Golf tournament
2017 Open Championship Dates 20–23 July 2017 Location Southport, England 53°37′19″N 3°02′00″W / 53.622°N 3.0333°W / 53.622; -3.0333 Course(s) Royal Birkdale Golf Club Organized by The R&A Tour(s) Par 70 Length 7,156 yards (6,543 m) Field 156 players, 77 after cut Cut 145 (+5) Prize fund $ 10,250,000[ 1] €8,935,572 £7,890,000 (est.) Winner's share $1,845,000 €1,608,403 £1,420,000 (est.) Jordan Spieth 268 (−12)
The 2017 Open Championship was a major golf championship and the 146th Open Championship , held 20–23 July at Royal Birkdale Golf Club in Southport, England . It was the tenth Open Championship at Royal Birkdale, which held its first in 1954 .[ 2]
Jordan Spieth shot four rounds in the sixties for 268 (−12), three strokes ahead of runner-up Matt Kuchar , for his third major title, and the second in which he led wire-to-wire (2015 Masters ). In the third round, Branden Grace scored 62 to set a new major championship record.[ 3]
This was the first year that the prize money was paid in U.S. dollars , rather than British pounds .[ 4]
This was the second Open Championship televised domestically by Sky Sports .[ 5] In the United States, it is the second Open Championship to be televised by NBC (Golf Channel 's parent network).[ 6]
Venue
This was the tenth Open Championship at Royal Birkdale; the ninth in 2008 saw Pádraig Harrington successfully defend his 2007 title from Carnoustie .
Course layout
Hole
Yards
Par
Hole
Yards
Par
1
448
4
10
402
4
2
422
4
11
436
4
3
451
4
12
183
3
4
199
3
13
499
4
5
346
4
14
200
3
6
499
4
15
542
5
7
177
3
16
438
4
8
458
4
17
567
5
9
416
4
18
473
4
Out
3,416
34
In
3,740
36
Source:
Total
7,156
70
Lengths of the course for previous Opens:[ 7]
2008 : 7,173 yards (6,559 m), par 70
1998 : 7,018 yards (6,417 m), par 70
1991 : 6,940 yards (6,350 m), par 70
1983 : 6,968 yards (6,372 m), par 71
1976 : 7,001 yards (6,402 m), par 72
1971 : 7,080 yards (6,470 m), par 73
1965 : 7,037 yards (6,435 m), par 73
1961 : 6,844 yards (6,258 m), par 72[ 8]
1954 : 6,867 yards (6,279 m), par 73[ 2]
Field
The Open Championship field was made up of 156 players, who gained entry through various exemption criteria and qualifying tournaments. The criteria included past Open champions, recent major winners, top ranked players in the world rankings and from the leading world tours, and winners and high finishers from various designated tournaments, including the Open Qualifying Series; the winners of designated amateur events, including The Amateur Championship and U.S. Amateur , also gained exemption provided they remain an amateur. Anyone not qualifying via exemption, and had a handicap of 0.4 or lower, could gain entry through regional and final qualifying events.
