Wednesday, August 30, 2023

Upper Midwest Connection of the Week Ending 27 August 2023

 Originally, I was going to post this yesterday, as I usually need some time to assess the candidates for Upper Midwest Connection of the Week, but I had a long day yesterday and needed some rest. As I write, I just got done helping livestream the third episode of Ahsoka. I told you I'm a nerd!

Anyway, it was a bit feistier last week than the previous two weeks, as the PGA Tour Canada returned to action for the final three weeks of its existence. Even so, there were only seven men Umcees eligible for last week's honour, along with Kate Smith and Kim Kaufman, winners of the plaudit the last two weeks. A pittance by normal standards, but let's run down the list.

Three of the Umcees--Frankie Capan III, Will Grevlos and Derek Hitchner--missed the cut. Capan is in danger of having to play a second season on the Korn Ferry Tour, though he shouldn't have to compete against the reshuffle, and he might even have to start in Second Stage of Q-school, the way things are going for him. Grevlos will have to First Stage to get any privileges on so much as the PGA Tour Americas for next year, but Hitchner is guaranteed Second Stage because of his PGA Tour U finish (#14). All three were out of the running for Upper Midwest Connection of the Week.

Of the six who made it, Kaufman wasn't that impressive at the Circling Raven Championship in Worley, Idaho, near Coeur d'Alene, only mustering a T63 and pocketing $749. Her final-round 75 was her worst of the week. Back on the men's side of things at the Manitoba Open in Winnipeg, George Kneiser of Oconomowoc, Wisconsin broke 70 the first two days but settled for par Saturday and suffered a +1 Sunday to finish T37. He remains 16th in the Fortinet Cup. His fellow-Wisconsinite Harrison Ott of Broomfield had a similar weekend showing, although his first two rounds were each one stroke better than Kneiser's corresponding performances, earning him a T28 and improving his Fortinet Cup standing to #62 with one last chance to retain his card this week at the CRMC Championship in Pequot Lakes, Minnesota. Returning to the ladies' side, Kate Smith wasn't so lucky, improving each round of the aforementioned Circling Raven Championship from 71 Friday to 70 Saturday and 68 Sunday, but she slipped to #17 in the Race for the Card somehow.

That leaves two Umcees who reached the top 15 at the Manitoba Open to vie for the weekly plaudit. These guys were the tie for 11th. They both hail from Wisconsin--one from Chippewa Falls, the other from Janesville. Both went to Big Ten schools for university, as one left the Dairyland for Minnesota, while the other stayed home and made the short jog to UW-Madison. One reached the top 25 in the Fortinet Cup, while the other gave himself an outside hope of making it to next week's PGA Tour Canada swan song. But when it came to choosing an Upper Midwest Connection of the Week, I knew I had to pick the more milestone-based achiever. Ladies and gentlemen, put your hands together for...


Thomas Longbella.

With all due respect to Jordan Hahn, who also tied for 11th, Longbella figures to carry more weight in Q-school when that rolls around and going forward. The reason? Longbella's performance lifted him into the top 25 at #22, and since he was all but guaranteed to make the grand finale in Calgary, he'll have two opportunities to consolidate a first-stage bye for the second year running. The CRMC Championship is just a few hours' drive from his alma mater, and the Fortinet Cup Championship doesn't have a cut. To make a long story short, Thomas Longbella has truly merited to become, in the short history of this blog, my first two-time Upper Midwest Connection of the Week.

This week, in addition to the Pequot Lakes event, both European Tour Group top-two tours will feature Umcees in their respective fields, and both are former Minnesota Gophers. Angus Flanagan tees off at the IGG Challenge in Sweden at 7:30 local time Thursday (12:30 Twin Cities/11:30pm Wednesday western Dakotas), and Erik van Rooyen follows suit an hour later at the Omega European Masters in Crans Montana, Switzerland (8:30 local/1:30 Twin Cities/12:30 W Dakotas). This will give fans of these golfers something to get up for during the fortnight in which both the PGA Tour and Korn Ferry Tour are off. Are y'all insomniac enough?

