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The PGA Tour announced transformational changes to the way it will operate with a new split-tour format in 2028 between a Championship and Challenger series.

The dramatic change has been a long time coming for the tour, as commissioner Brian Rolapp came from the NFL with the decisive purpose and vision in mind to make the PGA Tour more fan-friendly and more attractive from a television perspective. As he wrote to fans alongside the announcement, the main objective for the new two-tiered approach is to provide more opportunities for fans to see the top players in the world play alongside each other in a clearly defined schedule.

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But alongside the announcement comes plenty of questions for how exactly this will work for the tour’s network partners at NBC and CBS.

1) Will the top players actually buy in and participate fully?

The key point of this announcement is the promise and the expectation that the top players in the world will now have a fully defined tour in which to align their schedules. That has been something that the PGA Tour has been chasing for decades. Before Greg Norman helped launch LIV, he was trying to get a world golf tour together featuring top pros all the way back in 1994.

The lack of schedule consistency has always been a puzzler for sports fans who aren’t serious golf watchers. Everyone knows about the majors and probably The Players Championship. But who’s to say which of the world’s best golfers actually show up on a week-in and week-out basis at tournaments like the Canadian Open or Heritage? Rory McIlroy has made no apologies for skipping out on designated events and even postseason events in recent years. In fact, McIlroy and Scottie Scheffler didn’t share the field once between the Masters and PGA Championship in spite of there being three signature events.

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Currently, we only know that Championship players can’t play in Challenger events. But what guarantees are in place to make sure that the best of the best actually buy in and follow through on what is the entire goal of this endeavor? If top players aren’t playing the same events, then fans might be asking what’s the point of remaking the PGA Tour if it’s just going to be the same old story with a different cover.

2) How do TV partners respond?

There’s a math equation that needs to be solved for PGA Tour broadcast partners NBC and CBS. The new Championship Series calendar will be 23-24 events, including the majors, the Players, and the postseason. In the 2026 season, NBC and CBS combined to televise 31 PGA Tour events, 23 on CBS and eight on NBC. While the events on the Championship Series should receive a nice boost, that means at least seven tournaments will be dramatically reduced in quality. With the main season now starting in February, the three tournaments that Golf Channel exclusively televised at the beginning of the year are probably in serious jeopardy.

Given CBS has the bulk of the coverage, they will probably be most affected. The non-signature summer events seem the most likely to make the switch, given the prestige of tournaments like the John Deere Classic, 3M Open, and Rocket Classic doesn’t match the pedigree of others on the West Coast or Florida swing. And while the networks might be happy to have more certainty over their biggest events, there may have to be some negotiations to get them to buy in to having fewer top-tier events on the calendar.

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3) How attractive will the Challenger Series actually be?

Let’s make no mistake about it, the PGA Tour Championship Series will be, in every way that matters, what we know and think of as the PGA Tour today. It will feature the top 120 players on tour with 90 spots guaranteed to the top finishers in the rankings for the next season. That should account for everyone who matters from the standpoint of being a television draw.

The Challenger Series, though? That’s basically going to be a souped-up version of the Korn Ferry Tour. The PGA Tour says that seven Challenger events will be elevated during Championship bye weeks, meaning they would presumably fill those missing network television windows mentioned above. But take a look at the fields that could be on display, and you immediately wonder just who’s going to watch.

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