Criteria and exemptions
Each player is classified according to the first category in which he qualified, but other categories are shown in parentheses.[ a]
1. The Open Champions aged 60 or under on 23 July 2017
Stewart Cink (2)
Darren Clarke (2)
John Daly
David Duval
Ernie Els (2)
Todd Hamilton
Pádraig Harrington (2)
Zach Johnson (2,17)
Paul Lawrie
Tom Lehman
Sandy Lyle
Rory McIlroy (2,3,4,5,10,12,17)
Phil Mickelson (2,3,4,12,17)
Mark O'Meara
Louis Oosthuizen (2,4,5)
Henrik Stenson (2,3,4,5,17)
2. The Open Champions for 2007–2016
3. Top 10 finishers and ties in the 2016 Open Championship
4. Top 50 players in the Official World Golf Ranking (OWGR) for Week 21, 2017
Daniel Berger (12)
Wesley Bryan
Rafa Cabrera-Bello (5,17)
Paul Casey (12)
Kevin Chappell (12)
Jason Day (10,11,12)
Ross Fisher (5)
Matt Fitzpatrick (5,17)
Tommy Fleetwood
Rickie Fowler (11,17)
Branden Grace (5)
Emiliano Grillo (12)
Adam Hadwin
Billy Horschel
Kim Si-woo (11,12)
Kevin Kisner (12)
Russell Knox (12)
Brooks Koepka (8,17)
Matt Kuchar (12,17)
Marc Leishman
Hideki Matsuyama (12,21)
William McGirt (12)
Francesco Molinari (5)
Ryan Moore (12,17)
Alex Norén (5,6)
Pat Perez
Thomas Pieters (5,17)
Jon Rahm
Patrick Reed (12,17)
Justin Rose (8,14,17)
Charl Schwartzel (5,12)
Adam Scott (9,12)
Jordan Spieth (8,9,12,17)
Hideto Tanihara (22)
Justin Thomas (12)
Jimmy Walker (10,12,17)
Bubba Watson (9,12)
Bernd Wiesberger (5)
Danny Willett (5,9,17)
Gary Woodland (12)
5. Top 30 on the 2016 Race to Dubai
6. Last three BMW PGA Championship winners
7. Top 5 players, not already exempt, within the top 20 of the 2017 Race to Dubai through the BMW International Open
8. Last five U.S. Open winners
9. Last five Masters Tournament winners
10. Last five PGA Championship winners
11. Last three Players Championship winners
12. The 30 qualifiers for the 2016 Tour Championship
13. Top 5 players, not already exempt, within the top 20 of the 2017 FedEx Cup points list through the Travelers Championship
14. Winner of the 2016 Olympic Golf Tournament
15. Winner of the 2016 Open de Argentina
16. Winner and runner-up from the 2017 Korea Open
17. Playing members of the 2016 Ryder Cup teams
18. Winner of the 2016 Asian Tour Order of Merit
19. Winner of the 2016 PGA Tour of Australasia Order of Merit
20. Winner of the 2016–17 Sunshine Tour Order of Merit
21. Winner of the 2016 Japan Open
22. Top 2 on the 2016 Japan Golf Tour Official Money List
23. Top 2, not already exempt, on the 2017 Japan Golf Tour Official Money List through the Japan Golf Tour Championship
24. Winner of the 2016 Senior Open Championship
25. Winner of the 2017 Amateur Championship
26. Winner of the 2016 U.S. Amateur
Curtis Luck forfeited his exemption after turning professional in April 2017.
27. Winners of the 2016 and 2017 editions of the European Amateur
28. Recipient of the 2016 Mark H. McCormack Medal
Open Qualifying Series
The Open Qualifying Series (OQS) consisted of 10 events from the six major tours. Places were available to the leading players (not otherwise exempt) who finished in the top n and ties. In the event of ties, positions went to players ranked highest according to that week's OWGR .
Location
Tournament
Date
Spots
Top
Qualifiers
Australia
Emirates Australian Open
20 Nov
3
10
Aaron Baddeley , Ashley Hall , Cameron Smith
Singapore
SMBC Singapore Open
22 Jan
4
12
Phachara Khongwatmai , Jbe' Kruger , Prayad Marksaeng , Song Young-han
South Africa
Joburg Open
26 Feb
3
10
Darren Fichardt , Stuart Manley , Paul Waring
Japan
Mizuno Open
28 May
4
12
Adam Bland , Michael Hendry , Chan Kim , Kim Kyung-tae
France
HNA Open de France
2 Jul
3
10
Alexander Björk , Mike Lorenzo-Vera , Peter Uihlein
United States
Quicken Loans National
2 Jul
4
12
Charles Howell III , Kang Sung-hoon , Martin Laird , Kyle Stanley
Ireland
Dubai Duty Free Irish Open
9 Jul
3
10
David Drysdale , Ryan Fox , Richie Ramsay
United States
Greenbrier Classic
9 Jul
4
12
Jamie Lovemark , Sebastián Muñoz , Xander Schauffele , Robert Streb
Scotland
Aberdeen Asset Management Scottish Open
16 Jul
3
10
Andrew Dodt , Matthieu Pavon , Callum Shinkwin
United States
John Deere Classic
16 Jul
1
5
Bryson DeChambeau
Final Qualifying
The Final Qualifying events were played on 4 July at five courses covering Scotland and the North-West, Central and South-coast regions of England. Three qualifying places were available at each location.
