HomeGolfPGA drops Vegas from next year's autumn schedule

PGA drops Vegas from next year’s autumn schedule


The PGA Tour announced its schedule for events next fall after the 2025 Tour Chanmpionship, including stops in Japan, Mexico and Bermuda (Orlando Ramirez)

The PGA Tour announced its schedule for events next fall after the 2025 Tour Chanmpionship, including stops in Japan, Mexico and Bermuda (Orlando Ramirez)

The PGA Tour announced its schedule of seven post-season tournaments for the fall of 2025 on Tuesday with no Las Vegas event on the calendar for the first time since 1983.

The lineup is one fewer than this year and tees off with the Procore Championship in Napa, California, on September 11-14, two weeks after the 2025 Tour Championship.

Absent from the schedule is the Shriners Children’s Open in Las Vegas.

After the Ryder Cup next September at Bethpage Black, the PGA Tour events resume with the Sanderson Farms Championship on October 2-5.

The PGA Tour’s Japan stop, the Baycurrent Classic, will be October 9-12 at Yokohama Country Club followed by the Black Desert Championship on October 23-26 in Utah.

The World Wide Technology Championship at Los Cabos, Mexico, will be November 6-9 followed the next week by the Bermuda Championship and the RSM Classic on November 20-23 at Sea Island, Georgia.

“With events in four US states, Japan, Mexico and Bermuda, the conclusion to the 2025 golf calendar promises to be exciting for our fans worldwide,” said Tyler Dennis, PGA Tour chief competitions officer.

Under tighter qualifying rules for the 2026 PGA Tour approved by the Player Advisory Council last month, only the top 70 players in the FedEx Cup standings will secure exempt status with the 50 who reach next year’s BMW Championship being exempt into signature events for 2026.

Those ranked 51st and beyond will take FedEx Cup points into the fall to try and accumulate eligibility points for the 2026 campaign.

Three PGA Tour Challenge season events will be played next December — the  Hero World Challenge in the Bahamas hosted by Tiger Woods, the LPGA-PGA mixed-team Grant Thornton Invitational and the PNC Championship parent-child event.

Tour commissioner Jay Monahan also announced Tuesday that the PGA is searching for a new chief executive officer whose job would be to grow the business side of the operation in light of the $1.5 billion investment in PGA Tour Enterprises by Strategic Sports Group, a set of team sports owners.

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