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The First Look: PGA TOUR Q-School's Second Stage

The First Look

CALGARY, ALBERTA - SEPTEMBER 07: Alex Scott on the 17th green during the first round of the Fortinet Cup Championship at Country Hills Golf Club (Talons) on September 7, 2023 in Calgary, Alberta. (Photo by Tracy Wilcox/PGA TOUR via Getty Images)

CALGARY, ALBERTA - SEPTEMBER 07: Alex Scott on the 17th green during the first round of the Fortinet Cup Championship at Country Hills Golf Club (Talons) on September 7, 2023 in Calgary, Alberta. (Photo by Tracy Wilcox/PGA TOUR via Getty Images)

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Alex Scott knows golf’s mental side can be fickle.

This season, Scott missed six cuts in seven starts as a conditional Korn Ferry Tour member, struggling with the formula to maximize his potential. The Michigan native rebooted during a summer on PGA TOUR Canada, finishing No. 55 on the season-long Fortinet Cup to secure guaranteed starts on 2024 PGA TOUR Americas.

Now he seeks a promotion. Scott earned site medalist honors at First Stage of PGA TOUR Q-School presented by Korn Ferry, four strokes clear of the field in Lincoln, Nebraska, and now he turns his focus to Q-School’s Second Stage later this month. Medalists and ties at all five Second Stage sites will earn guaranteed starts on the 2024 Korn Ferry Tour, with approximately the top 25% of each site advancing to Q-School’s Final Stage in December. The top five and ties at Final Stage (Dec. 14-17, contested across TPC Sawgrass’ Dye’s Valley Course and Sawgrass Country Club) will earn 2024 PGA TOUR membership. The next 40 and ties will earn guaranteed starts on the Korn Ferry Tour, with the next 20 and ties earning exempt status for PGA TOUR Americas' Latin America Swing. The remainder of finishers will earn conditional status on the Korn Ferry Tour and PGA TOUR Americas.

There’s plenty on the line at Second Stage, and Scott is up for the challenge.

"I think the only person who's ever told me I can't do it is myself,” Scott said during a practice session at TPC Sawgrass (whose Dye’s Valley Course will co-host Q-School’s Final Stage). “So instead of being like my own worst enemy, I'm trying to be more friendly to myself, trying to understand all the work that I put in. It's going to come around and, you know, finish this season off strong."

Alex Scott relishes PGA TOUR Q-School's marathon nature

PGA TOUR Q-School’s Second Stage will be contested across five sites – three from Nov. 14-17; two from Nov. 28-Dec. 1. The number of finishers (and ties) to advance from each site will be finalized once all competitors tee off at that site.

Second Stage is traditionally known as one of professional golf’s most strenuous weeks. Players who fail to advance from Second Stage (without status based on prior merit) will face the next season without TOUR or Korn Ferry Tour status. This year’s Q-School ramps up the stakes – for the first time since 2012, PGA TOUR cards are available at Final Stage. The cut-and-dry nature of Second Stage is now magnified (if that were even possible).

“Second Stage of Q School is the most pressure a normal pro golfer can feel,” Johnson Wagner said recently on X, formerly known as Twitter. “If you get through you have status, if you don’t, you have to wait an entire year to try again.”

Wagner now spends much of his time in the golf media, but the veteran of 362 PGA TOUR starts (including three victories) speaks from a place of authority.

Second Stage fields bring an eclectic mix of young pros and wily veterans, duking it out to survive golf’s ultimate cut line. Here’s a capsule look at notables set to compete at each of five Second Stage sites.

(Note: After the top 125 on the final FedExCup Fall standings, all of whom secure exempt PGA TOUR status, the next 40 who elect to compete at Q-School will earn direct access to Final Stage. These players will be elevated to Final Stage after the FedExCup Fall standings are finalized at the conclusion of The RSM Classic. Hence, some players currently in Second Stage fields will not need to compete at Second Stage.)

Site: Dothan, Alabama

Course(s): Highland Oaks Golf Course (Highlands/Marshwood)

Notables: Michael Arnaud , 42, winner of the Korn Ferry Tour's 2018 BMW Charity Pro-Am presented by TD SYNNEX, remains in pursuit of his first PGA TOUR card ... Blayne Barber is continuing to chase a TOUR return. The Auburn University alum played 12 events on the Korn Ferry Tour this season as he attempted to break back into pro golf after nearly opening a gym … Marcus Byrd is teeing it up after four wins on the Advocates Professional Golf Association this year. Byrd teed it up four times on the PGA TOUR in 2022-23 ... Zack Fischer is a two-time medalist at Q-School's Final Stage (2013, 2021), but neither iteration offered PGA TOUR cards. He's eyeing TOUR membership for the first time ... Garett Reband , who played collegiately at the University of Oklahoma, finished No. 5 on the inaugural PGA TOUR University Ranking in 2021 ... Daniel Wetterich is in action in Alabama after two top-25 results on PGA TOUR Canada this year. Wetterich’s cousin is Brett Wetterich, who represented the United States at the 2006 Ryder Cup and won that year’s AT&T Byron Nelson.

SITE: Port St. Lucie, Florida

Course(s): The Tesoro Club (Palmer)

Notables: Matt Hill continues his chase for PGA TOUR status for the first time. Hill won eight times while at North Carolina State University in 2009 (including the NCAA Division I championship) and was ranked the world No. 1 amateur in the world. … Bo Hoag is looking to rekindle some Q-School magic from last year. Hoag earned medalist honors at Final Stage of Q-School in 2022, securing full 2023 Korn Ferry Tour status. His best result was a tie for 11th at the season-opening Bahamas Great Exuma Classic at Sandals Emerald Bay, and he finished No. 125 on the season-long standings. … Willie Mack III is also looking to make some more Q-School magic. The APGA veteran earned Korn Ferry Tour membership for the first time via 2022 Q-School, finishing No. 151 on this year’s season-long standings. He also teed it up twice on the PGA TOUR in 2023. … Celebrated collegiate star John Pak (who swept the college golf awards in 2021, winning the Haskins Award, Ben Hogan Award and Jack Nicklaus Award) will look to take the next step in his career. Pak won on PGA TOUR Canada this season and finished eighth in the season-long Fortinet Cup standings. … Ryan Ruffels will see if he can replicate some of his sister’s fine results from this year’s Epson Tour. Ruffels, who finished No. 141 on the 2022 Korn Ferry Tour standings to lose his card, returns to Second Stage while sister Gabriela notched three wins on the 2023 Epson Tour (the LPGA’s premier pathway circuit) and was No. 1 in the Epson Tour’s Race to the Card season-long money list. … Kristoffer Ventura , who finished No. 87 on this year’s Korn Ferry Tour Points List, hopes to channel the blazing form that saw him win twice on the 2019 Korn Ferry Tour – in just 11 starts – to quickly earn a PGA TOUR card.