Edward the Scop

Friday, August 25, 2023

Tosti, You're Toast, Part I: The Incident Itself

 Hitherto I've dealt primarily with Upper Midwest connections in the world of tour golf. After all, I am a cradle Upper Midwesterner, having been born in Grand Forks, North Dakota and lived the rest of my life in Minnesota. But this is a story that relates to a theme I've covered before here, and that's the integrity of the game. Thankfully, no Umcees were hurt (or otherwise involved) in the incident or the making of the present report or any sources on which it's based.

If you follow the Korn Ferry Tour on any level, odds are you've heard of the phrase "Tour-bound." This means a given player on the Korn Ferry Tour has accrued enough points (formerly money) to earn his PGA Tour card, which is obviously the goal of all KFT members. For the first few years of the points-list era, 900 was the failsafe threshold needed to be assured of said goal. Of course, this year PGA Tour cards are also available to some degree via Q-school for the first time since 2012, so the KFT Finals were converted into a four-event conclusion to the KFT season from now on. No longer do you have interlopers from the PGA Tour taking advantage of the yo-yo opportunity to bounce back from a disappointing season or seasons. Instead, it's all about the next wave of players, from the rank and file to the stars. Hence, the threshold is now 1100 points. So far, seven players have achieved this milestone. Most recently, Belgian star and Illinois Fighting Illini alumnus Adrien Dumont de Chassart cracked this threshold at last week's Magnit Championship by reaching 1132 to be exact, assuring he'll play PGA Tour events next year--not necessarily signature events, but most events of up to full-field status. For the record, his sole win thus far came at the BMW Charity Pro-Am on his pro debut fresh off his college career.

Another golfer who's reached the threshold is Alejandro Tosti of Rosario, Argentina. Tosti went to Florida for college and has had a somewhat checkered career. As with ADDC, Tosti broke through on the KFT this year...after five years in the pros. Two weeks ago, he won the Pinnacle Bank Championship in Omaha to secure his PGA Tour card, and he finished the regular season with nine straight cuts made. Next year, he'll finally take his talents long-term to the big tour, where he made the cut in all three events he played there as well, highlighted by a T10 at the Mexico Open...or will he? That is the crux of this article.

Yesterday as of this writing, Tosti opened with a 67 at the Albertsons Boise Open, which is not only one of the four remaining founder KFT founder events from the 1990 Ben Hogan Tour (as it was known then) but serves as the opener to the KFT Finals. It goes without saying that it's a big event, as only the 156 leading available players according to the points list get to play it. (There was one Umcee involved--#43 Frankie Capan III of North Oaks, Minnesota--but he was expected to MC.) According to Golf Digest, though, the round featured several concerns about Tosti's behaviour, and he was forced to WD.

That's not all. Ryan French of Monday Q Info noted various "alleged incidents" on Tosti's part this year, which have combined to incur a suspension from the Korn Ferry Tour.

Monday Q Info on X: "Breaking: According to sources, Alejandro Tosti who is in points, on the KFT has been suspended after an incident yesterday. This comes after numerous alleged incidents throughout the season that have lead to him being suspended. Full story coming." / X (twitter.com)

Without regard to how many such incidents he perpetrated, Tosti did make unwanted headlines at the LECOM Suncoast Classic earlier this season by freeloading on a cart. The Model Local Rule in question states that golf carts may only be used to enforce stroke and distance penalties or in playoffs. However, Tosti got an unauthorized volunteer to drive him from the 18th green to the 1st tee box in violation of this rule. (He had started his round on the 10th tee.)

I can only assume Tosti is strong and fit, as well as of a sustainable weight. For comparison, I am strong and fit but grossly obese, and yet I have generally pulled my own bag rather than relying on motorized transport during golf rounds. That said, I will have to await more word from sources, including the aforementioned Monday Q Info, before suggesting a punishment for Tosti.

To be continued...

Edward the Scop

You know what they say...all toasters toast...TOSTI!!!


