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There is something refreshingly straightforward about the PGA TOUR University program.

For years, the leap from elite college golf to professional golf could feel a little murky. Talent mattered, of course. Reputation mattered, too. So did timing, sponsor invites and finding the right week to catch lightning in a bottle. PGA TOUR University changed that. It gave college golf’s best players a clearer, merit-based runway to the professional game, and in doing so, it added another layer of drama to an already pressure-packed spring.

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And that is what makes this time of year so compelling.

As March rolls toward April, college players are not just chasing team wins, conference titles and NCAA Championship dreams. They are also chasing jobs. Real ones. The number 1 player in the final PGA TOUR University Ranking earns a PGA TOUR membership, players number 2-10 earn a Korn Ferry Tour membership and players number 11-25 earn a PGA TOUR Americas membership, all beginning after the college season wraps.

The Cleanest Explanation of What PGA TOUR University Actually Is

At its core, PGA TOUR University is the PGA TOUR’s official ranking system for NCAA Division I men’s players who are finishing out their college careers. In partnership with the World Amateur Golf Ranking, it evaluates players over the final two years of their collegiate careers, not just a hot month or a single magical postseason run. Eligible events include NCAA Division I men’s team competitions, official PGA TOUR events and select DP World Tour starts. For the Class of 2026, the ranking window began in Week 23 of 2024 and runs through June 1, 2026, after the final round of NCAA Championship stroke play.

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That last point matters.

PGA TOUR University is not some side list tucked away in a corner of the sport. It is a real, meaningful pathway with direct consequences. Finish first and you are headed to the PGA TOUR. Finish between second and 10th and you are off to the Korn Ferry Tour. Finish between 11th and 25th and you still have a meaningful professional starting point on PGA TOUR Americas. On top of that, players who finish number 2-5 are exempt into Final Stage of Q-School presented by Korn Ferry, while those who finish number 6-25 are exempt into Second Stage.

That is why the spring portion of the college season feels a little different now. Every finish carries weight. Every move up or down the board is about more than momentum. It can alter the entire launch point of a player’s professional career.

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There Is Also an “Accelerated” Lane, but This Race Is About the Seniors

One quick note, because it can get confusing for casual fans: PGA TOUR University and PGA TOUR University Accelerated are not the same thing.

The main PGA TOUR University Ranking is for players finishing their college careers. Accelerated is the underclassman track, allowing freshmen, sophomores and juniors to earn PGA TOUR membership early by accumulating points through elite accomplishments in college, amateur and professional golf. A player needs to reach 20 points, which is a deliberately high bar. Luke Clanton earned his PGA TOUR membership through PGA TOUR University Accelerated in February 2025, joining Gordon Sargent as one of the program’s headline success stories.

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That matters to the bigger picture, but the heartbeat of this spring is still the traditional PGA TOUR University race among seniors. That is the one tightening right now as the calendar begins to narrow.

Why the Pressure Spikes in March and April

Spring in college golf is when the math gets real.

Conference championships are around the corner, then Regionals arrive May 18-20, and from there the best teams and individuals advance to the NCAA Division I Men’s National Championship at Omni La Costa Resort & Spa in Carlsbad, California, scheduled for May 29-June 3. The top 25 in the final PGA TOUR University Ranking are locked in after the last round of stroke play on June 1, which means every meaningful spring start from here forward carries enormous professional consequences.

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That is why PGA TOUR University has become such a compelling watch. It gives college golf a second scoreboard. You have the team race and the individual race; everybody sees. Then you have this other race, the one that can change a player’s next two years in the game. It is part resume builder, part pressure cooker.

Ben James Is Still the Man to Catch

Right now, Virginia’s Ben James remains the headline.

James opened the 2025-26 cycle as the preseason number 1 and, importantly, he has not let go of that spot. Through Week 11 of the ranking, he sits at number 1 with a 1,248.27 points average. His senior season has been remarkably steady, with top-five finishes in all six starts, a 69.33 scoring average and only two over-par rounds. In a ranking built to reward sustained excellence, that kind of consistency is exactly what you want.

