Scottie Schefflerâs golfing influence is mammoth, as the tour star has revealed he is part of a team looking to overhaul a $100 million tournament.
The 28-year-oldâs impact continues to be heard throughout the golfing world, with the American revealing he is currently helping to overhaul a major tournament that he has long expressed dislike for â namely, the FedEx Cup.
When speaking about the tournament setup in 2024, Scheffler said:
âI think itâs silly. You canât call it a season-long race and have it come down to one tournament.â
âHypothetically, we get to East Lake, and my neck flares up, and it doesnât heal the way it did at The Players; I finish 30th in the FedExCup because I had to withdraw from the last tournament. Is that really the season-long race? No. It is what it is.â
After revealing his dislike of the format it seems like Scheffler isnât the only golfer hoping for change.
Adam Scott backs Scott Scheffler in FedEx Cup plans
Whilst speaking at the Arnold Palmer Invitational last month, Scheffler announced that he and other Player Council Members are currently discussing multiple new format ideas.
âThere are a few different formats that I think weâre looking at right now,â Scheffler stated.
âSome of âem good, some of âem were bad. Iâm not really going to go into details of those formats because weâre still ironing them outâ
Adam Scott has since backed Schefflerâs claims and now appears to be part of the monumental FedEx Cup renovation project.
âOne of the big things looking ahead is we want the FedEx Cup and Tour Championship to be legacy-type events and not too gimmicky.
âThatâs the premise from which weâre working. It might be impossible to change everything this year because we canât change points and this, that and the other so hopefully this year will be a bridge to next year.â
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What the new FedEx Cup could look like
The current format uses a handicap system, where the leading player in the rankings starts ten underpar, with a dwindling advantage as players move down the rankings.
It turns out that this format is wildly unpopular amongst the pros, with players such as Adam Scott and Sam Burns both having voiced their concerns over the format, branding it as âgimmickyâ and âconfusingâ.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/video/sports/smylie-kaufman-predicts-scottie-schefflers-wins-in-2025/vi-AA1wSSeb?cvid=a1f0ff69ed8348a68ee26aad72dcea5b&ei=115
This setup appears to be getting thrown out, though; it is currently unclear as to what the new format will look like. However, former board member Kevin Kisner has revealed he is hoping for a knockout-style layout.
âI like the one that TV is pushing. There would be a cut to the Round of 16 on Friday, eight play Saturday, top four duke it out on Sunday and five to eight play for their [final] position,â Kisner told Schupak.
âIâm biased. I like whatever TV likes. Theyâre our biggest money partner and I like playing for a lot of money.
âThat was one of the ideas. I donât know if that is still the direction. I think it will be a more traditional tournament with more consequence. I donât want to spoil the surprise too much.â
The post Adam Scott backs Scottie Scheffler in campaigning for drastic changes to âsillyâ PGA Tour event appeared first on HITC.