Ridiculous stat shows why Yankees havenât called up Spencer Jones to MLB
Why the Yankees Haven't Promoted Spencer Jones to MLB Yet
The PGA Tour's current 'Signature Event Era' features limited-field events with sponsor exemptions, raising concerns about meritocracy. The inclusion of exemptions for players like Tony Finau and Webb Simpson has sparked controversy regarding fairness and the impact on emerging talent.
Tony Finau and Webb Simpson are both sponsor exemptions in this week's Truist Championship.Getty Images
We can call this current iteration of the PGA Tour the âSignature Event Eraâ in part because of how transitional the league feels at the moment. It wonât look the way it does now forever. So how will the years 2023, 2024, 2025 and 2026 (and possibly even 2027, depend on the speed of changes) will be remembered? Chiefly for what they brought to the fore â limited-field, often-no-cut events played for $20 million. They were an attempt at clarifying the Tourâs âproductâ as well as a wartime device crafted to maintain loyalty from the best players in the sport, and they were an intriguing answer to a fundamental question about what makes professional golf compelling. But they also made things plenty awkward for the PGA Tour.
Make enough institutional moves on behalf of the Tour Elite, the Scottie Schefflers and Xander Schauffeles of the world, do enough to protect your brand names and it can start to feel like youâre neglecting the midfield, the up-and-comers. The tension of that ecosystem created some natural angst around these Signature Events, and never more than with the four sponsor exemptions offered into each of them.
Those sponsor exemptions are, in theory, a boon for events. They ensure that figures who may not have qualified can still have a positive impact on field strength, ticket sales, sponsor value, etc. But Signature Events were created during a time when the PGA Tour was fighting off LIV Golf and thumping its metaphorical chest about being the most meritocratic of the elite golf tours. Giving spots in a field to players as interest boosts is not pure meritocracy.
And so these exemptions have come under scrutiny. At times theyâve been controversial. The companies and tournament directors who select these exemptions put a lot of thought into the decisions, but the tourney spots donât always go to the best or most in-form players not already in the field. They may go to a player who won that tournament years ago. They may go to a player who is universally beloved and whose game has gone through a rough patch. They may go to a player lucky enough to be sponsored by the same company sponsoring the tournament.
Sponsor exemptions allow selected players who may not qualify to participate in Signature Events, impacting field strength and ticket sales.
Sponsor exemptions challenge the PGA Tour's claim of being meritocratic, as they prioritize certain players over others who have qualified based on performance.
Tony Finau and Webb Simpson are among the players receiving sponsor exemptions for this week's Truist Championship.
The Signature Event Era represents a shift in the PGA Tour's structure, focusing on high-stakes events while navigating competition from LIV Golf.
Why the Yankees Haven't Promoted Spencer Jones to MLB Yet

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So who is getting those invites, and how have they performed? Looking at the 19 most recent Signature Events and before this weekâs 20th gets underway (weâre starting this tally in 2024, when the current system really took shape), we can do some proper analysis of those exemption decisions. Below is a scrollable chart that includes the world golf ranking of each player at the time of their exemption, as well as their finish that week.
At this point, no player has gotten more looks than Gary Woodland, who has received seven exemptions. He recently won the Houston Open in March, meaning he could enter the remaining Signature Events for 2026 without needing an exemption. Before that win, Woodland had banked invites into more than a third of the Siggies.
And you know what? The golf world has felt pretty good about those. Woodland has been battling challenges with his health since before his 2023 brain surgery. The 2019 U.S. Open champ is widely considered one of the kindest players on Tour. He recently came forward about his struggles with PTSD following that surgery, too, and remains one of the most impressive stories going, particularly in light of his recent Houston Open victory.
Greater scrutiny has followed exemptions given to players outside the world top 100. While those are the minority, one is happening this week, with No. 441 Webb Simpson getting a nod. Itâs not hard to see why Simpson is in the field this week. Simpson has been a PGA Tour policy board member, is among the most beloved figures at the sponsorship level, and also happens to live on the property at Quail Hollow, host of this weekâs event. But just know that not every Tour member on the outside has loved seeing Simpson receive these exemptions constantly. Heâs received the second-most exemptions, with six â alongside Rickie Fowler, Jordan Spieth and Adam Scott â but has never been in the top 200 in the world during any of those tournaments. To his credit, Simpson finished T24 on exemption at the 2024 Truist â but hasnât fared any better since.
Sixteen of the 76 exemptions to date have been given to players outside the top 150 in the world at that time, and only Brandt Snedeker â ranked 430th ahead of the 2025 Memorial â was able to crack the top 10 the week of that exemption. As with all explanations for who receives these invites, there were plenty of reasons why Snedeker earned that invite, but an obvious connection is embroidered across the front of his hat: Workday, one of Snedekerâs most prominent sponsors, also sponsors the Memorial.
Kevin Kisner (then ranked 526), Michael Thorbjornsen (then 710) and Tiger Woods (893) also all received exemptions while outside the top 500 in the world, but each of those cases was extremely different. Kisner was 40 years old and had gone a full year without a top-30 finish. Thorbjornsen, a Massachusetts native and a top young talent, was invited to the Travelers Championship, widely regarded as the Signature Event of the Northeast. (He was 22 years old then, has since won on Tour and is now ranked 62nd in the world.) And then thereâs Woods, who would get any sponsor exemption he wanted if he needed it, but in this case is the host of the Genesis Invitational and received the exemption before the Tour went so far as to manufacture a new, 80-win exemption category for him alone.
As for how these players are performing? The results are all over the place. And maybe that should be the expectation. The average finish for sponsor exemptions has been around 38th to 40th, directly in the middle of these 72- to 80ish-man fields. There have been nine top-10 finishes by sponsor exemptions and 11 who have finished 70th or worse â missed cuts and withdrawals included. Everyone else nets out somewhere in the middle of those two poles, which, again, might be exactly whatâs expected. Below is a list of the players who have received exemptions, ranked from most to least.
7 invites: Gary Woodland
6 invites: Webb Simpson, Adam Scott, Rickie Fowler, Jordan Spieth
5 invites: Billy Horschel
4 invites: Tony Finau, Matt Kuchar
3 invites: Keith Mitchell, Max Homa, Mackenzie Hughes
2 invites: Min Woo Lee, Tom Kim, Shane Lowry, Max Greyserman, Brandt Snedeker
1 invite: Peter Malnati, Maverick McNealy, Harry Hall, Sahith Theegala, Tiger Woods, Will Zalatoris, Nicolai Hojgaard, Rafael Campos, Justin Rose, Chris Kirk, Kevin Kisner, Wyndham Clark, Marco Penge, Alex Noren, Michael Thorbjornsen, Luke Clanton, Joel Dahmen
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