SITE: Savannah, Georgia (Georgia I)

Course(s): The Landings Golf & Athletic Club – Deer Creek

Notables: Ryan Blaum , 40, is ready to keep up the chase for a TOUR return. Blaum played 17 events on the Korn Ferry Tour this season and notched two top-25 finishes. … Alistair Docherty will be playing with a heavy heart after the passing of his close friend Kevin McAlpine in late October. Docherty will be the first to admit that he had a solid, if unspectacular, season on the Korn Ferry Tour with one top-10 finish. … Joey Garber has returned to the Q-School grind once again. He had two top-10 results on the Korn Ferry Tour this season and finished No. 72 on the Points List after just missing out on a PGA TOUR card in 2022. Needing a three-way T12 in the 2022 season finale, Garber ended up in a five-way T12. … While Mac Meissner earned a PGA TOUR card for next year, his brother Mitchell Meissner is eager to join him. He’s teeing it up in Savannah. … Nicholas Thompson , the brother and sometimes-caddie to LPGA star Lexi Thompson, is in the field.

Nov. 28-Dec. 1

SITE: Valencia, California

Course(s): Valencia Country Club

Notables: Alex Chiarella , who is from Hawaii and put in a solid fundraising effort this season after the wildfires in Maui, is back to Second Stage after two top-25 finishes on the Korn Ferry Tour this season. … After finishing in the heartbreaking No. 26 spot on the 2022 Korn Ferry Tour Points List – one position shy of a TOUR card at the time – Brandon Harkins returned to the circuit and notched a pair of top-10 finishes in 2023 but is back at Second Stage. After finishing No. 70 on the 2023 Korn Ferry Tour Points List, he’s fully exempt on the circuit for 2024 if he doesn’t earn a TOUR card. … Peter Kuest is signed up to compete at Valencia CC after an impressive run on the PGA TOUR this summer. He parlayed Monday qualifying into the Rocket Mortgage Classic into a tie for fourth, which set him up nicely for the rest of the season. (If his TOUR non-member points fall between Nos. 126-150 on the FedExCup Fall standings after The RSM Classic, he’ll advance directly to Final Stage without needing to compete at Second Stage.) … TOUR veterans Sean O’Hair , D.J. Trahan , Nick Watney and Bo Van Pelt are in action in California. … Former college star Braden Thornberry , who won the 2017 NCAA Division I Men’s Golf Championship (also ascending to world No. 1 amateur the next year, in addition to winning the Haskins Award and Mark H. McCormack Medal) will return to Second Stage. … Kyle Westmoreland , an Air Force Academy graduate who finished No. 25 on the 2022 Korn Ferry Tour Finals Points List to earn his first PGA TOUR card, is signed up to compete at Second Stage in California.

SITE: Valdosta, Georgia (Georgia II)

Course(s): Kinderlou Forest Golf Club

Notables: Brothers George Bryan and Wesley Bryan are set to tee it up together in Georgia at Second Stage, although both are in the field of a PGA TOUR event (this week’s Butterfield Bermuda Championship) for the first time. … Plenty of long-time TOUR talent will head to Georgia to try to nab a promotion including Derek Ernst , Matt Every , David Hearn , Hank Lebioda , Ted Potter Jr. and Tag Ridings. … Alabama's First Stage site medalist James Nicholas will tee it up in Georgia after competing at Final Stage of DP World Tour Q-School in Spain. … Luke Schniederjans – brother of Ollie – will look to earn a PGA TOUR card for the first time. … Curtis Thompson , whose brother Nicholas is at the other Georgia site, is teeing it up.

pga tour school qualifying

PGA TOUR Q-School presented by Korn Ferry

With PGA TOUR cards at stake for the first time in more than a decade, GOLF Channel and Peacock will broadcast eight hours of live weekend coverage at Final Stage of 2023 PGA TOUR Q-School presented by Korn Ferry, officially scheduled for December 14-17 at the Dye’s Valley Course at TPC Sawgrass and Sawgrass Country Club in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida.

In addition, Korn Ferry, the umbrella sponsor of the Korn Ferry Tour since June 2019, is expanding its partnership with the PGA TOUR and will be the presenting sponsor for PGA TOUR Q-School.

Learn More about Q-School

pga tour school qualifying

PGA Tour qualifying begins this week and ends in December in Ponte Vedra. How will it work?

Brunswick country club is a site for a pre-qualifier, with the road ending at tpc sawgrass dye's valley and sawgrass country club.

pga tour school qualifying

A three-month road to the First Coast begins this week for the reimagined PGA Tour qualifying process. 

PGA Tour Q-School presented by Korn Ferry starts with eight 54-hole pre-qualifying tournaments in Georgia, Alabama, North Carolina, Texas, Ohio, Kansas, Illinois and California that will be played late this week and next week. 

The Georgia pre-qualifier is Sept. 20-22 at the Brunswick Country Club. Among the players in the field will be Golden Isles residents Bradley Arrington, Ben Boyle, Aaron George, Cody Montgomery and Christopher Williard, and past First Coast Amateur champion Trevor Hulbert. 

A nifty 60: Taylor Funk goes low to qualify for PGA Tour Canada Fortinet Cup Championship

Two First Coast residents will be playing in the North Carolina pre-qualifier at The Club at Irish Creek in Kannapolis on the same dates, Sam Ohno of Ponte Vedra Beach and Neal Pease of St. Augustine. Playing in the Alabama event at the RTJ Golf Trail Canyon/Loblolly Courses is 2016 Junior Players champion Khavish Varadan.  

