2024 TOUR Championship Primer: History, TV, Field, Odds

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Patrick Cantlay Leads Tour Championship Round 3
Patrick Cantlay reacts after making birdie on the 18th green during the third round of the TOUR Championship at East Lake GC on Sept 4, 2021 in Atlanta, GA. (Photo by Cliff Hawkins via Getty Images)

It’s The TOUR Championship week – the final stop of the 2024 PGA Tour season, and while the field at East Lake is missing many familiar names, it still features a throng of marquee names, including two of the season’s major winners: Scottie Scheffler (Masters) and Xander Schauffele (PGA and The Open).

The 30-player set will once again be contested using the much-criticized handicap format and will be played at the acclaimed East Lake Golf Club.

The star-studded gathering in Atlanta, Georgia will feature defending champion Viktor Hovland. He will be joined by a several other former FedEx Cup winners, including Patrick Cantlay (2021), Rory McIlroy (2019, 2016) and Justin Thomas (2017).

Other top-ranked stars teeing it up this week in Atlanta include Ludvig Aberg (4), Wyndham Clark (5), Collin Morikawa (6) and Hideki Matsuyama (7).

Below, you’ll find more details to help you get primed for the 2024 edition of the FedEx Cup’s TOUR Championship.


The Skinny

Rory McIlroy Wins 2022 FedEx Cup TOUR Championship
Rory McIlroy speaks at a press conference after winning the FedExCup after the final round of the TOUR Championship at East Lake GC on Aug 28, 2022 in Atlanta, GA. (Photo by Rankin White for the PGA TOUR via Getty Images)

Tournament: The TOUR Championship/FedEx Cup
Dates: Aug 29-Sep 1, 2024
Where: Atlanta, GA
Course: East Lake Golf Club
Distance: Par 71, 7490 yards
Architect: Tom Bendelow (1908), Donald Ross (1913)
Redesign: Rees Jones (1994)
Format: 72-holes, starting-strokes
Purse: $100 million
Winning Share: $25 million
2023 Champion: Viktor Hovland


How to Follow The TOUR Championship

Paul Azinger (L) and Dan Hicks of NBC Sports/Golf Channel appear on set during the second round of the TOUR Championship at East Lake Golf Club on Aug 23, 2019 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Sam Greenwood/Getty Images)

TELEVISION: Thu-Fri: 1-6 p.m. (GOLF); Sat: 1-2:30 p.m. (GOLF), 2:30-7 p.m. (NBC); Sun: 12-1:30 p.m. (GOLF), 1:30-6 p.m. (NBC)

PGA TOUR LIVE: Thu-Fri: 11:15 a.m.-6 p.m. (ESPN+); Sat: 12-7 p.m. (ESPN+); Sun: 11 a.m.-6 p.m. (ESPN+)

PGA TOUR RADIO: Thu-Fri: 12-6 p.m.; Sat: 2-7 p.m.; Sun: 1-6 p.m.
(PGA TOUR Radio on SiriusXM and PGATOUR.com/liveaudio)

LINKS: Facebook | X (Twitter) | Instagram | TikTok


TOUR Championship History

Tiger Woods
Tiger Woods celebrates on the 18th green after winning the TOUR Championship at East Lake GC on Sep. 23, 2018 in Atlanta, GA. Photo by Sam Greenwood/Getty Images

The Tour Championship has been the FedExCup playoff finale since the first playoff in 2007, but the event has roots going back 20 years earlier. Always an elite event, prior to 2007, its field consisted exclusively of the top 30 money leaders of the past PGA Tour season and generally took place in the late fall.

The inaugural 1987 event was claimed by Tom Watson – two strokes clear of Chip Beck, the second member of the 59 Club.

Other champions in the pre FedExCup era included legends such as Curtis Strange, Tom Kite, Paul Azinger, David Duval, Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson.

In 2007, the Tour Championship moved from November to mid-September, where it ended the then four-tournament FedEx Cup Playoffs. As in past years, 30 players qualified for the event, but the basis for qualification was no longer prize money. Instead, FedEx Cup points accumulated during the regular PGA Tour season and then during the three preceding playoff events determined the participants.

Dustin Johnson Wins FedExCup Tour Championship
Dustin Johnson poses with the FedEx Cup Trophy after winning the TOUR Championship at East Lake Golf Club on Sep 7, 2020 in Atlanta, GA. (Photo by Sam Greenwood/Getty Images)

From 2019 onward, the FedExCup was reduced to three events, and the Tour Championship is now held in late August rather than mid-September. The tournament also adopted a new format called starting strokes, in order to ensure that the winner would also be the FedExCup champion.