Location
Qualifiers[ a] [ c]
Gailes Links
Ryan McCarthy , Julian Suri , Connor Syme (a)
Hillside
Adam Hodkinson , Nick McCarthy , Haydn McCullen
Notts (Hollinwell)
Laurie Canter , Joe Dean , Mark Foster
Royal Cinque Ports
Austin Connelly , Robert Dinwiddie , Matthew Southgate
Woburn
Shiv Kapur , Ian Poulter , Toby Tree
Alternates
To make up the full field of 156, additional places were allocated in ranking order from the Official World Golf Ranking at the time that these places were made available by the Championship Committee.
From the Week 26 (week ending 2 July) Official World Golf Ranking:
From the Week 27 (week ending 9 July) Official World Golf Ranking:
Round summaries
First round
Thursday, 20 July 2017
Three Americans – Brooks Koepka , Matt Kuchar , and Jordan Spieth – shared the lead after the first round on five under par, a shot clear of England's Paul Casey and Charl Schwartzel , with Ian Poulter a further shot back.[ 12] Reigning champion Henrik Stenson was one under after a 69. Rory McIlroy was five over par after six holes but recovered to finish with a one-over-par 71.[ 13] [ 14]
Second round
Friday, 21 July 2017
In difficult conditions, Jordan Spieth followed his first round 65 with a 69 to lead by two strokes from Matt Kuchar .[ 15] Only eight players scored under par for their second rounds, Zach Johnson 's 66 being the best round of the day. Alfie Plant was the only amateur to make the cut. He eagled the par-five 15th on his way to a 73 and a 36-hole total of 144.[ 16]
Amateurs: Plant (+4) , Syme (+9), Cianchetti (+11), Ellis (+12), McNealy (+12)
Third round
Saturday, 22 July 2017
Jordan Spieth shot a 65 to take a three-stroke lead over Matt Kuchar , who shot a 66. On an easier day of scoring, Branden Grace scored 62, breaking the long-standing men's major championship record of 63.[ 17] There were also low rounds from Dustin Johnson , with a 64, and Henrik Stenson , with a 65, both getting into a tie for 7th place.[ 18]
Grace scorecard
Hole
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Par
4
4
4
3
4
4
3
4
4
4
4
3
4
3
5
4
5
4
Grace
−1
−1
−1
−2
−3
−3
−3
−4
−5
−5
−5
−5
−5
−6
−6
−7
−8
−8
Final round
Sunday, 23 July 2017
Beginning the round with a three-shot lead, Jordan Spieth bogeyed three of his first four holes to fall into a tie with Matt Kuchar .[ 19] A birdie at the 5th combined with a bogey by Kuchar at the 6th allowed Spieth to re-open a two-stroke advantage, but a bogey-birdie swing at the 9th evened the score heading to the back-nine. The score remained level until the 13th, when Spieth hit his tee shot well to the right of the fairway. Forced to take an unplayable lie and drop from the practice area, he managed to get up-and-down to save bogey while Kuchar took the lead by making par.[ 20] At the par-3 14th, however, Spieth nearly holed his tee shot and converted the birdie attempt to tie Kuchar.[ 21] Then at the par-5 15th, Spieth made a 48-foot (15 m) eagle putt to take the lead once again. With birdies on the next two holes Spieth played 14–17 in five-under to take a two-stroke lead heading to the last. When Kuchar found a greenside bunker and made bogey, Spieth was able to tap in for par and win the championship by three strokes.[ 22] Li Haotong birdied his last four holes for 63 (−7) and jump into third place at 274 (−6), the best finish for an Asian player at the Open Championship since Lu Liang-Huan in 1971 , also at Royal Birkdale.[ 23] With the victory, Spieth joined Jack Nicklaus as the only golfers to win three legs of the career Grand Slam before the age of 24.[ 24]
