"Give us a chance to sort this out"
Nice to see the PGA Tour Commish Tim Finchem acknowledging that not visiting Chicago annually starting in 2007 was not such a hot idea. Ed Sherman reports:
"The reaction has been strong, and we take that into consideration," said Finchem, in town for the PGA Championship. "It's not often I get e-mails from fans who don't like what we're doing. . . . Give us a chance to sort this out. There may be a change in plans."
"I know people are disappointed about '08 and '10, but I'd like them to think about what they are getting in '07, '09 and '11," he said. "We ask the fans to hang with us. Out of six years, the best players in the world are going to be here at least four years, and maybe [twice in 2012]. That's not bad."
Reader Comments (8)
just to get your timeline correct,
the Western has been at Cog Hill since 1991 (or before Tiger Woods joined the PGAtour). Before that, it was held at Butler National starting in 1974 (or before Tiger Woods was born).
I would think that the WGA was to maintaing a pretty consistent, high profile event for the PGA tour before Finchem and his henchmen came up with the sillyFEDEXCup. Some may argue better than the "5th major" at TPC Sawgrass that he is trying to force down our throats.
If anything, maybe the constant turnover of sponsors for the Western over the last decade got the PGA nervous and got them to start thinking of someone more permanent. In fact so permanent that the tournament wont stay in the area on a permanent basis.
I'm not looking forward to a "Depends U.S. Open" or a "Preparation H PGA Championship."
Every major championship is an event that is not under the direct control of the PGA Tour. And every event on the PGA Tour that is a regular event seems to be on the same razor's edge of commercial viability. Whatever strength an individual event has, it seems to relate to history, and the quality of the golf course and the power of the instituional memory among the organizers; Riviera, Muirfield, Colonial, Westchester...
I'm beginning to think that maybe Greg Norman is onto something with a "Shareholders' Lawsuit" against the PGA Tour...
It's not just Philly!
After 2006, aside from an occasional Presidents Cup, I don't see any PGAT events between NYC and Greensboro.
Gone will be Williamsburg, DC, and Pennsylvania. Meanwhile, Florida, Texas, California and Georgia are saturated.