Just the energy of the change... now the second Major, in the heart of the seasonal fray, some different regional profiles, a schedule perhaps ready to be made leaner, less disposable, more precious...all of this gets the mind cooking and left to wonder:
Is this also an opportunity to add even more and return to Match Play?
Perhaps not at first glance; perhaps there is no burning desire to do this, and no gnawing need...perhaps the excitement of a new and better schedule for this and other competitions is enough and let's see where it goes... right?
YET...
The chief argument (which I heartily acknowledge) is that match play can (and has) fizzle(d) as both an exhibition and as a proper identification of a enduring champion, if notorious top players are eliminated early...and more disappointingly if they are beaten by someone clearly (not year-in, year out) of their caliber...some lower ranked grinder who got in because he had a hot last autumn or collected a lot of 9 - 12th place checks without anyone noticing...
SO, I WAS MUSING...
What if the PGA was conducted at Match Play and there were 64 players in the playing bracket...
THUR: RD 1 - 64 to 32 = 32 matches
FRI: RD 2 - to 16 and RD 3 - to 8 = 24 matches
SAT: Quarterfinals to 4 and Semifinals to 2 = 6 matches
SUN: 36 hole Final.
BUT HOW DO YOU GET TO THE 64?
Glad you asked. In the main, the idea is to get as many of the names to also combine with rewarding that season's winners, sprinkle in a few champions, a few Cinderellas and favorite sons, and do so with a proper eye to international doings. So...if it had been THIS May...
A. The previous season's winners of
1. The Masters - Danny Willett
2. The US Open - DJ (also qualifies through C)
3. The Open Champ - Henrik Stenson
4. The Australian PGA Chmp. - Harold Varner III
5. The South African PGA Chmp. - Jaco van Zyl
6. The European PGA (BMW) Chmp. - Chris Wood
B. The last 3 Am. PGA Champions
7. Jimmy Walker
8. Jason Day
9. Rory McIlroy
C. Any Winner of a PGA Tour event THAT calendar season. (starting after Kapulua TOC) up to Sunday before tournament. For this year, that would have meant:
10. Craig Thomas - Sony
11. Hudson Swafford - Career Builder
12. John Rahm - Farmers
13. Hideki Matsuyama - Waste Mgt.
14. Jordan Spieth - AT &T
15. Rickie Fowler - Honda
16. Adam Hadwin - Valspar
17. Mark Leishman - Bay Hill
18. D.A. Points - Puerto Rico
19. Russell Henley - Shell Houston
20. Sergio Garcia - The Masters
21. Wesley Bryan - Heritage
22. Cameron Smith - Zurich - New Orl.
23. Bryan Harman - Wells Fargo
24. Si Woo Kim - The Players
25. Billy Horschel - Nelson
26. Kevin Kisner - Colonial
(C ends here, assuming there isn't a change in the number of events)
Of course, we want there to be a crack for Club Professionals, so:
27. The Win...
28. Place...
29 & Show from the Club Pro Championship
30. A staff professional representative from the host course
31. A touring professional representative chosen by the host course - (perhaps a regional favorite son who hasn't otherwise q'ed)
32. A single PGA of America exemption...
33. The #1, Adam Scott
34. & the #2,Justin Rose World Golf ranking players not otherwise qualified... (as of May this year, if it were considered "live" it would be Alex Noren and Brooks Koepka)
***this number of 34 can go up or down by a few, if there is no redundancy of winners or more crossovers among categories
BUT WHAT ABOUT THE OTHER 30 (or similar number)?
Glad you asked... how do you think the Colonial (Dean-DeLuca) or any tournament to precede the newly issued PGA would feel about not only having their tour event, with their standard winner and prize money BUT ALSO having the Top 30 (not otherwise qualified) finishers get the AT-LARGE entries into the PGA?...
I say because there's this added value, that the field be cut in half (78) and not a 36 cut on Friday, but a 54 hole cut on Saturday.
Wouldn't that be fun?
Not only does that/whichever tournament take on added importance and draw a greater field, but attention will be paid further down the leader board, longer into the proceedings...Patrick Reed, Phil just making the Saturday cut...what's the number going to be...are they out, are they in? And then Sunday, does Garcia already qualified, just bump a guy out of position with what is usually a meaningless birdie in the 9th-to-last group? A 6 man playoff for 2 spots in the PGA, though the winner is decided and the money is divided...won't there be some great stories from all across the spectrum there...? ...Stories that will roll right into the following PGA week?
Of course, once the the field is set at 64...then the seedings for Match Play can go according to World Golf rankings...which is also kind of fun because the three (3) Club Pros and the host club rep, the PGA pick (and perhaps the host club touring favorite son) will almost certainly be Seeds 64 - 59 by that measure and be like Cinderella-lambs to the sluaghter against DJ, Spieth, Rory et al... that would be fun Thursday entertainment and once in a while, you never know...
and THAT kind of early take-down of a top 10 player we can tolerate, nay relish...
So we give Cinderalla a couple of cracks, and we give the 6 best lions a push-over, but a fun one... Meanwhile in the other 26 matches, we'll have a great variety of worthy players, from the winner's circle of the recent past, and a chance for more interesting matches in the meat of it.
If Wesley Bryan then beats Spieth and Jhnottan Vegas beats Rory and a last-ditch qualifier like Paul Casey beats Jason Day, and DJ is nipped by Pat Perez, well...we did the best we could.
LAST NOTE:
I am remembering the premise I started near the top...Isn't this move to May delightful enough? Why do more, or add yet another wrinkle?
Well, because I think the tournament has always been looking for something special, a niche, a notorious obstacle, a bit of character that the other three have... at the Masters, it's Jones, the historic champions, the thrilling finishes, the green jacket ambiance, the glorious spring of a Mackenzie-bones course...at the US Open, it's the rough, the punishment, the greens, the grind, the punishment of loose play, the big collapses, the time-honored stodgy American courses... at the British, it's the fundamentals, the ancient history beyond knowing..the names on the jug...the capricious links, the capricious weather, the perseverance and tempering necessary.
What has the PGA had, like any of that, in memory older than most on the board?
The tournament has been played all over the calendar in like seven different months... some on a few courses that didn't even exist for 50 years... or were never more than expedient Doak 3-4s that were hungry to host... conflicted with the OpenChmp in a difficult travel time.... played at match with one set of qualification rules... then another set...then medal play in 1958.... where it got fixed in the summer, played in way too many places of broiling heat and dangerous lightening...
Since the move to medal play, what has this tournament ever had besides a full, big, quality field? Where is that precious obstacle, that notorious identity, that dogged character necessary to claim what's supposed to be a a most-treasured prize?
If I took away the designation as a professional major (a designation it earned in a time and on terms no longer operating) what would separate this week's PGA from the Wyndham or Wells-Fargo, the big-field? Big deal. The Players, a WGC event, or Bay Hill have that...
Maybe the PGA can have this...or maybe not...your opinions welcome.
cheers vk