The PGA Tour’s 2028 Overhaul: Two Tiers, Match Play and Pine Valley

Promotion, relegation, no sponsor exemptions — and a Tour Championship that might finally be worth the name

The dust had barely settled on Wyndham Clark’s second U.S. Open title at Shinnecock Hills when the PGA Tour landed another story. On Tuesday at TPC River Highlands, CEO Brian Rolapp stepped to a podium and delivered the most significant structural overhaul in the Tour’s history. Starting in 2028, the Tour’s new model will include two separate series of tournaments running concurrently — the PGA Tour Championship Series and the PGA Tour Challenger Series. Golf, in other words, has finally borrowed football’s best idea.

PGA Tour CEO Brian Rolapp addresses media at TPC River Highlands during the 2026 Travelers Championship

Two Tracks, Running at Once

The Championship Series is the premium tier. It will feature up to 24 events, including 16 signature events, The Players Championship, four major championships, and season-ending events. Each signature event will be a 72-hole stroke-play tournament with average field sizes of 120 golfers and 36-hole cuts to the top 65 and ties, with a purse of at least $20 million. There will be no sponsor exemptions.(ESPN)

The Challenger Series sits beneath it as a genuine proving ground. It will consist of a minimum of 20 tournaments with purses of at least $4 million and 144-man fields, with around seven elevated events played during Championship Series off-weeks. Win twice on the Challenger track, and a player earns immediate promotion to the top flight.

PGA Tour graphic for the Championship Series and Challenger Series structure launching in 2028

Promotion, Relegation — and a Last Chance

At least the top 90 players in the Championship Series points list will retain their membership the following season, with another 20 promoted from the Challenger Series each year. Those who fall outside the top 90 are not cut loose immediately. Golfers facing potential relegation will be able to compete in a “last chance” series of four to six events in the autumn. Any golfer who fails to regain Championship Series status and doesn’t advance through those events will be eligible to compete in the Challenger Series the next season. It is promotion and relegation, applied to golf. The Premier League figured this out sixty years ago.

Tiger Woods chaired the Future Competition Committee that produced the recommendations, alongside Patrick Cantlay, Adam Scott and Camilo Villegas, among others. Rolapp described the outcome as a model grounded in meritocracy, with clearer pathways, higher stakes and more consistency when the best players compete together.(ESPN)

The Playoffs Finally Get Interesting

The Tour Championship — long the least compelling event in its own playoff — is overdue a reinvention. From 2028, it will leave East Lake and rotate to prestigious courses that the Tour has rarely or never played, including Pine Valley Golf Club in New Jersey, Cypress Point Club in California, and Seminole Golf Club in Florida. The postseason will also incorporate match play: a World Cup-style pool format with 32 players in groups of four vying for 16 final spots, then a small-field match play final at one of the world’s great courses — no ropes, no corporate buildout. Just golf at the places it was meant to be played. (The Fried Egg)

Tommy Fleetwood mid-swing

Where European Golf Fits In

The announcement carries real consequence on this side of the Atlantic. The future autumn schedule will feature a limited series of elevated international events with top players from the Championship Series, co-sanctioned by the DP World Tour. How many DP World Tour finishers earn direct Championship Series status is still being finalised — but the pathway matters, and the conversations are very much live.

Rory McIlroy, who had described the Challenger Series concept as a glorified version of the Korn Ferry Tour during his U.S. Open press conference, tempered his position once the full details landed, calling it a positive step for professional golf. High praise, by Rory’s standards.

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Europe’s Open: Five Names Worth Backing at Royal Birkdale

Two majors down. One to go. And it happens to be the most European one.

Royal Birkdale Golf Course Southport

The 2026 major season has been, by any reasonable measure, a European one. Rory McIlroy defended his Masters title at Augusta in April — the fourth player in history to win back-to-back Green Jackets. Aaron Rai won the PGA Championship in May, becoming the first English-born player to claim a major since 1919. Two of the three majors played so far this year have gone to Europe. The fourth, the oldest and the most naturally European of them all, arrives at Royal Birkdale on 16 July. Here are the five names worth backing.

Tommy Fleetwood — The Hometown Favourite

Tommy Fleetwood mid-swing

If there is a script written for this Open, it ends with Fleetwood’s name on the trophy. He grew up in Southport. He knows every gust off the Irish Sea, every quirk of that coastline — and, one suspects, every pub on the high street. The gallery at Birkdale will carry him loudly, and for four days. He finished tied eleventh at Shinnecock Hills last weekend. His links record is exceptional. The only thing Fleetwood has never done is win a major. Birkdale in July, in front of a crowd entirely on his side, feels like the moment that changes.

