Korn Ferry Tour Finals

The Korn Ferry Tour Finals is a series of four golf tournaments that conclude the season on the Korn Ferry Tour. The finals are contested in a playoff format, similar to the FedEx Cup playoffs on the PGA Tour, with players eliminated after each of the first three tournaments. At the end of the Finals, the top 30 players on the season-long points list earn PGA Tour membership for the following season ("Tour cards").

Official logo.

From 2013 to 2022, the Finals were conducted in a very different format, as a separate entity from the tour's regular season. The top 75 players from the Korn Ferry Tour, along with players who failed to make the top 125 on the PGA Tour that same season, competed in a series of three or four tournaments. The top 25 players based on points earned in the Finals alone earned PGA Tour cards for the following season. The series was established as a replacement for the PGA Tour Qualifying Tournament in 2013.

Tournaments

edit

Since 2023, the first year of the new format, the Finals have consisted of the following four tournaments:[1]

Korn Ferry Tour Finals tournaments
Tournament Location Competitors
Albertsons Boise Open Boise, Idaho 156
Simmons Bank Open Franklin, Tennessee 144
Nationwide Children's Hospital Championship Columbus, Ohio 120
Korn Ferry Tour Championship French Lick, Indiana 75

Each event has an enhanced purse of US$1,500,000 and awards more points than the standard Korn Ferry Tour event. The first three events feature a standard tour cut rules, while the Tour Championship does not have a cut.[1]

In 2019, 2021 and 2022, under the original format, the Finals consisted of only three tournaments, as the Simmons Bank Open was not part of the series. In 2020, the Tour Finals series was not held as the Korn Ferry Tour revised its schedule into a combined 2020-21 season due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[2] The three tournaments that would have been part of the Finals were contested as regular-season events.

Prior to 2019, the Finals had been a series of four tournaments from its inception in 2013.[3] Three other tournaments were part of the Tour Finals for part of that period:

Qualification

edit

The top 156 players in the Korn Ferry Tour points system through the end of the regular season qualify for the first Finals event. The number of participants is reduced each week of the Finals based on the season-long points ranking. In 2023, however, in the first three Finals events, players ranked below the cutoff were able to play if eligible players did not take part.[1] This provision was dropped in 2024 and no alternate lists were used.[5]

Under the format in place from 2013 to 2022, there were four ways to qualify for the Finals:[6]

  • Finish in the top-75 on the Korn Ferry Tour's regular season standings (money list from 2013 to 2018, points from 2019).
  • Finish the PGA Tour's regular season ranked 126–200 on the FedEx Cup points list. Not all players with this criterion competed, as some were already exempt for the PGA Tour the next year through other means.
  • As a non-member of the PGA Tour, earn enough FedEx Cup points to place 126–200 on the points list.
  • Special medical exemptions.[7]

Tour cards

edit

Under the system introduced in 2023, the top 30 players on the Tour at the conclusion of the Finals earn a PGA Tour card. The points for the regular season and Finals are combined, with the Finals events worth more points than regular-season tournaments.[1] The change in the qualifying rules for the Korn Ferry Tour were made in conjunction with new rules for the PGA Tour Qualifying Tournament, which awarded PGA Tour cards in 2023 for the first time in a decade.[8]

Under the previous format, the top 25 players in the Finals (originally based on earnings, later on points) earned PGA Tour cards. This was in addition to the cards earned by the top 25 players on the Korn Ferry Tour during the regular season.[9]

Players who win their third event of the season during the finals are also fully exempt on the PGA Tour. The top 75 players, those who qualify for the Korn Ferry Tour Championship, are guaranteed no worse than full Korn Ferry Tour status for the next season.

Criticism

edit

One unintended consequence of the elimination of direct access to the PGA Tour through "Q school" was that more amateurs turned professional earlier in the year (June instead of August) in order to have a better chance at earning a PGA Tour card through high finishes via sponsors' exemptions.[10]

