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Sports / Golf

Golf: Top three have set their eyes on $10m play-off prize

Published: 31 Aug 2013 - 12:56 am | Last Updated: 30 Jan 2022 - 03:50 pm

 


Tiger Woods of the US and Adam Scott of Australia prepare to play from the 10th tee during the first round of the Deutsche Bank Championship at TPC Boston in Norton, Massachusetts.

NORTON, Massachusetts: The world’s top three golfers tee off together today as the second FedExCup playoff event, the Deutsche Bank Championship, gets under way with scores of other players still in the hunt for the $10m jackpot.

World number one Tiger Woods, nursing a back injury that left him in agony during Sunday’s final round at The Barclays, heads the FedExCup point standings and has been grouped with second-ranked Adam Scott and Phil Mickelson (third).

Woods has won a season-high five times on the PGA Tour while Australian Scott and American Mickelson have both clinched majors this year - at the Masters and British Open respectively.

No prizes then for guessing which group will attract the most attention from spectators for the opening two rounds.

“It’s a good grouping, isn’t it?” world number two Scott told reporters yesterday. “It’s going to be huge for everyone to come out and watch and great viewing on TV. They’re the big show and it’s fun to be involved in that atmosphere,” he said of Woods and Mickelson, who between them have won 19 majors. “I think I’ve learned to enjoy being a part of all that and gotten somewhat comfortable with it.”

But the beauty of the FedExCup format, putting aside any debate about the competitive justice of a lucrative play-off series which began in 2007, is that being in the top three in the points standings at this stage counts for little.

American Brandt Snedeker won last year’s FedExCup title and the $10m bonus, leapfrogging Woods, Mickelson, Rory McIlroy and Nick Watney with victory at the season-ending event.

It is a format that is familiar to American sports, particularly in the National Football League where the battles of the regular season count for little when it comes to the play-off stages.

“Technically, you can win every tournament you play in all year, you win 30 events and lose the last one and lose the FedExCup,” said Woods. “So that’s very similar to what the (New England) Patriots went through.

“You have an undefeated season, but you don’t win the last game, you don’t win the Super Bowl, you don’t win the FedExCup.

“They (PGA Tour officials) are trying to create some excitement towards the end of the year. They’ve done a great job of that.” 

The gradual cutting down of the field, from 125 players at The Barclays to just the top 30 at the Tour Championship in Atlanta, along with a point re-set to keep the battle open, has certainly helped keep the tension alive, according to Woods.

“The first couple of years there was really no drama going into the Tour Championship,” the 14-times major champion said. “I had won it outright and Vijay (Singh) had won it outright, and all we could do is just tee it up.

“There was a minor (points) re-set, but still it didn’t quite have the same drama. Now anybody that’s in the top five, they win the Tour Championship, they automatically win the FedExCup.”REUTERS