centenary Course), Perthshire, Scotland

Gregory Havret will defend his title this week at the Johnnie Walker Championship at Gleneagles.

Havret closed with a three-under 70 last year to beat hard-charging Graeme Storm (68) by a shot for his third European Tour win.

The Frenchman sealed the victory with an up-and-down par save from a bunker beside the 18th green, celebrating with a right-fist pump and a customary champagne shower from his countrymen.

Havret will be joined in the field this week by fellow Johnnie Walker champions Marc Warren (2007), Emanuele Canonica (2005), Miles Tunnicliff (2004).

But because the first event of the PGA Tour's FedEx Cup playoffs is also on the docket this week, many of Europe's top stars will be in the United States.

Golf Channel has coverage of all four rounds beginning at 10 a.m. (et) on Thursday and Friday and 9 a.m. on both weekend days.

Next week is the Omega European Masters, where Jean-Francois Lucquin won last year.
LPGA TOUR
SAFEWAY CLASSIC, Pumpkin Ridge Golf Club, Ghost Creek Golf Course, North Plains, Oregon

All 12 members of the victorious U.S. Solheim Cup team are scheduled to play in this week's Safeway Classic, including defending champion Cristie Kerr.

The players woke up Monday morning in Illinois, their 16-12 win over Europe only hours old, and immediately began preparing for the three-day tournament in Oregon.

"First class is going to be loud this morning!" Christina Kim said on her Twitter feed, preparing to take a flight to Portland with Kerr and some of her other teammates.

Kerr fired a seven-under 65 in the final round last year, then beat Helen Alfredsson and Sophie Gustafson -- two of her opponents at the Solheim Cup -- in a playoff.

She birdied the first extra hole to claim her 11th LPGA Tour victory -- her first since the 2007 U.S. Women's Open. Kerr picked up win No. 12 this season at the Michelob Ultra Open.

World No. 1 Lorena Ochoa, the 2007 champion, headlines the rest of the field.

ESPN2 has coverage of the first two rounds, while ESPN will broadcast Sunday's final round.

Next week is the CN Canadian Women's Open, where Katherine Hull won last season.
CHAMPIONS TOUR
BOEING CLASSIC, TPC Snoqualmie Ridge, Snoqualmie, Washington

Tom Kite won the Boeing Classic for the second time last year, shooting a six-under 66 in the final round to beat Scott Simpson by two shots.

It marked the 10th win in Kite's Champions Tour career, but first since he also captured this tournament in 2006.

This will be an interesting week for the Hall of Famer. Not only will he defend his title at the TPC Snoqualmie Ridge, but the PGA Tour playoffs begin Thursday at a course (Liberty National) that Kite helped design.

Kite will be joined in the field by fellow Boeing Classic winners Denis Watson and David Eger. It is the first time since July 10 that the Champions Tour will begin a non-major event.

Golf Channel has coverage of all three rounds beginning at 6:30 p.m. (et) the first two days and 7 p.m. on Sunday.

Next week is the Walmart First Tee Open at Pebble Beach, where Jeff Sluman won last season.


NATIONWIDE TOUR
NORTHEAST PENNSYLVANIA CLASSIC, Elmhurst Country Club, Moscow, Pennsylvania

Last year, Scott Piercy shot a six-under 64 in the final round of the Northeast Pennsylvania Classic to win for the second time in three weeks.

Piercy, playing this season on the PGA Tour, won't get a chance to defend his title this week. But 15 of the 19 winners from this season will be on hand.

This is the second time that Elmurst Country Club in Moscow, Penn., will host the tournament, which is the only PGA Tour-sanctioned event in the state.

There is no television coverage this week.

Next up for the Nationwide Tour is the Mexico Open, where Jarrod Lyle won last season.
CANADIAN TOUR
SEAFORTH COUNTRY CLASSIC, Seaforth Golf Club, Seaforth, Ontario

The $125,000 Seaforth Country Classic is on tap this week.

Last year, Kent Eger fired a seven-under 64 in the final round to beat a trio of hard-charging players -- Wil Collins (62), John Ellis (63) and Daniel Im (63) -- by two shots.

Eger, who captured his first win, finished at 26-under 258 to set a Canadian Tour record for lowest overall score.

Next week is the Canadian Tour Championship, where Tom Stankowski won last year.
 
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