Woods holds the tournament record with three wins – two coming in the FedExCup format, the most recent of which was in 2018. Mickelson and McIlroy are the only other players to have won more than one, with Tiger as the runner-up in both of Phil’s victories.

East Lake Golf Club has been the Tour Championship’s permanent venue since 2004, although the FedEx Cup is only a small part of the club’s story. Founded 100 years earlier in 1904, the Atlanta course is a Donald Ross design, famous for being the home course of the legendary Bobby Jones.

It is believed to be the site where Jones played his first and last rounds. The course also once hosted the Ryder Cup, the 1963 edition, with Arnold Palmer as the U.S. captain.

History: Recent Winners

Year-Winner-To Par (Margin)
2023 Viktor Hovland -27 (5)*
2022 Rory McIlroy -21 (1)*
2021 Patrick Cantlay -21 (1)*
2020 Dustin Johnson -21 (3)*
2019 Rory McIlroy -18 (4)*
2018 Tiger Woods -11 (2)
2017 Xander Schauffele -12 (1)
2016 Rory McIlroy -12 (Playoff)
2015 Jordan Spieth -9 (4)
* Hovland started -8 (Gross -19)
* McIlroy started -4 (Gross -17)
* Cantlay started -10 (Gross -11)
* Johnson started -10 (Gross -11)
* McIlroy started -5 (Gross -13)

History: Wins

3 – Tiger Woods (1999, 2007, 2018)
2 – Phil Mickelson (2000, 2009)
2 – Rory McIlroy (2016, 2019)


Hole of the Week

The 15th hole at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta, Georgia – the host venue of the PGA Tour’s season finale. Credit: East Lake Golf Club

No. 15, East Lake Golf Club
Par 3, 211 yards

Considered one of the oldest “isthmus” par 3s (not an island, but close to being one) in the country, the 15th hole at East Lake should once again provide all kinds of action this week. A super-flat green is surrounded by the golf course’s iconic lake, which provides a natural setting for gusts of wind to create havoc at most any time.

“The 15th hole will really be a gut-checking hole, as Justin Rose refers to some of the holes at East Lake,” Rees Jones said in 2016. “They will have to fight through 14 and 15 and then push the pedal down on the last three holes.”

The club’s signature hole has historically played well over par, and has ruined many good rounds down the stretch.


The Field at East Lake

Scottie Scheffler Wins 2024 Olympic Gold
Gold medalist, Scottie Scheffler of the USA (centre), Silver medalist, Tommy Fleetwood of Great Britain (left) and Bronze medalist, Hideki Matsuyama of Japan following the Men’s Individual Stroke Play Round 4 at Le Golf National on the ninth day of the 2024 Paris Olympic Games in France on August 4, 2024. (Photo by John Walton for PA Images via Getty Images)
Pre-Game Leaderboard

1. Scottie Scheffler -10
2. Xander Schauffele -8
3. Hideki Matsuyama -7
4. Keegan Bradley -6
5. Ludvig Aberg -5
6. Rory McIlroy -4
7. Collin Morikawa -4
8. Wyndham Clark -4
9. Sam Burns -4
10. Patrick Cantlay -4
11. Sungjae Im -3
12. Sahith Theegala -3
13. Shane Lowry -3
14. Adam Scott -3
15. Tony Finau -3
16. Byeong-hun An -2
17. Viktor Hovland -2
18. Russell Henley -2
19. Akshay Bhatia -2
20. Robert MacIntyre -2
21. Billy Horschel -1
22. Tommy Fleetwood -1
23. Sepp Straka -1
24. Matthieu Pavon -1
25. Taylor Pendrith -1
26. Chris Kirk E
27. Tom Hoge E
28. Aaron Rai E
29. Christiaan Bezuidenhout E
30. Justin Thomas E

Xander Schauffele Wins 2024 British Open
Xander Schauffele Interacts with his caddie Austin Kaiser during day four of The 152nd Open championship at Royal Troon on July 21, 2024 in Troon, Scotland. (Photo by Harry How via Getty Images)
Top-5 Betting Favorites

1. Scottie Scheffler E
2. Xander Schauffele 2-1
3. Hideki Matsuyama 10-1
4. Rory McIlroy 16-1
5. Ludvig Aberg 18-1

Full Field & Odds

Credits: OWGR, PGA Tour Media, Getty Images, Joel Cook


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