Nationwide Tour
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Golf's Nationwide Tour is the developmental tour for the U.S. based PGA Tour, and features professional golfers who have either failed to score well enough at that level's Qualifying School (the main tour's qualifying tournament, popularly referred to as "Q-School") to earn their PGA Tour card, or who have done so but then failed to win enough money to stay at that level. Those who are on the top 20 of the money list at year's end are given PGA Tour memberships for the next season.
The earlier "satellite tour" was formalized by the PGA Tour in 1990 and was initially called the Ben Hogan Tour in honor of golf great Ben Hogan. In 1990 there were thirty events, and the typical event purse was $100,000. The name was later changed to the Nike Tour in 1993, and the Buy.com Tour in 2000 in naming rights deals. The current name is a result of the purchase of naming rights by Nationwide Insurance in 2003. Currently (in 2006) there are 31 events, one each in Australia, New Zealand and Panama, and the remainder in the United States. The events in Australia and New Zealand are co-sanctioned by the PGA Tour of Australasia. Purses at the other events range from $450,000 to $750,000, which is about one tenth of the level on the PGA Tour.
All Nationwide Tour Tournaments operate similar to typical PGA Tour tournaments in that they are all 72-hole stroke play events with a cut made after 36 holes. The cut on the Nationwide Tour is for the top 60 players and ties, unlike 70 for the PGA Tour. The fields are usually 144 or 156 players, based on time zones. For the aforementioned international events, the joint tour will split players spots with the nationwide tour for proper sanctioning. As with the PGA Tour, the winner of the tournament will get a prize of 18% of the total purse.
Since this tour is a developmental tour, players are usually vying to play well enough to gain status on the PGA Tour. The main ways of having status for the Nationwide Tour are to finish in a group of the top 50 golfers at qualifying school after the top 30 and ties, those who finished between 21st and 60th on the previous year's money list, and those who were formally fully exempt on the PGA Tour in the recent past. Around 14 open qualifying spots are given during the Monday of tournament week, and those who finished in the top 25 of a Nationwide event are automatically exempt into the next tournament. Past PGA Tour winners aged 48 and 49 can play on the Nationwide tour on an increased basis to prepare themselves for the Champions Tour.
Since 1997, a player who wins three tournaments in one year on the Nationwide Tour receives an immediate promotion to the PGA Tour for the remainder of the year. This "performance promotion" (informally sometimes referred to as a "battlefield promotion") has occurred seven times[1]:
- 1997 Chris Smith
- 2001 Heath Slocum, Chad Campbell, Pat Bates
- 2002 Patrick Moore
- 2003 Tom Carter
- 2005 Jason Gore
The Nationwide Tour is one of the nine tours on which Official World Golf Rankings points are available, and one of only two developmental tours that offer ranking points, the other being the Europe-based Challenge Tour.
[edit] 2007 schedule
The table below shows the Nationwide Tour's 2007 schedule. The numbers in parentheses after winners' names show the player's total number of wins on the Nationwide Tour including that event. No one accumulates many wins on the Nationwide Tour because success at this level soon leads to promotion to the PGA Tour.
[edit] Money list winners
Nationwide Tour
- 2006 Ken Duke - $382,443
- 2005 Troy Matteson - $495,009
- 2004 Jimmy Walker - $371,346
- 2003 Zach Johnson - $494,882
Buy.com Tour
- 2002 Patrick Moore - $381,965
- 2001 Chad Campbell - $394,552
- 2000 Spike McRoy - $300,638
Nike Tour
- 1999 Carl Paulson -$223,051
- 1998 Bob Burns - $178,664
- 1997 Chris Smith - $225,201
- 1996 Stewart Cink - $251,699
- 1995 Jerry Kelly - $188,878
- 1994 Chris Perry - $167,148
- 1993 Sean Murphy - $166,293
Ben Hogan Tour
- 1992 John Flannery - $164,115
- 1991 Tom Lehman - $141,934
- 1990 Jeff Maggert - $108,644
[edit] See also
- Professional golf tours
- Challenge Tour - the analogous tour in Europe operated by the PGA European Tour
- Gateway Tour - a third tier tour in the United States
- NGA Hooters Tour - another third tier tour in the United States
[edit] External links
- Official site
- How to become a new Nationwide Tour member - pgatour.com article of January 17, 2007 detailing the options for getting onto the Nationwide Tour, both on a regular basis and for a single event.