Winners

edit

Tournament winners

edit
Year Albertsons Boise Open Simmons Bank Open Nationwide Children's
Hospital Championship
Korn Ferry Tour
Championship
2024   Matt McCarty   Paul Peterson   Frankie Capan III   Braden Thornberry
2023   Chan Kim   Grayson Murray   Norman Xiong   Paul Barjon
Year Albertsons Boise Open Nationwide Children's
Hospital Championship
Korn Ferry Tour
Championship
2022   Will Gordon   David Lingmerth   Justin Suh
2021   Greyson Sigg   Adam Svensson   Joseph Bramlett
Year Nationwide Children's
Hospital Championship
Albertsons Boise Open Korn Ferry Tour
Championship
2019   Scottie Scheffler   Matthew NeSmith   Tom Lewis
Year Nationwide Children's
Hospital Championship
DAP Championship Albertsons Boise Open Web.com Tour
Championship
2018   Robert Streb   Kramer Hickok   Bae Sang-moon   Denny McCarthy
Year Nationwide Children's
Hospital Championship
Albertsons Boise Open DAP Championship Web.com Tour
Championship
2017   Peter Uihlein   Chesson Hadley (2/2)   Nicholas Lindheim   Jonathan Byrd
Year DAP Championship Albertsons Boise Open Nationwide Children's
Hospital Championship
Web.com Tour
Championship
2016   Bryson DeChambeau   Michael Thompson   Grayson Murray Canceled*
Year Hotel Fitness
Championship
Small Business Connection
Championship/Chiquita Classic
Nationwide Children's
Hospital Championship
Web.com Tour
Championship
2015   Henrik Norlander   Chez Reavie   Andrew Loupe   Emiliano Grillo
2014   Bud Cauley   Adam Hadwin   Justin Thomas   Derek Fathauer
2013   Trevor Immelman   Andrew Svoboda   Noh Seung-yul   Chesson Hadley (1/2)

*Tournament canceled due to Hurricane Matthew

Money/points leaders

edit
Year Regular season
points leader
Finals
points leader
2024   Matt McCarty   Matt McCarty
2023   Ben Kohles   Ben Kohles
Year Regular season
winner
Finals winner Overall
winner
2022   Yuan Yechun   Justin Suh   Justin Suh
2021   Stephan Jäger   Joseph Bramlett   Stephan Jäger
2019   Zhang Xinjun   Scottie Scheffler   Scottie Scheffler
2018   Im Sung-jae   Denny McCarthy   Im Sung-jae
2017   Brice Garnett   Chesson Hadley   Chesson Hadley
2016   Wesley Bryan   Grayson Murray   Wesley Bryan
2015   Patton Kizzire   Chez Reavie   Patton Kizzire
2014   Carlos Ortiz   Derek Fathauer   Adam Hadwin
2013   Michael Putnam   John Peterson   Chesson Hadley

Bolded golfers received full exemptions for the PGA Tour not subject to re-order. In 2013, golfers who led the regular season money list and the Finals money list received full exemptions.[11] Since 2014, golfers who led the overall money list and the Finals money list received full exemptions.[12] Points replaced money beginning in 2019.

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c d "How it works: Korn Ferry Tour Finals". PGA Tour. Retrieved January 1, 2024.
  2. ^ Korn Ferry Tour Communications (May 4, 2020). "Korn Ferry Tour announces new restart schedule and combined 2020-21 season". PGA Tour. Archived from the original on May 4, 2020. Retrieved March 23, 2024.
  3. ^ "PGA Tour announces 2019 Web.com Tour schedule". Golf Canada. September 20, 2018.
  4. ^ Warsinskey, Tim (December 7, 2015). "Web.com Tour championship coming to Canterbury, affiliated with LeBron James charity". cleveland.com. Retrieved December 7, 2015.
  5. ^ "2024 Korn Ferry Tour Finals: How it works, what you need to know". PGA Tour. August 19, 2024.
  6. ^ "Eligibility for the 2013 Web.com Tour Finals". PGA Tour. Retrieved August 26, 2013.
  7. ^ "Field study: Web.com Tour Finals". PGA Tour. August 23, 2013. Retrieved August 26, 2013.
  8. ^ Schupak, Adam (January 31, 2023). "PGA Tour Q-School to be hosted in 2023 at TPC Sawgrass and neighboring Sawgrass CC". Golfweek. Retrieved February 12, 2024.
  9. ^ "Eligibility for the 2014 Web.com Tour Finals". PGA Tour. June 1, 2014.
  10. ^ Herrington, Ryan (June 18, 2014). "Why so many top amateurs are turning pro this week – and the unintended consequence". Golf Digest.
  11. ^ "Meet the graduates: 2013 Web.com Tour Finals top 50". PGA Tour. Archived from the original on December 14, 2013. Retrieved September 13, 2015.
  12. ^ "Meet The 50: Who's headed to the PGA Tour for the 2014-15 season?". PGA Tour. Archived from the original on September 12, 2015. Retrieved September 13, 2015.
edit