The Mercedes-Benz Championship will launch the PGA Tour's much-trumpeted new era in the absence of Tiger Woods and with most players scratching their heads over what lies ahead this season.
In a radical shake-up, Tour officials have established the
FedExCup, a season-long points competition which will culminate in
a four-event playoff series with $10 million to be won by the
overall champion.
"It's going to be interesting to see how it pans out," said
US Open champion Geoff Ogilvy after Wednesday's pro-am tournament
at the Kapalua Resort's Plantation Course.
"I don't think anyone really knows how it's going to shake
out but I think it's going to be fun. It's going to build momentum
during the year and I think people will get really excited about it
by the end of the year.
"That $10 million carrot at the end is a pretty big deal.
That's a lot of money for anybody."
As with most of his peers, however, Australian Ogilvy will
always regard the four majors as golf's holy grail.
"The FedExCup is going to be a nice feather in your cap, but
I don't think there's a golfer in the world who wouldn't rather win
a major," he said.
Fellow Australian Adam Scott, bidding for his sixth PGA Tour
title after winning the season-ending Tour Championship two months
ago, agreed.
"I'm going to worry about the four majors, and then I'll worry
about those playoffs," he said. "I figure if I play (the final)
eight weeks, everything is going to be sweet.
"$10 million certainly gets your attention. But my goal is
always to win golf tournaments and, if I win enough, I'll win the
FedExCup, so that takes care of itself."
Thirty-six tournaments will make up the regular PGA Tour
season before the big-money playoffs are held, ending with the Tour
Championship in Atlanta, Georgia for the top 30 players from
September 13th-16th.
The leading 144 players in the points list will qualify for
the first playoff event, the Barclays Classic outside New York from
August 23rd-26th.
The field will be cut to 120 for the following week at the
Deutsche Bank Championship in Norton, Massachusetts before 70
players qualify for the September 6th-9th BMW Championship near
Chicago.
Computer projections indicate that players would probably
need to be ranked in the top 20 going into the Tour Championship to
have a viable chance to win the FedExCup.
Although points rather than money will determine success on
the 2007 PGA Tour, world number two Jim Furyk plans to treat this
season like any other.
"Ultimately, whether you're looking at the money list or the
points list, what it really boils down to is you need to play
well," he said.
"You need to focus on what's going to get you there and the
process, rather than the end result."
Like Scott, Furyk is banking on playing as much of the closing
stretch as he can.
"I intend to play seven out of eight for sure, and hopefully
eight out of nine," he said. "I can't skip the British (Open),
Akron (for the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational) or the PGA
(Championship), and I'm defending at the Canadian."
For Australia's Stuart Appleby, who is chasing a fourth
successive victory at Kapalua - which starts today - the key to the
season will be a fast start.
"It's just a horse race, get out of the gates, get our
position and get going," he said.
Victory for Appleby would not only give him the perfect start
to his campaign but also make him the first player since Woods (at
the 2003 Bay Hill Invitational) to win a PGA Tour event four years
in a row.
World number one Woods, champion at Kapalua in 2000, decided
last week to skip the event which brings together all the
title-holders from the previous season.