Final leaderboard
Champion
Silver Medal winner (low amateur)
(a) = amateur
(c) = past champion
Note: Top 10 and ties qualify for the 2018 Open Championship ; top 4 and ties qualify for the 2018 Masters Tournament
Leaderboard below the top 10
Place
Player
Score
To par
Money ($ )
T11
Paul Casey
66-77-67-67=277
−3
175,333
Chan Kim
72-68-67-70=277
Henrik Stenson (c)
69-73-65-70=277
T14
Austin Connelly
67-72-66-73=278
−2
128,917
Jason Dufner
73-71-66-68=278
Zach Johnson (c)
75-66-71-66=278
Hideki Matsuyama
68-72-66-72=278
Ian Poulter
67-70-71-70=278
Chris Wood
71-72-68-67=278
T20
Charley Hoffman
67-73-72-67=279
−1
104,500
Xander Schauffele
69-75-70-65=279
T22
Richard Bland
67-72-70-71=280
E
88,000
Rickie Fowler
71-71-67-71=280
Jamie Lovemark
71-69-70-70=280
Richie Ramsay
68-70-70-72=280
Adam Scott
69-74-70-67=280
T27
Aaron Baddeley
69-76-72-64=281
+1
64,500
Daniel Berger
68-76-70-67=281
Jason Day
69-76-65-71=281
David Drysdale
72-73-66-70=281
Tony Finau
70-73-67-71=281
Tommy Fleetwood
76-69-66-70=281
Thongchai Jaidee
70-73-68-70=281
Andrew Johnston
69-74-67-71=281
Bubba Watson
68-72-71-70=281
Lee Westwood
71-74-69-67=281
T37
Laurie Canter
70-72-72-68=282
+2
45,286
Sergio García
73-69-68-72=282
Russell Henley
70-70-75-67=282
Martin Kaymer
72-72-70-68=282
Søren Kjeldsen
71-71-72-68=282
Webb Simpson
71-74-70-67=282
Steve Stricker
70-72-69-71=282
T44
Chang Yi-keun
71-71-71-70=283
+3
31,070
Andrew Dodt
69-75-69-70=283
Ross Fisher
70-72-66-75=283
Matt Fitzpatrick
69-73-68-73=283
Kang Sung-hoon
68-73-76-66=283
Joost Luiten
68-72-70-73=283
Kevin Na
68-75-68-72=283
Thomas Pieters
69-75-68-71=283
Jon Rahm
69-74-70-70=283
Peter Uihlein
72-72-69-70=283
T54
Scott Hend
71-74-65-74=284
+4
25,843
J. B. Holmes
71-72-71-70=284
Dustin Johnson
71-72-64-77=284
Kevin Kisner
70-71-74-69=284
Justin Rose
71-74-69-70=284
Toby Tree
70-75-69-70=284
Jimmy Walker
72-72-70-70=284
61
Ernie Els (c)
68-73-70-74=285
+5
25,000
T62
Kim Kyung-tae
73-71-69-73=286
+6
24,500
Mike Lorenzo-Vera
75-70-70-71=286
Shaun Norris
71-74-65-76=286
Sean O'Hair
72-73-71-70=286
Thorbjørn Olesen
70-72-74-70=286
Alfie Plant (a)
71-73-69-73=286
0
Charl Schwartzel
66-78-71-71=286
24,500
Song Young-han
71-74-69-72=286
T70
Joe Dean
72-72-70-73=287
+7
23,556
Brandon Stone
73-72-68-74=287
Andy Sullivan
70-75-69-73=287
Gary Woodland
70-69-74-74=287
T74
James Hahn
68-76-70-74=288
+8
23,163
Bernd Wiesberger
69-75-71-73=288
76
Danny Willett
71-74-73-71=289
+9
22,975
77
Kent Bulle
68-72-74-76=290
+10
22,850
CUT
Roberto Castro
76-70=146
+6
Mark Foster
75-71=146
Ryan Fox
74-72=146
Pádraig Harrington (c)
73-73=146
Shiv Kapur
73-73=146
Kim Si-woo
70-76=146
Anirban Lahiri
73-73=146
Pablo Larrazábal
72-74=146
Alexander Lévy
71-75=146
David Lipsky
68-78=146
Julian Suri
74-72=146
Adam Bland
75-72=147
+7
Paul Broadhurst
75-72=147
Matthew Griffin
70-77=147
Russell Knox
74-73=147
Martin Laird
68-79=147
Francesco Molinari