Aaron Rai — The Man With Momentum

Aaron Rai with the Wanamaker Trophy, Aronimink, May 2026

Three weeks ago, Rai won the PGA Championship at Aronimink. He did it without any of the drama that typically surrounds major week — calmly, methodically, with the composure of someone who had done it before. He hadn’t. He was also tied eleventh at Shinnecock Hills last weekend. The form is there. The belief, clearly, is there. Links golf will suit him. This is a player who could win two majors in a calendar year, and if that thought has not yet crossed his mind, it will have crossed his caddie’s.

Rory McIlroy — The Links Specialist

Tommy Fleetwood mid-swing

McIlroy won The Open at Royal Liverpool in 2014. He has six major titles and back-to-back Masters victories. His Shinnecock weekend was painful — a promising start that unravelled over two difficult back nines — but he has already confirmed the next two weeks will be spent playing links golf at home. The Scottish Open follows on 9 July, four days before Birkdale. There is a reason McIlroy talks about The Open the way other players talk about Augusta. The links game is the one he trusts most. He is not the favourite. He is, however, dangerous.

Shane Lowry — The Experience Card

Tommy Fleetwood mid-swing

Lowry won at Royal Portrush in 2019 in conditions that resembled a weather event more than a golf tournament. He won anyway. He is the sort of player who gets sharper when the wind gets up and the occasion gets heavy. Royal Birkdale in July can be both. Lowry will not feature prominently in the early conversations about this Open. That is almost certainly how he would prefer it.

Robert MacIntyre — The One Worth Watching

Tommy Fleetwood mid-swing

The young Scotsman plays links golf as though he was born to it — which, on the west coast of Scotland, he essentially was. MacIntyre has been building quietly toward a major for two years. The ingredients are there: the game, the temperament, the pedigree. Birkdale, with the right wind and the right week, might be where the building finally stops.

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Wyndham Clark Wins the 2026 US Open at Shinnecock Hills

A six-shot lead, a hostile gallery, and one of the more gripping Sunday finishes in recent major championship history.

The 126th US Open, played at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club in Southampton, New York, was always going to produce a story. Shinnecock has that effect. It punishes complacency, rewards the scrambler, and creates theatre on the final day. This year was no exception.

Wire to Wire — and Every Inch of It

Wyndham Clark entered Sunday’s final round six strokes clear. He shot a 73. He still won by one. That tells you more about Shinnecock Hills than it does about the champion.

Wyndham Clark with the US Open trophy at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club, Southampton, June 2026

Clark’s decisive quality all week was scrambling — 16 of 24 saves over four rounds. The most important came on the par-5 16th, when he drove into thick fescue, escaped, and holed a 25-foot birdie to re-establish a two-stroke lead. A three-putt bogey on the 17th reduced it to one. Two putts from 52 feet on the 72nd hole sealed it. Final score: 4-under 276, one ahead of Sam Burns. Clark became the ninth player in US Open history to go wire-to-wire — joining a list that includes Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy.

The Crowd and the Redemption

This win carries weight beyond the leaderboard. Clark had a difficult 2025, a season that included a well-documented incident at Oakmont and considerable reputation repair. He arrived at Shinnecock with a portion of the gallery openly against him — many rooting instead for Scottie Scheffler, world number one, chasing the career Grand Slam on his 30th birthday and Father’s Day. Clark handled the noise with composure. “Anytime someone said something negative to me, I replaced it with something positive,” he said. His father, Randall, having taken a red-eye from Denver to surprise his son on Sunday morning, was waiting by the 18th green. It was that kind of afternoon.

The Chasers

Sam Burns had the round of the day — a 67 — and came within a stroke of a playoff. He birdied four of his first eight holes in a charge that, at one point, appeared capable of overturning a seven-shot deficit.

Sam Burns in action during his final-round 67 at the 2026 US Open, Shinnecock Hills

Missed putts on both the 17th and 18th holes ended the run. It was his third consecutive top-ten finish at a US Open.

Scheffler finished tied fourth at even-par 280. The career Grand Slam remains unfinished business.

Scottie Scheffler on the course the final round, Father's Day, Shinnecock Hills

McIlroy, briefly in contention on Saturday, described the final day as the course “winning the battle.” Tom Kim, ranked 141st in the world and playing as a qualifier, finished a composed solo third at one-under — and earned his exemption into next year’s US Open at Pebble Beach.

What Shinnecock Demands

Shinnecock Hills rewarded one quality above all others this week: the ability to hold a game together when the course is actively working against you. Fescue rough that punishes the wayward shot. Greens fast enough to produce three-putts from anywhere. A wind that changes the arithmetic every hour. Clark’s answer to all of it was definitive.

If Sunday’s final round has put golf firmly back on the agenda — it tends to do that — there are courses rather more welcoming than Shinnecock’s fescue waiting across the Atlantic. Browse our Portugal golf holidays and play in the sunshine, where scrambling is entirely optional.