Tuesday, August 22, 2023

Upper Midwest Connection of the Week Ending 20 August 2023

 It was another quiet week for men's Umcees in tour golf. Only three such players were involved in such events worldwide. Tom Hoge teed it up at the BMW Championship (always to be regarded as the reincarnation of the Western Open) at Olympia Fields near Chicago with a very outside chance of a return to East Lake. Frankie Capan III, seeking to break out of a slump on the Korn Ferry Tour, concluded his first (and so far, only) regular season of professional tour golf at the Magnit Championship in New Jersey. As for former Minnesota Gopher Angus Flanagan, he finally got a chance to show his stuff at the Vierumaki Finnish Challenge in, well, Finland. It helped his chances of starting that the DP World Tour resumed after having been off since the Open Championship. So, how did each do?

Despite a good showing, narrowly missing a third top-20 finish in five starts, Hoge had to crack the top four (at least) with no more than two ties for the minimum finish. His season is over, though he does have the signature events to look forward to in 2024. Capan never got going in the last event before the KFT Finals, slipping to #43 on the points list. Flanagan had arguably the best week of the men, all things considered, but an up-and-down final round in Finland meant he only moved from #186 to #170 on the Road to Mallorca. He'll have work to do to improve his status on either side of the pond much, whether through any further Challenge Tour events or through Q-school.

For the second straight week, it was the women's game that provided the Umcee fireworks. Specifically, the two Umcees on the second-tier Epson Tour very much led the region at the Wildhorse Ladies Golf Classic. Unfortunately, the wildfires in the region (which are starting to be cured by rain from Tropical Storm Hillary) wiped out the final round due to heavy smoke, so the affair was cut short. Nevertheless, official money was allocated to all who had made the cut the day before. Last week's Upper Midwest Connection of the Week, Kate Smith, finished a healthy T13 with six others. However, she loses her throne this week to a more seasoned player, namely...


Kim Kaufman.

Heading into the Wildhorse Classic, the Clark, South Dakota native had made less than $10 grand on the Epson Tour, where she'd been relegated a couple years ago after losing her LPGA Tour card, in the course of the 2023 season. Well, she made almost half her prize money on the year from this event alone ($7753 to be exact) by tying for fourth. Her efforts enabled her to jump from #88 to #65 on the Epson Tour money list. This is significant since only the top eighty members by winnings get to keep their cards (provided they don't finish top ten and get promoted to the LPGA Tour or finish top-20 or so at LPGA Q-Series). Both she and Smith are guaranteed to at least crack Stage II of Q-school, having been among the top 125 in the Epson Tour as of the end of the Four Winds Invitational the week before the Wildhorse Classic. However, I'm sure Kaufman would like to join Smith in being on track to skip straight to Q-Series, which admits the top 25 Epson Tour money list finishers not otherwise in the top ten, among others.

(Before I preview this week's action, honourable mention to Smith, whose finish allowed her to climb to #14 in the money list. If she keeps it up, there's no way she'll miss out on winning in the Race for the Card.)

This week should see more action on the men's side of things. PGA Tour Canada resumes after its fortnightly hiatus at the Manitoba Open, so plenty of Umcees can be observed in action. Also, the aforementioned KFT Finals begin with the Boise Open, and Capan is expected to play all rounds in his quest for a PGA Tour card. Lastly, there's a chance Flanagan sneaks into the Dormy Open in Sweden on the Challenge Tour (he's one of the top alternates as of this writing).

Edward the Scop

Tuesday, August 15, 2023

Upper Midwest Connection of the Week Ending 13 August 2023

 When I created my Upper Midwest Connection of the Week honour, I promised I wouldn't limit myself to any given tour or tours. This is especially critical to determine who it has been for weeks when it seems activity is down. Last week was one of those weeks.

In the whole wide world of men's tour golf, a mere three Umcees competed last week: Tom Hoge on the PGA Tour and Frankie Capan III and Tripp Kinney on the Korn Ferry Tour. There was no PGA Tour Canada event, as that circuit is on a fortnightly hiatus ahead of next week's Manitoba Open and the following week's CRMC Championship near Brainerd in my home state of Minnesota. Let's look at how they performed...