Depending on the size of the fields, a certain number of finishers will advance to one of 13 72-hole first-stage qualifiers that will be played between Oct. 10-27. First-stage survivors will advance to one of five 72-hole second-stage events between Nov. 14-Dec. 1. 

The last step: the PGA Tour Q-School Final Stage qualifier Dec. 14-17 at the TPC Sawgrass Dye’s Valley Course and the Sawgrass Country Club. Each participant will play two rounds at those courses with the top-five finishers, plus ties, earning PGA Tour cards for the 2024 season. 

The next 25 finishers, plus ties, will earn Korn Ferry Tour status through the third reshuffle of the 2024 season. The next 15 will have status through the second reshuffle. 

Everyone else who reaches the final stage will have Korn Ferry Tour membership and will also be exempt to the Latin American Swing of the 2024 PGA Tour Americas season. 

It will be the first time since 2012 that the national qualifier has had PGA Tour cards at stake. Since 2013, it meant membership only to the Korn Ferry Tour. 

But there’s a bit more to the process than just progressing from one stage to another. At each step, beginning with first-stage qualifying, players who have competed on professional tours worldwide or have strong amateur credentials will have exemptions. Here’s how that works: 

First stage

There are 11 exemptions to the first stage, including anyone who held membership since 2021 on the PGA Tour, Korn Ferry Tour, Japan Golf Tour, the Korea Professional Golf Association, the DP World Tour, PGA Tour Australiasia, the Sunshine Tour (South Africa), PGA Tour Latinoamerica or PGA Tour Canada. 

Also exempt to first stage are players who reached second stage qualifying for the last three years of the Korn Ferry Tour qualifying process, top-50 in first stage, a participant in a major or The Players in 2022, between No. 101-200 on the World Golf Rankings as of Sept. 11 or who played in the 2023 PGA Professional Championship or made the cut in the 2022 PGA Assistant Professional Championship. 

There are also avenues for amateurs. First-stage qualifying is open to members of the 2021 and 2023 Walker Cup teams, those ranked between No. 6-25 on the World Amateur Golf Ranking as of Sept. 6 and semifinalists of the last three U.S. Amateurs or finalists of the last two U.S. Mid-Amateurs. 

Among the area players meeting those criteria are Taylor Funk and Travis Trace from PGA Tour Canada. 

Second stage

There are 17 categories of exemption to the second stage. Among them are any PGA Tour member from 2022-23, Korn Ferry Tour winners since 2020, the players from No. 61-85 on the final 2023 Korn Ferry Tour points list (to be determined after the final three Korn Ferry Tour Finals events), any player who has made 50 or more PGA Tour cuts, anyone who made the cut in a major or The Players Championship last season and the Nos. 2-5 money-leaders on the pro tours from Japan, Korea, South Africa, Australia and Asia. 

The top-five on the World Amateur Rankings, Nos. 6-20 on the 2023 PGA Tour University rankings, the top-five finishers at the PGA Professional Championship also are exempt to second stage. 

Final stage

When the survivors of the second-stage qualifiers arrive in Ponte Vedra, they will be met by players who have met a dozen other exemption categories to the final stage. 

Those include the top-40 available players between No. 125-200 on the 2023 PGA Tour FedEx Cup points list, the leading money-winners on the international professional tours and the top-five players from PGA Tour Canada and PGA Tour Latinoamerica. 

The final category was claimed by Chandler Blanchet of Atlantic Beach, who won the PGA Tour Latinoamerica Tour Championship to claim first on the Totalplay Cup points list.

Why Q-School?

That’s been the shorthand for the PGA Tour’s qualifying process since the 1970s when there were two six-round qualifiers each year. During the competition, the players also received classes from the PGA Tour staff in finance, the rules of golf and media and fan relations. 

That will be the case again. On Dec. 18, the day after the final round of the final stage, rookies who have qualified for either the PGA Tour or Korn Ferry Tour will have sessions on what to expect from professional golf at the Tour’s Global Home. 

Q-School tales

Of course, between this week and the final week in Ponte Vedra, the Q-School success and horror stories from back in the day will resurface. The latter seems to resonate in history more than the former. 

Some of the more notable: 

  • David Gossett shot 59 in one of his 2000 Q-School rounds at PGA West in La Quinta. He also never shot in the 60s in the other five rounds and failed to earn his Tour card. 
  • Jaxon Brigman signed for a 66 in the final round of the 1999 Q-School. Turns out he gave himself one more stroke than he actually took and had a 65, which would have qualified on the number. But he had to take the 66 and missed his card by one. He later called it, "like a death in the family." 
  • Tim O'Neal was two shots ahead of the number to earn his Tour card with two holes to play 2000. He went bogey-triple bogey. 
  • Sean Pacetti of Palatka needed to par the final hole at PGA West in 2004 to qualify, but hooked his tee shot in the water and made a triple. 
  • One of the notable stories of perseverance was Mark McCumber of Jacksonville, who finally got his Tour card after eight attempts to qualify. He went on to win 10 times and the 1988 Players Championship. 

But Q-School success is no guarantee of the future.  

  • Paul Tesori of St. Augustine got his Tour card in 1996 but an auto accident during the off-season marred his rookie year and his swing, and he never recovered. Tesori has, however, gone on to be one of the most successful PGA Tour caddies in recent history. 
  • Ty Tryon of Orlando became the youngest player to earn his card at Q-School at the age of 17 in 2001. But he missed most of his rookie season with mononucleosis and soon lost his Tour card, never to return. 

Where they’re playing 

There will be competition on 28 courses in 14 states and all four time zones. There will be five courses in Florida used, four in Texas and three each in Georgia, Alabama and California. 

Pre-qualifying stage (54 holes)  

  • Sept. 13-15: Bull Valley Golf Club, Woodstock, Ill.; Ironwood Country Club, Palm Desert, Calif.; Sand Creek Station Golf Course, Newton, Kan. 
  • Sept. 20-22: Brunswick (Ga.) Country Club; RTJ Golf Trail Cambrian Ridge, Greenville, Ala.; The Club at Irish Creek, Kannapolis, N.C.; Sand Ridge Golf Club, Chardon, Ohio. 
  • Sept. 27-29: The Bridges Golf Club, Gunter, Texas. 

