Current:Home > FinanceExclusive: First look at 2024 PGA Tour schedule; 4 designated events to keep 36-hole cut -TrueNorth Capital Hub
Exclusive: First look at 2024 PGA Tour schedule; 4 designated events to keep 36-hole cut
View
Date:2025-04-18 02:50:50
The PGA Tour's season of change will see a lot of date shifts, some new sponsors, plenty of no-cut events but a lot of familiarity, based on a copy of the 2024 schedule obtained exclusively by Golfweek, part of the USA TODAY Network.
The Tour will return to a calendar-year season for the first time in a decade with 39 regular season events and a further eight in the post-playoffs fall series. Twelve non-major Tour events have designated status, meaning lucrative purses and limited fields. The AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am will become a designated event, as previously reported by Golfweek. The tournament director for the AT&T, Steve John, declined comment until the Tour makes a formal schedule announcement.
Multiple sources say only four of the dozen designated Tour events will feature a 36-hole cut – the Players Championship, the Genesis Invitational, the Memorial Tournament and the Arnold Palmer Invitational. Field sizes at the latter three invitationals will fluctuate with eligibility, but several sources say the maximum will be 80 players with a cut to 50 and ties. The Players remains a full-field event.
There are already no halfway cuts at the season-opening Sentry event – formerly known as the Tournament of Champions – or the three FedEx Cup Playoff stops. In '24, no players will be leaving after 36 holes at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, the RBC Heritage, the Wells Fargo Championship and the Travelers Championship either. Designated events are mandatory for top stars this season, but under pressure from players the Tour has not made them must-shows for 2024.
SPORTS NEWSLETTER:Sign up to get the latest news and features sent directly to your inbox
The most noteworthy date shift will see the Memorial Tournament, hosted by Jack Nicklaus, held a week before the U.S. Open, having traditionally been staged two weeks ahead of the third major. The Tour is intent on establishing a schedule cadence that would see designated events held in consecutive weeks where possible. That will allow otherwise ineligible players to qualify for designated events via their performances in the preceding regular tournaments.
Dan Sullivan, the executive director of the Memorial Tournament, would not comment on any changes ahead of the official release of the schedule. That unveiling is planned for Aug. 8.
A PGA Tour spokesperson declined to comment on the schedule prior to it being announced.
Two designated events not held back-to-back are the AT&T Pebble Beach and the Genesis Invitational, which are separated by the WM Phoenix Open. The WMPO always finishes on Super Bowl Sunday and will do so again, on Feb. 11. The Memorial will open three-straight designated weeks, followed by the U.S. Open at Pinehurst and the Travelers.
The '24 schedule shows some sponsor changes and two stops without confirmed support.
The Houston Open, previously a fall event sponsored by Cadence Bank, moves to March under the sponsorship of Texas Children's, a hospital. The South Korean conglomerate CJ takes over as sponsor of the Byron Nelson stop after AT&T bowed out. Among the tournaments awaiting confirmed sponsors are the first leg of the Florida swing, the Palm Beach Classic, formerly the Honda Classic and a July event opposite the Genesis Scottish Open, sponsored this year by Barbasol.
The schedule does not reflect any changes that might emerge from the PGA Tour's negotiations with the Saudi Arabian Public Investment Fund, which is not expected to impact the '24 lineup. The Olympics will impact things though. Golf medals will be handed out on Aug. 4, which pushes the Wyndham Championship and the FedEx Cup Playoffs back one week. The season concludes at the Tour Championship on Sept. 1.
The fall events, in which players who don't qualify for the playoffs will jockey for priority in the '25 season, begin with the Fortinet Championship on Sept. 9.
2024 PGA Tour schedule
Tournaments in bold are the designated events.