We start, of course, with Hoge. The Fargo product made the FedEx Cup playoffs for the fourth straight year despite the tightening of criteria (just seventy this year as opposed to 125 in past years). Despite being very overlooked, Hoge started out with promise, carding an opening -3 by shooting 67 at TPC Southwind in Memphis at the FedEx St Jude Championship. Even the next day wasn't too shabby, as he also broke par with a 69. Unfortunately, it hit the fan Saturday with a 73. Hoge was in danger of missing the BMW Championship this week (fifty this year made it, down from seventy in the past) for the first time since nearly losing his Tour card in 2019 before birdieing the last three holes somehow on Sunday. His -4 finish dropped him to #48 (from #46) in the standings, so he has a lot of work to do to make a second straight trip to East Lake.

Meanwhile, Capan entered the Pinnacle Bank Championship in Omaha at #38 in the KFT Points List but slipped one spot as a result of his performance. This was because he struggled at the weekend with rounds of 73 and 72, both over par (+2 and +1, respectively). It's clear Capan was outshined by Tripp Kinney, who actually trailed him with one round to go. But then Kinney rattled off six birdies Sunday, and only a bogey on his fourth-to-last hole kept him from building on his jump to #178 (from #233) in the points list this week at the Magnit Championship in New Jersey before next week's KFT Finals opener at the Boise Open. With all that said, though, the Upper Midwest Connection of the Week for last week is...


Kate Smith.

You didn't think I follow women's golf, did you?! Well, an Umcee is an Umcee, and Smith counts as one.

Hailing from Detroit Lakes, Minnesota and a local five-time high school state champ at the Double-A level in the state girls' golf tournament, Smith entered last week's Four Winds Invitational in South Bend, Indiana without a top-five finish in her as yet short professional golf career since graduating from the University of Nebraska in 2022. Well, she got not only that, but a place on the podium with Gabi Ruffels of Australia (who won for the third time on the Epson Tour, which is the LPGA Tour's equivalent of the KFT) and fellow runner-up Becca Huffer. Indeed, had Smith recorded birdie at the last, she would have added $6400 to her winnings of $16 020. As it stands, Smith had been teetering towards falling outside the top 35 on the order of merit on the Epson Tour, known appropriately as the Race for the Card. This is important because, unlike the PGA Tour, the majority of promotees to the LPGA Tour come via qualifying school finals, AKA Q-Series.

How is this so? Only ten cards are awarded directly via Epson Tour money, while twenty are given to the top finishers at Q-Series. If a golfer has to play Q-Series, she had better finish top 35 on the Epson Tour if she isn't already an LPGA Tour member to gain direct entry upon applying. As a result of her career best showing, Smith moved from #30 to #19 in the Race for the Card!

This week, the spotlight will inevitably be cast upon Olympia Fields near Chicago, as the BMW Championship goes down to determine the thirty Tour Championship participants. That said, let's not lose sight of the fact that the KFT is also wrapping its regular season as the PGA Tour did a couple weeks ago. Hopefully Frankie Capan III can snap out of his funk and get to the top 30 by season's end, earning a card on the PGA Tour.

Edward the Scop

Wednesday, August 9, 2023

Upper Midwest Connection of the Week Ending 6 August 2023

 First off, apologies for not posting earlier this week. My Mondays have become increasingly hectic with driving range and other practice, and I had been shorted on sleep the night before. Perhaps the desire to play D&D again has cost me some rest, as I haven't been able to indulge in it since 20 April. The NFL Draft was a week later, followed by my trip to see one of my best friends in Philadelphia for a few days the week after that. Also, I was following the Leagues Cup last night, as Minnesota United won a second straight penalty shootout, this time over Toluca. I told you I like soccer as well as golf! The Loons are now only two wins away from next year's Concacaf Champions Cup, one of which would have to come over Nashville. In any case, at least until the end of my league season, I will probably post more often on Tuesdays than Mondays.

But back to golf. Last week was the conclusion of the FedEx Cup regular season, and as expected, (at least) two of the big three Umcees are going to the FedEx Cup Fall, which starts next month with the Fortinet Championship. Erik van Rooyen missed the cut by two strokes, and Troy Merritt, who did make the cut but stumbled on Sunday, saw his streak of five straight playoff qualifications come to an end--and not just because of the stricter criteria for qualifying. On the Korn Ferry Tour, Monday qualifier Andre Metzger, who has some connection to the Sioux Falls area, missed the cut despite a -3 Friday, while Frankie Capan III failed to improve in the order of merit, remaining at #38.