First stage (72 holes)  

  • Oct. 10-13: AK-CHIN Southern Dunes Golf Course, Maricopa, Ariz.; Omni Resort at ChampionsGate; Muskogee (Okla.) Golf Club; Wilderness Ridge, Lincoln, Neb. 
  • Oct. 17-20: Bear Creek Golf Club, Murrieta, Calif.; Lake Caroline Golf Club, Madison, Miss.; Rockwell (Texas) Golf and Athletic Club; The Falls Club at the Palm Beaches, Lake Worth; University of New Mexico Golf Club. 
  • Oct. 24-27: Abilene (Texas) Country Club; Bermuda Run (N.C.), Country Club; RTJ Golf Trail, Magnolia Grove, Mobile, Ala.; Walden on Lake Conroe Golf Course, Montgomery, Texas. 

Second stage (72 holes)  

  • Nov. 14-17: RTJ Golf Trail at Highland Oaks, Dothan, Ala.; Tesoro Club, Port St. Lucie; The Landings Golf and Athletic Club, Deer Creek Course, Savannah, Ga. 
  • Nov. 28-Dec. 1: Kinderlou Forest Golf Club, Valdosta, Ga.; Valencia (Calif.) Country Club. 

Final stage (72 holes)  

  • Dec. 14-17: TPC Sawgrass Dye's Valley; Sawgrass Country Club, Ponte Vedra Beach. 

Golf News Net

2023 PGA Tour Q-School final results: Prize money payouts, leaderboard, PGA Tour cards earned

pga tour school qualifying

The 2023 PGA Tour Q-School Finals final leaderboard is headed by medalist Harrison Endycott, who took top honors at TPC Sawgrass and Sawgrass Country Club in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla.

Endycott finished the 72-hole event at 15-under 265, earning exempt status on the 2024 PGA Tour season. Trace Crowe finished runner-up on 11-under total, earning a PGA Tour card as part of the top five and ties. Blaine Hale Jr. was the third-place finisher.

Two players tied for fourth place, meaning exactly five players got 2024 PGA Tour cards although the top five and ties would have earned cards. Hayden Springer and Raul Pereda rounded out the card winners.

The first 25 finishers and ties after the top five and ties will be exempt on the Korn Ferry Tour for the first two reshuffles to guarantee 12 starts. Any remaining finishers within the category of that next top 40 will be subject to the second reshuffle, guaranteeing eight Korn Ferry Tour starts in 2024 to start the season.

After the next 40 and ties, a group of the next 20 and ties earn exempt status for the Latin America Swing of the 2024 PGA Tour Americas season, in addition to conditional 2024 Korn Ferry Tour membership.

Everyone who completes the event at least earns conditional Korn Ferry Tour and PGA Tour Americas membership for 2024.

Endycott won the $50,000 the winner's share of the $510,000 purse.

PGA Tour Q-School Finals recap notes

The PGA Tour Q-School Finals offered PGA Tour cards for the first time in a decade.

However, with reshuffles every four events, a player who Monday qualifies on the Korn Ferry Tour and does well can improve their status dramatically in short order.

There is no limit to the number of fully-exempt players possible, so long as those players all tied for first place.

2023 PGA Tour Q-School Finals final leaderboard, results and prize money payouts

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  • Q-School Schedule
  • 2023 KFT Schedule

Tournaments

Final stage final stage.

  • Dec 14-17 Thu, Dec 14 - Sun, Dec 17

TPC Sawgrass - Valley

Ponte Vedra Beach, FL

  • Courses TPC Sawgrass - Valley Sawgrass CC- E/W

Korn Ferry Qualifying Tournament

Course - TPC Sawgrass - Valley

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Tee: Q-School (6,850 yds - Par 70)

Just 12 miles from Jacksonville, Fla., and 20 miles north of historic St. Augustine, TPC Sawgrass offers two championship golf courses that are open for the public to enjoy – THE PLAYERS Stadium Course and THE PLAYERS Championship.

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Sawgrass CC- E/W

pga tour school qualifying

Tee: Q-School (7,054 yds - Par 70)

The East -West course formerly hosted The Players Championship tournament from 1977 to 1981 prior to the tournament moving to its present location.

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  • Qualifying School

pga tour school qualifying

2024/2025 SEASON CHALLENGER PGA TOUR OF AUSTRALASIA QUALIFYING SCHOOL

1. introduction.

The PGA Tour of Australasia Qualifying School has been conducted at the end of each season to establish which players, not otherwise exempt, will gain their playing privileges on the Tour for the following season through a qualifying competition. The entry form for the 2024/25 season will need to be completed online and be submitted to the PGA Tour of Australasia. Should you experience any difficulty, contact details are provided below to assist with your application. The Qualifying School will be conducted in two stages of stroke play as below.

FIRST QUALIFYING STAGE (54 holes) The First Stage will be contested over 54 holes of stroke play, with 18 holes being played each day. After 36 holes, there will be a cut to those players within 10 shots or more of the final qualifying place. At the conclusion of 54 holes, a set number of players will qualify and proceed to the Final Stage taking place in the following week.

The First Stage is divided into two sections (Sections A and B) with each Section to be played on a different course as below.

The exact number of qualifying positions available from the First Qualifying Stage will be announced as soon as possible once all the participants have teed off in the first round. Players who are tied on the final qualifying position score shall be required to participate in a play-off to determine who qualifies for the Final Qualifying Stage (approximately 20% to 25% of players will advance, subject to entry numbers).

In the event of a delay in completing the First Stage, applicants are advised that the day after the scheduled dates may be used as a full playing day to complete the relevant qualifier.

Players at first stage must register via the Tournament Office no later than 12:00pm (noon) on Tuesday April 2, 2024. Players who do not confirm their participation by this time may be removed from the official draw.

SCHEDULE OF EVENTS

All applicants, except those who are exempt into the Final Qualifying Stage, are required to compete in the First Qualifying Stage.