73-74=147
Robert Streb
69-78=147
Justin Thomas
67-80=147
Paul Waring
74-73=147
Fabrizio Zanotti
77-70=147
An Byeong-hun
77-71=148
+8
Alexander Björk
75-73=148
Kevin Chappell
73-75=148
Darren Clarke (c)
75-73=148
Dylan Frittelli
73-75=148
Brian Harman
70-78=148
Kim Gi-whan
73-75=148
Jbe' Kruger
76-72=148
Tom Lehman (c)
72-76=148
Ryan McCarthy
76-72=148
Haydn McCullen
73-75=148
Ryan Moore
74-74=148
Patrick Reed
73-75=148
Kyle Stanley
70-78=148
Emiliano Grillo
76-73=149
+9
Bill Haas
71-78=149
Ashley Hall
75-74=149
Charles Howell III
74-75=149
Paul Lawrie (c)
70-79=149
Stuart Manley
68-81=149
William McGirt
77-72=149
Pat Perez
74-75=149
Cameron Smith
74-75=149
Connor Syme (a)
73-76=149
Stewart Cink (c)
77-73=150
+10
Michael Hendry
73-77=150
David Horsey
75-75=150
Yuta Ikeda
71-79=150
Shane Lowry
72-78=150
Prayad Marksaeng
76-74=150
Phil Mickelson (c)
73-77=150
Wang Jeung-hun
77-73=150
Luca Cianchetti (a)
75-76=151
+11
David Duval (c)
79-72=151
Tyrrell Hatton
75-76=151
Nick McCarthy
74-77=151
Mark O'Meara (c)
81-70=151
Jhonattan Vegas
75-76=151
Wesley Bryan
74-78=152
+12
John Daly (c)
74-78=152
Harry Ellis (a)
77-75=152
Darren Fichardt
71-81=152
Billy Horschel
76-76=152
Maverick McNealy (a)
78-74=152
Yūsaku Miyazato
70-82=152
Louis Oosthuizen (c)
78-74=152
Matthieu Pavon
74-78=152
Callum Shinkwin
74-78=152
Hideto Tanihara
77-75=152
Bryson DeChambeau
76-77=153
+13
Adam Hadwin
71-82=153
Sandy Lyle (c)
77-76=153
Sebastián Muñoz
74-79=153
Brendan Steele
76-77=153
Phachara Khongwatmai
74-80=154
+14
Robert Dinwiddie
77-79=156
+16
Adam Hodkinson
80-76=156
Todd Hamilton (c)
79-79=158
+18
Source: [ 25]
Scorecard
Final round
Hole
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Par
4
4
4
3
4
4
3
4
4
4
4
3
4
3
5
4
5
4
Spieth
−10
−10
−9
−8
−9
−9
−9
−9
−8
−8
−8
−8
−7
−8
−10
−11
−12
−12
Kuchar
−8
−9
−8
−8
−8
−7
−7
−7
−8
−8
−8
−8
−8
−8
−9
−9
−10
−9
Li
+1
+1
+1
+1
+1
+1
+1
E
−1
−1
−1
−2
−2
−2
−3
−4
−5
−6
Cabrera-Bello
−3
−3
−3
−3
−3
−3
−3
−4
−4
−4
−3
−4
−4
−4
−4
−4
−5
−5
McIlroy
−2
−2
−2
−2
−2
−2
−2
−2
−3
−3
−4
−4
−4
−4
−3
−3
−5
−5
Cumulative tournament scores, relative to par
Source: [ 25]
Notes
^ a b (a) – indicates the player was an amateur.
^ a b Faldo and Price were in their final year of eligibility.
^ (R) – indicates a golfer who came through Regional Qualifying.
^ Scott Piercy , ranked 65, declined his place, which then went to Lahiri.[ 11]
^ Finau replaced Ben Curtis .[ 9]
^ Hahn replaced Brandt Snedeker .[ 10]
References
^ "The Champion Golfer of the Year will win USD1,845,000 at The 146th Open at Royal Birkdale" . The Open Championship. 5 July 2017.
^ a b "Peter Thomson wins British Open with 283" . Pittsburgh Post-Gazette . Associated Press. 10 July 1954. p. 11.
^ "Branden Grace shoots first-ever 62 in major championship history" . Golf.com . 22 July 2017. Retrieved 22 July 2017 .
^ "Open Championship: Royal Birkdale prize money to be paid in US dollars, not sterling" . BBC Sport . 5 July 2017. Retrieved 19 July 2017 .
^ Murray, Ewan (19 July 2017). "R&A calls BBC golf coverage 'tired and outdated' and defends Sky's Open deal" . The Guardian . Retrieved 24 July 2017 .
^ "NBC Takes Over British Open TV Rights From ESPN 1 Year Early" . Golf.com. Retrieved 24 July 2017 .