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But what looked comfortable a while back now looks far less so.

Texas senior Christiaan Maas has made this a real race. Maas is number 2 at 1,203.565, and according to the latest spring storyline update, he has trimmed James’ advantage from 105 points at the start of the calendar year to just 45 points. That is a serious cut into the lead. Maas helped himself with a T10 at the DP World Tour’s Hero Dubai Desert Classic in January, then followed that with a win at the Southern Highlands Collegiate, his third collegiate victory.

That does not mean James is wobbling. It means the race has teeth.

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And behind those two, Vanderbilt’s Wells Williams has climbed to number 3 after posting five top-10 finishes in six starts. Oklahoma’s Jase Summy is fourth, with Texas’ Tommy Morrison fifth. That top five is especially important because, beyond the number 1 PGA TOUR card, those players currently occupy the positions that carry exemption into the Final Stage of Q-School.

The Juiciest Drama Might Be Around 10 and 25

As fascinating as the fight for number 1 is, the most volatile pressure points may be lower down the board.

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At number 10, Tennessee’s Lance Simpson currently holds the final position that would earn Korn Ferry Tour membership. He is sitting just ahead of South Carolina’s Frankie Harris, who is number 11 after a spring surge that included a win at the Puerto Rico Classic. Arizona’s Filip Jakubcik has already played his way into the top 10 at number 9 after picking up his third collegiate title at the Arizona NIT. That part of the board feels especially fragile, the kind of cluster where one hot week can change everything.

Then there is the cut line at number 25, which might be the most stressful number in the entire system.

According to the ranking table in the attached update, Mississippi State’s Garrett Endicott currently occupies number 25. Just ahead of him are Duke’s Ethan Evans at number 24 and Illinois’ Ryan Voois at number 23. Lurking just outside the line are Georgia Tech’s Hiroshi Tai at number 26 and Arkansas’ John Daly II at number 28. That is where March and April can feel downright brutal. You are not just trying to move up. You are trying not to get passed.

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And history says that the last spot can matter a whole lot more than people realize. Last year, Johnny Keefer finished number 25 in the final PGA TOUR University Ranking, earned PGA TOUR Americas membership, then turned that opportunity into a stunning climb. He finished number 1 on the 2024 PGA TOUR Americas Points List, then number 1 on the 2025 Korn Ferry Tour Points List, and now he is a PGA TOUR member ranked inside the top 75 in the world. That is not just a nice story. That is the entire point of the program.

Why PGA TOUR University Matters More Now Than Ever

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What PGA TOUR University has done, maybe better than anything, is make college golf feel even more connected to the professional game.

The names at the top of this pathway are no joke. Ludvig Aberg became the first player to earn a PGA TOUR card directly by finishing number 1 in 2023. Michael Thorbjornsen followed in 2024, and David Ford did the same in 2025. Karl Vilips, meanwhile, showed how valuable the lower tiers of access can be when he finished 10th in 2024, earned Korn Ferry Tour membership, won that summer and played his way onto the PGA TOUR.

That is why this spring race deserves attention well beyond college golf diehards.

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It is not just a ranking. It is a live look at who might be next. It is a test of consistency, staying power and the ability to handle a season where every start matters. And as we move through March and into April, that is exactly what makes PGA TOUR University one of the most interesting things happening in the game right now. The spotlight may still be brighter on the PGA TOUR and Korn Ferry Tour, but for a growing number of future stars, the most important golf of the spring is still being played in college colors.

PGA of America Golf Professional Brendon Elliott is an award-winning coach and golf writer who serves as Athlon Sports Senior Golf Writer. Read his recent “The Starter” on R.org, where he is their Lead Golf Writer. To stay updated on all of his latest work, sign up for his newsletter or visit his MuckRack Profile.

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This story was originally published by Athlon Sports on Mar 19, 2026, where it first appeared in the Golf section. Add Athlon Sports as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

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