Following the first 2 rounds (36 holes) any player 10 shots or more behind the last qualifying place will not advance to Round 3 of the First Qualifying Stage.

FINAL QUALIFYING STAGE (72 HOLES) The Final Stage will be contested over 72 holes of stroke play, with 18 holes being played each day. After 54 holes, there will be a cut to those players within 10 shots or more of the final qualifying place.

On the conclusion of 72 holes, the leading 30 players (and those players tied on the final qualifying place score) will be ranked according to score. Each of these players will be eligible to for Full Tournament Membership of the PGA of Australia for the following season and will be placed in a Tournament Exemption Category and will be subject to any re-rank policy. In the event of a tie for 1st position, the tie will be settled by a sudden death play-off which will be conducted immediately following the completion of the final round. The result of the play off will also determine prize money distribution (if applicable).

Those players finishing beyond 30th place and ties, who complete the Final Stage, will be eligible for Full Tournament Membership of the PGA of Australia, however, they will not hold an exemption category. If a player is accepted as a Full Member (Tournament), they will be ranked according to their score after the completion of the Final Qualifying Stage, and, if eligible, placed in the appropriate tournament member classification for the 2024/25 season.

In the event of a delay in completing the Final Stage, applicants are advised that the day after the scheduled dates may be used as a full playing day to complete the relevant qualifier.

All tied scores shall be ranked by card play-off as follows: (a) the best last 18, (b) the best last 36 holes, (c) the best last 9, 6, 3 & 1 holes (holes 10 – 18).

SCHEDULE OF EVENTS:

3. ELIGIBILTY FOR ENTRY

a) All male professional golfers; and b) All male amateur golfers with a handicap index of 1.0 or less under the handicapping scheme adopted by the recognised authority controlling golf in the country from which they elect to enter. An official certificate from the relevant home club affiliated with the national Golf Union or Golf Association verifying an applicant’s handicap must accompany this application before it can be considered.

NOTE : It is not a breach of the Rules of Amateur Status for an amateur golfer to file an entry for and play in any Stage of the PGA Tour of Australasia Qualifying School. A player who is an amateur golfer when commencing play at the Final stage of the Qualifying School is not eligible to win any prize money on offer at Final Stage

A player who enters the Qualifying School as an amateur may change his status to professional for any Stage of the Qualifying School but must do so in writing (to the PGA Tour of Australasia, prior to participating at the relevant stage.

4. EXEMPTIONS FOR FINAL STAGE

The following players are exempt from participating in PGA Tour of Australasia First Qualifying Stage and are exempt into Final Qualifying Stage:

  • Challenger PGA Tour of Australasia (Tournaments with $400k prize purse or greater)
  • European Tour
  • Korn Ferry Tour (or previous equivalent)
  • Sunshine Tour
  • Any former winner of a PGA Tour of Australasia tournament with prize purse lower than $400k from January 1, 2018.
  • Any player ranked inside the Top 500 of the Official World Golf Rankings as at close of entries.
  • 61st to 100th ranked Full Members, plus Temporary Tournament Member – Tour (TTMT) players within those positions from the 2023/24 Final PGA Tour of Australasia Order of Merit
  • Any player from the Top 30 of the PGA Tour of Australasia Career Money List at the conclusion of the 2023/24 season
  • The Leading graduating PGA of Australia Associate (to a floor of 10th position) as at the close of entries.
  • The leading 3 entrants to a limit of 10th place in the R & A World Amateur Ranking at the close of entries.
  • The current amateur champions of Australia, New Zealand, Great Britain, United States, Canada, Japan, Asia and the Junior World Amateur Champion at close of entries
  • Any amateur that was selected by their country to play in the most recent World Amateur Teams Championship (Eisenhower Trophy)
  • Any amateur that was selected and played in the most recent Walker Cup.
  • Winner of the last played Asia Pacific Championship.
  • The leading five (5) players within the Top 10 from the 2023 Dogwood Invitational.
  • Any Future Tour Affiliate Member who would have accumulated points throughout the 2023/24 PGA Tour of Australasia season to the equivalent of 100th place or higher. Note 1: A player’s accumulative points will be calculated by determining the amount of points the player would have earned in PGA Tour of Australasia Tournaments if they were a Professional.
  • Note 2: Should the player turn Professional throughout the season, any points earned as a Professional will not be counted for the sake of determining the players accumulative points as an amateur.
  • Any player who has already gained a PGA Tour of Australasia Tournament Exemption Category for the 2024/2025 season to the equivalent of Category 16 (as per the 2023/24 Tournament Exemption Categories) or higher.
  • Any additional player at the discretion of the General Manager of Tournaments, PGA of Australia.

Players competing at Final Qualifying Stage must register in person with the PGA at Moonah Links no later than 12:00 noon on Monday 8th April 2024.

The PGA Tour of Australasia reserves the right to add additional qualifying venues should this be necessary and amend the conduct, format, and cut marks for the Qualifying School at any time. Every effort will be made to complete the prescribed number of holes for each Stage of the Qualifying School but if fewer holes can only be completed over the days allotted to each Stage, the PGA Tour of Australasia may reduce the number of holes required to complete each Stage or reschedule a Stage.

5. ENTRY FEES

Challenger PGA Tour of Australasia Qualifying School:

  • A$2,090 (incl. GST); irrespective of which Stage the applicant is applying to enter; or
  • A$1,155 (incl. GST); former PGA Tour of Australasia Tournament Winners, members who fall under the ‘10 season tournament members’ category for 2024/25 season, or is ranked in the Top 30 of the Final 2023/24 PGA Tour Career Money List and any player who has already gained a PGA Tour of Australasia Tour Exemption Category for the 2024/25 season to the equivalent of Category 16 or higher.

Payment may only be made by credit card or debit card and must be made at the end of the entry application process.

6. ENTRY DEADLINES

5:00pm (AEDT) Friday, 22nd March 2024.

Note: PGA of Australia reserves all rights to extend the entry deadline for applicants in exceptional circumstances and at its complete discretion.