DATES | TOURNAMENT |
Jan. 4-7 | The Sentry |
Jan. 11-14 | Sony Open in Hawaii |
Jan. 18-21 | The American Express |
Jan. 24-27 | Farmers Insurance Open |
Feb. 1-4 | AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am |
Feb. 8-11 | WM Phoenix Open |
Feb. 15-18 | Genesis Invitational |
Feb. 22-25 | Mexico Open at Vidanta |
Feb. 29-March 3 | Palm Beach Classic |
March 7-10 | Arnold Palmer Invitational |
March 7-10 | Puerto Rico Open (opposite field) |
March 14-17 | The Players Championship |
March 21-24 | Valspar Championship |
March 28-31 | Texas Children's Houston Open |
April 4-7 | Valero Texas Open |
April 11-14 | The Masters |
April 18-21 | RBC Heritage |
April 18-21 | Corales Puntacana Championship (opposite field) |
April 25-28 | Zurich Classic of New Orleans |
May 2-5 | CJ Cup honoring Byron Nelson |
May 9-12 | Wells Fargo Championship |
May 9-12 | Myrtle Beach Classic (opposite field) |
May 16-19 | PGA Championship (Valhalla) |
May 23-26 | Charles Schwab Challenge |
May 30-June 2 | RBC Canadian Open |
June 6-9 | The Memorial Tournament |
June 13-16 | U.S. Open (Pinehurst) |
June 20-23 | Travelers Championship |
June 27-30 | Rocket Mortgage Classic |
July 4-7 | John Deere Classic |
July 11-14 | Genesis Scottish Open |
July 11-14 | Opposite-field event TBA (formerly Barbasol) |
July 18-21 | The Open Championship (Royal Troon) |
July 18-21 | Barracuda Championship (opposite field) |
July 25-28 | 3M Open |
July 29-Aug. 4 | Olympics |
Aug. 8-11 | Wyndham Championship |
Aug. 15-18 | FedEx St. Jude Championship |
Aug. 22-25 | BMW Championship |
Aug. 29-Sept. 1 | Tour Championship |
Fall Series | |
Sept. 11-15 | Fortinet Championship |
Sept. 19-22 | Sanderson Farms Championship |
Sept. 26-29 | Presidents Cup |
Oct. 3-6 | Black Desert Championship (Utah) |
Oct. 10-13 | Shriners Children's Open |
Oct. 17-20 | Zozo Championship |
Oct. 31-Nov. 3 | World Wide Technology Championship |
Nov 14-17 | Butterfield Bermuda Championship |
Nov. 21-24 | RSM Classic |
Dec. 5-8 | Hero World Challenge |
Dec. 12-15 | Grant Thornton Invitational |
Dec. 19-22 | PNC Championship |
veryGood! (365)
Related
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- At the end of humanity, 'The Last of Us' locates what makes us human
- 'Brutes' captures the simultaneous impatience and mercurial swings of girlhood
- Oscar nominee Stephanie Hsu is everywhere, all at once
- Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
- Hot and kinda bothered by 'Magic Mike'; plus Penn Badgley on bad boys
- 2022 Books We Love: Nonfiction
- Mr. Whiskers is ready for his close-up: When an artist's pet is also their muse
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- Bret Easton Ellis' first novel in more than a decade, 'The Shards,' is worth the wait
Ranking
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Senegal's artists are fighting the system with a mic and spray paint
- An older man grooms a teenage girl in this disturbing but vital film
- How Stokely Carmichael and the Black Panthers changed the civil rights movement
- 'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
- Can you place your trust in 'The Traitors'?
- We recap the 2023 Super Bowl
- 2023 Oscars Guide: International Feature
Recommendation
SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
The list of nominations for 2023 Oscars
'All the Beauty in the World' conveys Met guard's profound appreciation for art
Ballet dancers from across Ukraine bring 'Giselle' to the Kennedy Center
Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
'Dr. No' is a delightfully escapist romp and an incisive sendup of espionage fiction
San Francisco Chinatown seniors welcome in the Lunar New Year with rap
This tender Irish drama proves the quietest films can have the most to say