^ "Media guide" . The Open Championship. 2011. pp. 21, 203. Archived from the original on 18 April 2012. Retrieved 13 October 2016 .
^ "Palmer takes British crown" . Eugene Register-Guard . (Oregon, U.S.). Associated Press. 16 July 1961. p. 1B.
^ a b Gray, Will (12 July 2017). "Former champ Curtis withdraws from Open; Finau in" . Golf Channel . Archived from the original on 16 July 2017.
^ a b @TheOpen (19 July 2017). ".@BrandtSnedeker has withdrawn from The 146th Open at Royal Birkdale and is replaced by @JamesHahnPGA #TheOpen" (Tweet ) – via Twitter .
^ Romine, Brentley (11 July 2017). "Scott Piercy declines British Open spot, Anirban Lahiri added to field" . Golfweek .
^ Murray, Scott; Burnton, Simon (20 July 2017). "The Open 2017: first round, as it happened" . The Guardian . Retrieved 21 July 2017 .
^ Fordyce, Tom (20 July 2017). "The Open 2017: Jordan Spieth, Brooks Koepka & Matt Kuchar tied for lead" . BBC Sport . Retrieved 21 July 2017 .
^ Murray, Ewan (20 July 2017). "Jordan Spieth sets standard at Open to share lead after first round" . The Guardian . Retrieved 21 July 2017 .
^ Murray, Scott; Miller, Nick (21 July 2017). "The Open 2017: Jordan Spieth takes two-shot lead on day two – as it happened" . The Guardian . Retrieved 24 July 2017 .
^ "The Open 2017: Jordan Spieth leads by two shots" . BBC Sport . 21 July 2017. Retrieved 22 July 2017 .
^ Murray, Ewan (22 July 2017). "Branden Grace shoots lowest-ever men's major round of 62 at the Open" . The Guardian . Retrieved 24 July 2017 .
^ Murray, Scott; McVeigh, Niall (22 July 2017). "The Open 2017: Jordan Spieth leads the way after third round – as it happened" . The Guardian . Retrieved 24 July 2017 .
^ Murray, Scott; Ostlere), Lawrence (23 July 2017). "Jordan Spieth wins the Open 2017: final round, as it happened" . The Guardian . Retrieved 24 July 2017 .
^ Davis, Matt (21 July 2017). "The Open 2017: Jordan Spieth holds off Matt Kuchar to win third major" . BBC Sport . Retrieved 24 July 2017 .
^ DiMeglio, Steve (23 July 2017). "Jordan Spieth puts together incredible finish to win British Open" . USA Today . Retrieved 24 July 2017 .
^ "Jordan Spieth wins Open for 3rd major title, finishes 3 shots ahead of Matt Kuchar" . ESPN . 23 July 2017. Retrieved 23 July 2017 .
^ Herrington, Ryan (23 July 2017). "British Open 2017: With 63 at Birkdale, Li becomes famous for more than just mom's viral video" . Golf Digest . Retrieved 23 July 2017 .
^ Zak, Sean (22 July 2017). "9 ways Jordan Spieth made history Sunday at Royal Birkdale" . Golf.com . Retrieved 23 July 2017 .
^ a b "The Open" . ESPN . 23 July 2017. Retrieved 23 July 2017 .
External links
U.S. Open Ryder Cup Presidents Cup Open Championship Other events
Phoenix Open (CBS Super Bowl years 2007, 2013, 2016, 2019, 2021)
The Honda Classic (1987–present, except Winter Olympic years in 2018 and 2022)
WGC-Mexico Championship (2017–present)
Valspar Championship (2007–present)
Arnold Palmer Invitational (1987–present)
Shell Houston Open (2007–present)
Valero Texas Open (2012–present)
WGC-Cadillac Match Play (2007–present, except Winter Olympic years 2010 and 2014)
The Players Championship (1988–present)
Deutsche Bank Championship (2007–present)
The Northern Trust (alternates with CBS, 2022-)
BMW Championship (2007–present, alternates with CBS, 2022-)
The Tour Championship (2007–present, alternates with CBS, 2022-)
Mayakoba Golf Classic (2020-present)
Hero World Challenge (2007–present)
QBE Shootout (2007–2013, 2017–present)
Majors and special events Former events
Key figures
Related articles