7. WITHDRAWALS

A player may withdraw at any time provided notification of their withdrawal is received by the PGA of Australia in writing. Players who withdraw prior to the Entry Deadline will receive a full refund of their Entry Fee. Players who withdraw after the Entry Deadline will be refunded no more than AUD$1,155 (incl. GST). Unless extreme personal circumstances exist, once a participant tees off (or is absent on the tee) the player is no longer eligible for any type of refund.

8. REGULATIONS

By submitting a completed Qualifying School application form, each applicant: a) acknowledges the sole authority of the Tournament Players Committee and Board of PGA of Australia to establish: (i) the Qualifying School Rules and Conditions of Entry and Participation as published in this application form; and (ii) any subsequent rules and regulations of which the applicant is notified of prior to any stage of the Qualifying School (together with the “QS Rules and Regulations”). b) agrees to abide by the QS Rules and Regulations and any amendments made from time to time by the Tournament Players Committee or the Board of PGA of Australia, or persons acting with their authority. This may include but is not limited to changes to the format, conditions, field sizes and schedules referred to in this form. c) accepts and abides by the decisions of the Tournament Players Committee, Board of the PGA of Australia, Chief Executive of PGA of Australia, Qualifying School Tournament Director or such other authorised persons of PGA of Australia. d) agrees to conduct himself in accordance with and agree that he is bound by the Code of Behaviour and Disciplinary Procedure of the PGA of Australasia (in each case references therein to ‘Members’ are deemed to be a reference to the relevant applicant).

9. GENERAL POLICY

The PGA Tour of Australasia reserves the right to reject an application for entry at any time. Conduct unbecoming a professional or non-competitive performance during a previous Qualifying School can be a basis for the rejection of an application to enter. The PGA Tour of Australasia also reserves the right to remove a player from a tournament at any time due to conduct or non-competitive performance (+14 or more in any given round with weather factors considered). An entrant who is removed from a tournament for any of these reasons, after he has commenced play, will not be entitled to any type of refund of his entry fee. The PGA of Australia reserves the right to apply other reasonable criteria (including, but not limited to, judgements as to character, conduct and other criteria in accordance with the current PGA of Australia Member Regulations) to all those who apply to become Full Members of the PGA of Australia. Accordingly, the PGA of Australia may, in its absolute discretion, determine whether to extend the undersigned an invitation to join the PGA of Australia as a result of their successful completion of the Qualifying School or whether to accept an application for membership once an invitation to

join the PGA of Australia has been extended. If the undersigned successfully completes the Qualifying School and wishes to apply to become a Full Member of the PGA of Australia, they must pay the prescribed membership fee and complete a Membership Form before an application can be considered.

10. MEMBERSHIP SEMINAR AND ONLINE ASSESSMENTS

All players eligible for Tournament Membership at the completion of Final Stage of Qualifying School must attend the prescribed PGA of Australia Membership Seminar and those who have been a Member for less than 3 years in total and have yet to complete the On-line Education Module must complete the required on-line study programmes. Any player who fails to attend the Membership Seminar(s) will be ineligible to be considered for Full Membership and those who fail to complete the required on-line study programmes by the prescribed dates may have their membership revoked. Session date(s), time(s) and agenda(s), along with on-line learning deadlines will be made available to all eligible participants in due course.

11. PRIZE MONEY

Prize money allocated to competitors at Final Stage will be confirmed prior to Round 1 of Final Stage.

12. ENQUIRIES

All Qualifying School queries can be made to the PGA of Australia’s Tournament Division by the following methods: Email: [email protected] Tel:+61(0) 3 8320 1921

13. ONLINE ENTRY PROCESS

All players entering the 2024-25 Q-School are to enter via the MyPGA Online Portal via the following link:

Please note: any player who has previously played in a PGATA Tour event may have log-in credentials already set in the MyPGA portal and may have to send a request via email to obtain log-in credentials to access this area. Email Address: [email protected]

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NASCAR at Dover qualifying results, starting lineup: Kyle Busch wins his first pole of 2024 for Wurth 400

Busch earns his 34th career cup series pole, moving him to 22nd on the all-time poles list.

gettyimages-2150444789.jpg

Kyle Busch won the pole for the Wurth 400 at Dover Motor Speedway in qualifying on Saturday, posting a lap of 22.196 (162.191 MPH) in the final round to win his first pole of the 2024 season and his first since Gateway last June. Busch's pole is also the 34th of his Cup career overall, breaking a tie with Fonty Flock for the 22nd most in NASCAR history.

Saturday's practice and qualifying sessions featured cool temperatures and heavy tire wear, and it also featured major problems for two Cup rookies. First, Zane Smith spun and backed his car into the wall, and then Kaz Grala crashed hard when he overcorrected on the exit of turn 4, sending him head-on into the outside wall. Neither driver was able to make a qualifying lap afterwards, and Grala will be forced to go to a backup car for Sunday's race.

A huge hit for Kaz Grala at Dover. #NASCARonFS1 pic.twitter.com/Gw5kCELJcz — FOX: NASCAR (@NASCARONFOX) April 27, 2024

Christopher Bell nearly joined those two in qualifying, as he spun in the middle of turns 3 and 4 and very nearly backed his car into the wall as well. However, Bell was able to drive out of the spin and keep from suffering major damage, only scuffing the paint off his rear bumper as he drove off and back to pit road.

. @CBellRacing goes for a big slide but only brushes the wall! pic.twitter.com/qGN7bMIiwi — NASCAR (@NASCAR) April 27, 2024

Practice featured a bit of a blast from the past, as NASCAR Hall of Famer Jimmie Johnson -- the all-time winningest driver at Dover -- displayed some of his old mastery by posting the fifth fastest lap overall. However, Johnson's speed did not carry over to qualifying and he will roll off 27th on Sunday.

Corey Heim, making his Cup Series debut subbing for the injured Erik Jones, qualified 32nd. On the other end of the grid, Noah Gragson followed up a career-best third place finish at Talladega by qualifying fifth to earn the best starting spot of his Cup career.

