As a longtime baseball fan, I love when October rolls around for Major League Baseball.
After a long, grueling regular season, every team that makes the playoffs is on close-to-even ground. Just because your team won the most games from April through September doesn’t make you a shoe-in for the World Series, but it does start you against an opponent with a lower season record.
This weekend, professional golf’s proverbial October begins with The Barclays tournament at Liberty National Golf Club in Jersey City, NJ — and I couldn’t be more eager to watch.
The Barclays kicks of the beginning of the PGA Tour Playoffs where all competitors are challenging for the FedExCup.
In years past, the PGA Championship usually signified the end of the PGA Tour season. But since the FedExCup’s introduction in 2007, the big name players have found two more reasons to keep playing into the autumn — a shiny new trophy signifying you are the best of the PGA Tour and a $10 million bonus.
As Tiger Woods and Vijay Singh would attest, this is a great honor to have (Woods won the inaugural year, followed by Singh in 2008). However, it might be a little more difficult for the two to add this year’s silverware to their trophy case because the PGA Tour changed the format of the playoffs.
In 2007 and 2008, players earned points during the regular season to qualify for the four-tournament playoff. Once the playoffs started, the points system was reset and everyone started at an equal playing ground — kind of like the Major League Baseball playoffs.
The only problem with the system was that if someone performed well in the first two of four events, they could coast to the championship trophy in the final two tournaments, much like Vijay Singh did in 2008.
The PGA noticed this weakness in the setup and changed it for 2009 to make sure that all four tournaments mean something in the playoff series. Here is the playoff setup for the FedExCup:
-- The top 125 golfers will enter The Barclays this weekend. Of the top 125 golfers, 25 will be cut from the field that will compete during the Deutsche Bank Championship next week. Only the top 70 will compete in the BMW Championship Sept. 10-13 and just 30 will make THE TOUR Championship on Sept. 24-27.
-- The FedExCup point system will be quintupled for the playoffs. So a tournament win will equal 2,500 points for a golfer, compared to the 250 to 600 points for winning tournaments during the regular season. Such a setup will level the playing field between golfers who performed impressively during the regular season and those performing well in the playoffs. This is one major change to the points system of last year.
-- Once the field is narrowed down to 30 for the playoff finale — THE TOUR Championship — the points will be reset, assuring that the FedExCup will be decided at THE TOUR Championship.
-- THE TOUR Championship will be set up so the playoff standings leader starts with 2,500 points, second place gets 2,250 and so on down to 210 for the 30th-ranked golfer. With the reset, every golfer has a mathematical chance to win the FedExCup, some with more control of their destinies than others.
With the new system, the playoffs will allow players like Sergio Garcia (No. 89 of the 125 field) to take on Tiger Woods (leading the FedExCup regular season point standings) for the silverware if he can outplay the 2009 PGA Tour Money List leader during this string of four tournaments.
In short, September is no longer a time for most of the pros on the PGA Tour to pack up their golf bags and call it season — It’s a time to win a new piece of silverware and a multi-million dollar prize.
So, golf fans, don’t flip the TV channel over to college or pro football just yet. There’s plenty of good golf to watch in the next couple of weeks.