St. Petersburg Times Online: Sports
TampaBay.com
Place an Ad Calendars Classified Forums Sports Weather
tampabay.com

printer version

Tour idea gets mixed reaction

By BOB HARIG, Times Staff Writer
© St. Petersburg Times
published March 1, 2002

MIAMI -- A proposed new tour for major championship winners is raising more than a few eyebrows.

Especially because it would draw players from the PGA Tour and likely impact the Senior PGA Tour.

Fred Couples and his agent have put together a plan called the Majors Tour. It would include major championship winners between the ages of 37 and 55 for a tour of seven to 12 events per year.

They would be played at past major championship venues such as Merion and Winged Foot.

According to Golf World, players would be guaranteed a minimum of $500,000 for the year. Purses would about $2-million.

"I don't want to play the senior tour," Couples, 42, told the Los Angeles Times. "I don't want (PGA commissioner) Tim Finchem to say, "Come to this,' "Play this,' "Do this,' because I'm one of the new guys on the block.

"I don't want to have to play 20 times to make the senior tour go."

PGA Tour members are required to get releases to play in competing events, so it is likely any interested players would have to give up their Tour membership to compete in the new venture.

Greg Norman, who had the original idea for a World Tour in 1994, was skeptical.

"The PGA Tour, I'm sure, is going to do the same thing with Fred Couples they did with me," Norman said.

"I think this idea is very good, and it's warranted. But the players all supported me until the 11th hour. So let's see what happens. I will be very curious."

PLAYING SHORT-HANDED: Greg Kraft managed to get around Doral's "Blue Monster" course without a bogey despite going several holes without his 3-wood, which came loose during the round.

"The shaft came off, so I called an official," said Kraft, who shot 66 and is one behind leader Chris DiMarco. "He took it in, had it reglued, brought it back 15 minutes later. I had it back and then used it twice on the way in.

"The first swing I was kind of worried, but you got to hit it some time. I needed it."

Back to Sports
Back to Top

© 2006 • All Rights Reserved • St. Petersburg Times
490 First Avenue South • St. Petersburg, FL 33701 • 727-893-8111
Contact the Times | Privacy Policy
Standard of Accuracy | Terms, Conditions & Copyright
 

From the Times sports desk

Spring Training 2002
  • Sizing up the Rays

  • Bucs
  • Dunn's the priority as Bucs go to market

  • Devil Rays/Spring Training
  • 3 Rays join aging trend
  • Stable job brings smile to Sturtze
  • Around area camps

  • Lightning
  • Injuries provide rookie chance for regular shifts
  • Tortorella blasts Ciger for missing game, practice

  • College basketball
  • Tampa men favored to win conference
  • Womens basketball roundup
  • Spartan shorts

  • Golf
  • Top stars avoid talk of victory
  • Tour idea gets mixed reaction

  • Colleges
  • Pitchers search for more consistency
  • Bulls bits

  • NFL on TV
  • ABC adds Madden to Mondays
  • Favorites to replace Madden-Summerall have drawbacks
  • With comedian leaving, translations not needed

  • Preps
  • Bears defeat 'Canes, continue to improve
  • Attention scalpers: Beware of angry mob
  • Tornadoes plan to attack
  • Close games don't bother Bogie


  • From the wire

    From the state sports wire
  • Jacksonville's Spicer placed on IR after leg surgery
  • FIU-Western Kentucky game postponed because of Jeanne
  • Brown anxious to face old team for first time
  • Dolphins' desperate defense readies for Roethlisberger
  • Former Sarasota lineman sheds tough-guy image with Michigan
  • Rothstein rejoins Heat as assistant
  • No. 16 Florida has history on its side against Kentucky
  • FSU and Clemson QBs both off to slow starts