Wurth 400 starting lineup

  • #8 - Kyle Busch
  • #12 - Ryan Blaney
  • #24 - William Byron
  • #45 - Tyler Reddick
  • #10 - Noah Gragson
  • #11 - Denny Hamlin
  • #14 - Chase Briscoe
  • #34 - Michael McDowell
  • #48 - Alex Bowman
  • #16 - A.J. Allmendinger
  • #2 - Austin Cindric
  • #4 - Josh Berry (R)
  • #22 - Joey Logano
  • #31 - Daniel Hemric
  • #19 - Martin Truex Jr.
  • #23 - Bubba Wallace
  • #47 - Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
  • #17 - Chris Buescher
  • #54 - Ty Gibbs
  • #77 - Carson Hocevar (R)
  • #5 - Kyle Larson
  • #1 - Ross Chastain
  • #3 - Austin Dillon
  • #6 - Brad Keselowski
  • #7 - Corey LaJoie
  • #21 - Harrison Burton
  • #84 - Jimmie Johnson
  • #41 - Ryan Preece
  • #9 - Chase Elliott
  • #38 - Todd Gilliland
  • #99 - Daniel Suarez
  • #43 - Corey Heim
  • #20 - Christopher Bell
  • #42 - John Hunter Nemechek
  • #15 - Kaz Grala (R)
  • #51 - Justin Haley
  • #71 - Zane Smith (R)

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Carson Hocevar goes from stop motion to full speed

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PGA Tour Players React to Nelly Korda’s Success

Bunched leaderboard means a hollywood ending in store at wilshire.

  • Nelly Korda

pga tour school qualifying

Nelly Korda’s five consecutive LPGA Tour victories have taken the golf world by storm in recent weeks, even catching the eye of some of her male counterparts on the PGA Tour. Take a look at what they had to say about the Rolex Women’s World Golf Rankings No. 1’s success over the past few months.

Scottie Scheffler

“One of the people here asked me, is this turning into a competition between you and Nelly, and I was like, I don't know, man. I think if it's a competition, she's got me pretty beat right now. Five wins in a row. She had that T16 at the beginning of the year, which was just terrible. I can't believe she did that. It's pretty special stuff. To win four times in a row and then show up at a major championship and win is extremely impressive. I'm extremely happy for her. I think we've all seen the golf swing. I wish I could see it more in person, but we don't really run into them too much outside of some TaylorMade shoots and stuff like that. Some great golf, some historic stuff, and hopefully she keeps it up.”

“She finished T16 in her first event this year and the other five she's won. I don't know if I can quite relate to that. That's some pretty serious golf. I'm extremely happy for her and proud of her. That's some pretty special stuff. It's been a treat to watch.”

Billy Horschel

“I had a three-week stretch where I finished second, first, first, and I thought I was something special at that time, but what Nelly and Scottie are doing is unreal. I can't imagine that. And over a period of time, not just five weeks in a row, they've done over six, seven, eight weeks. It's unreal golf. To think about who they're playing against in today's generation of more talented players and doing what they're still doing, I'd say we're not going to see anything like that again, but I'm sure we will. You have to stand up and applaud them because it's pretty special. As a golf fan, I'm just lucky to be able to see that because, at the end of the day, I'm a golf fan at heart.”

J.T. Poston

“I don't know her personally, but five in a row is pretty impressive, and that was a major (Sunday), right; is that correct? That's pretty impressive. Obviously, what Scottie has been doing has been pretty impressive, and for her to reel off five in a row, that's hard to fathom.”

Wyndham Clark

“To win five in a row is amazing. Especially one being a major that she just won. Kudos to her. She's playing amazing and clearly the best female in the world.”

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Moscow Metro

The Moscow Metro Tour is included in most guided tours’ itineraries. Opened in 1935, under Stalin’s regime, the metro was not only meant to solve transport problems, but also was hailed as “a people’s palace”. Every station you will see during your Moscow metro tour looks like a palace room. There are bright paintings, mosaics, stained glass, bronze statues… Our Moscow metro tour includes the most impressive stations best architects and designers worked at - Ploshchad Revolutsii, Mayakovskaya, Komsomolskaya, Kievskaya, Novoslobodskaya and some others.

What is the kremlin in russia?

The guide will not only help you navigate the metro, but will also provide you with fascinating background tales for the images you see and a history of each station.

And there some stories to be told during the Moscow metro tour! The deepest station - Park Pobedy - is 84 metres under the ground with the world longest escalator of 140 meters. Parts of the so-called Metro-2, a secret strategic system of underground tunnels, was used for its construction.

During the Second World War the metro itself became a strategic asset: it was turned into the city's biggest bomb-shelter and one of the stations even became a library. 217 children were born here in 1941-1942! The metro is the most effective means of transport in the capital.

There are almost 200 stations 196 at the moment and trains run every 90 seconds! The guide of your Moscow metro tour can explain to you how to buy tickets and find your way if you plan to get around by yourself.

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Field hockey - Men's European clubs ranking

Exclusively on The-Sports.org

This classification is inspired by UEFA coefficients and allows to rank the European championships by basing itself on the results of the last 5 seasons of the field hockey European Cups : Men's Euro Hockey League.

Latest update: 2022-02-21

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pga tour school qualifying

IMAGES

  1. Brandel Chamblee signs for insane scorecard at PGA Tour Champions Q School

    pga tour school qualifying

  2. PGA Champions Tour Qualifying School taking place in South Mississippi

    pga tour school qualifying

  3. PGA Tour Q-School: Qualifying Tournaments

    pga tour school qualifying

  4. PGA tour: Harrison Endycott wins qualifying school event

    pga tour school qualifying

  5. Five Canadians earn status at PGA TOUR Canada Q-School

    pga tour school qualifying

  6. PGA TOUR Canada announces 2023 Qualifying Tournament information

    pga tour school qualifying

COMMENTS

  1. PGA TOUR Q-School presented by Korn Ferry: Track scores as players

    For the first time in a decade, PGA TOUR cards will be available at the PGA TOUR Q-School presented by Korn Ferry, which will be held Dec. 14-17 at TPC Sawgrass' Dye's Valley Course and ...

  2. qualifying.pgatourhq.com

    Interested in playing on the PGA TOUR, PGA TOUR Champions, Korn Ferry Tour, or PGA TOUR Americas? Click on the links below to get information on either open qualifying or the qualifying tournament processes for each Tour. Open Qualifying. Open Qualifying. 2024 Senior Open Presented By Rolex - Qualifier (US)

  3. PGA TOUR Q-School presented by Korn Ferry

    2023 PGA TOUR Q-SCHOOL PRESENTED BY KORN FERRY. With PGA TOUR cards at stake for the first time in more than a decade, GOLF Channel and Peacock will broadcast eight hours of live weekend coverage at Final Stage of 2023 PGA TOUR Q-School presented by Korn Ferry, officially scheduled for December 14-17 at the Dye's Valley Course at TPC Sawgrass and Sawgrass Country Club in Ponte Vedra Beach ...

  4. The First Look: PGA TOUR Q-School's Second Stage

    PGA TOUR Q-School's Second Stage will be contested across five sites - three from Nov. 14-17; two from Nov. 28-Dec. 1. The number of finishers (and ties) to advance from each site will be ...

  5. PGA TOUR Q-School

    PGA TOUR Q-School presented by Korn Ferry. Q-School Schedule; 2023 KFT Schedule; ... Korn Ferry Tour Q-School Korn Ferry Qualifying Tournament. View Connected Programs. Korn Ferry Tour. PGA Tour Latinoamérica. Mackenzie Tour - PGA Tour Canada. PGA TOUR. Current Events. Quick Links. About. Contact Info

  6. About PGA TOUR Q-School

    About. With PGA TOUR cards at stake for the first time in more than a decade, GOLF Channel and Peacock will broadcast eight hours of live weekend coverage at Final Stage of 2023 PGA TOUR Q-School presented by Korn Ferry, officially scheduled for December 14-17 at the Dye's Valley Course at TPC Sawgrass and Sawgrass Country Club in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida.

  7. PGA Tour Qualifying Tournament

    The annual PGA Tour Qualifying Tournament, also known as Qualifying School or Q-School, was historically the main method by which golfers earned PGA Tour playing privileges, commonly known as a Tour card. From 2013 to 2022, Q-School granted privileges only for the Korn Ferry Tour, the PGA Tour's official developmental circuit, but in 2023 it began to again award a small number of PGA Tour cards.

  8. Chase for the cards: PGA Tour 'Q-School' process begins this week

    The last step: the PGA Tour Q-School Final Stage qualifier Dec. 14-17 at the TPC Sawgrass Dye's Valley Course and the Sawgrass Country Club. Each participant will play two rounds at those ...

  9. 2023 PGA Tour Q-School Finals field: Players, rankings

    The 2023 PGA Tour Q-School Finals field is set with the passing of the PGA Tour tournament entry deadline.The field is set for this event, played at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., from ...

  10. 2023 PGA Tour Q-School final results: Prize money payouts, leaderboard

    The 2023 PGA Tour Q-School Finals final leaderboard is headed by medalist Harrison Endycott, who took top honors at TPC Sawgrass and Sawgrass Country Club in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla.

  11. Korn Ferry Tour Qualifying Tournament

    Each year, several worthy players take their shot at advancing through pre-qualifying, First Stage and Second Stage at various sites across the country -- all leading up to Final Stage. Korn Ferry Tour Q-School Korn Ferry Qualifying Tournament. View Connected Programs.

  12. PREVIEW and RECAP: PGA Tour Q-School Second Stage

    The Second Stage of PGA Tour Qualifying School (Q-School) is heading into the final two sites, with three of the five already completed and 47 total tickets punched to the Final Stage. Starting in 2023, the PGA Tour returned to a system where the top five players from the final stage earn PGA Tour cards instead of going to the Korn Ferry Tour ...

  13. Final Stage

    TPC Sawgrass - Valley. Ponte Vedra Beach, FL. Tee: Q-School (6,850 yds - Par 70) Just 12 miles from Jacksonville, Fla., and 20 miles north of historic St. Augustine, TPC Sawgrass offers two championship golf courses that are open for the public to enjoy - THE PLAYERS Stadium Course and THE PLAYERS Championship. Profile.

  14. Qualifying School

    The PGA Tour of Australasia Qualifying School has been conducted at the end of each season to establish which players, not otherwise exempt, will gain their playing privileges on the Tour for the following season through a qualifying competition. The entry form for the 2024/25 season will need to be completed online and be submitted to the PGA ...

  15. NASCAR at Dover qualifying results, starting lineup: Kyle Busch wins

    Kyle Busch won the pole for the Wurth 400 at Dover Motor Speedway in qualifying on Saturday, posting a lap of 22.196 (162.191 MPH) in the final round to win his first pole of the 2024 season and ...

  16. PGA Tour Players React to Nelly Kordas Success

    PGA Tour Players React to Nelly Korda's Success. Sarah Kellam is a Kentucky native and played collegiate golf at Northern Kentucky University. She currently serves as a Manager of Digital ...

  17. Moscow metro tour

    Moscow Metro. The Moscow Metro Tour is included in most guided tours' itineraries. Opened in 1935, under Stalin's regime, the metro was not only meant to solve transport problems, but also was hailed as "a people's palace". Every station you will see during your Moscow metro tour looks like a palace room. There are bright paintings ...

  18. Field hockey

    Dinamo Elektrostal Moscow - Titles, trophies and places of honor. Men's Euro Hockey League since 2007/2008 (7 participations) . Best result : First Round in 2021/2022; EuroHockey Men's Club Trophy since 2008 . Best result : 1st

  19. Field hockey

    Field hockey - Men's European clubs ranking. Exclusively on The-Sports.org. This classification is inspired by UEFA coefficients and allows to rank the European championships by basing itself on the results of the last 5 seasons of the field hockey European Cups : Men's Euro Hockey League.

  20. Alina Kabanova (Piano)

    Alina Kabanova (Piano) Born: 1982 - Sevastopol, Ukraine. The Ukrainian pianist, Alina Kabanova, began studying piano at the age of 5 at the Moscow Conservatory's special music school. She gave her first public recital at the age of 6; at age 9, she appeared a number of times as the soloist in L.v. Beethoven 's Piano Concerto No. 5.