It was at the Windsor Championship on the PGA Tour Canada in its last week before a fortnight's hiatus, then, that top-level Umcee performances were to be found last week. We start with Monday qualifier Van Holmgren. Originally from Plymouth, Minnesota and a graduate (I think) of Wayzata High School, Holmgren went to North Dakota State for a few years before transferring to Florida Gulf Coast University. Did you know that, at 6'8", he is the tallest player in PGA Tour Canada history? He started out strong, posting -5 and -2 rounds on the workweek before struggling with a +4 weekend. Next, Jordan Hahn (no relation to James) hails from Janesville, WI and went to the nearby University of Wisconsin. He broke par all four days but only mustered -1 Sunday and finished T44.

Two other Minnesota connections finished much higher up the leaderboard Sunday. Derek Hitchner, native of Minneapolis and alumnus of Pepperdine, was a PGA Tour U third team laureate this past spring by finishing 14th on that list. This ensures he'll start Q-school in the second stage rather than the first regardless of where he finishes this season. He broke 70 all four days, highlighted by a 6-under 65 Friday. But given a Fortinet Cup rank of 35th, it's unlikely over the last three events of the season that he'll crack the top five to skip second stage, which renders a top-25 finish in the list irrelevant for this season. Fortinet Cup placement is relevant, though, for this week's Upper Midwest Connection of the Week...

Thomas Longbella at the Windsor Championship.

Thomas Longbella.

Moving to #26 in the Fortinet Cup and to the cusp of the top thousand in the world rankings, the Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin native and University of Minnesota product saved his best for last, carding a bogey-free -7 Sunday, including five birdies on the back nine. He could have cracked the Fortinet Cup top 25 if he'd taken better advantage of the par fives, as he missed birdies on two of the three, but he's still got time to secure a second straight first-stage bye, as he has made six successive cuts on PGA Tour Canada. He'll look to keep working toward that goal over the last three events--the Manitoba Open in Winnipeg, the CRMC Championship in Brainerd, Minnesota (yes, PGA Tour Canada runs an event stateside) and the Fortinet Cup Tour Championship in Calgary.

As for next week's honour, there'll only be four Umcees up for it, two of whom--Tripp Kinney of West Des Moines, Iowa and the aforementioned Andre Metzger--got in via open qualifying. There are also two regulars: Tom Hoge, who returns to action after sitting out the last two weeks, his spot in the FedEx Cup playoffs secure, and Frankie Capan III, who resumes his quest for a PGA Tour card at the Pinnacle Bank Championship.

Edward the Scop


Wednesday, August 2, 2023

The Bhatia Rule: A Proposal

 As I mentioned in my last post, this week marks the end of the FedEx Cup regular season. While there will be a fall series to sew up membership for less-fortunate golfers who don't make the playoffs, it's clear the easiest way to crack the new series of designated events is to make it and advance to the BMW Championship the week after next. These fifty fortunate souls, after all, are assured of playing all the events on the 2024 regular-season schedule, designated and otherwise.

You might have been anticipating my Upper Midwest Connection of the Month for July in this post. However, the timing was too good to pass up the present topic, so I took advantage. Rest assured the aforementioned honour will be announced in due course.

Anyway, several hours after Brian Harman had won the Open Championship on 23 July, the opposite-field Barracuda Championship came down to a playoff. Patrick Rodgers teed off at the final hole of Tahoe Mountain Club's Old Greenwood Course in Truckee, California, believing a par at the last would be sufficient to win after three career runner-up finishes, one of which had stemmed from a playoff loss to Charles Howell III at the RSM Classic in 2018. What he didn't know was that 21-year-old phenom Akshay Bhatia was attempting a tying putt for birdie.

As is well-known, Bhatia skipped university to go pro, making the Fortinet Championship cut as an 18-year-old in 2020 and reaching the top ten in that event. There had been ups and downs since then, but he'd finally attained STM via his second-placed finish at the Puerto Rico Open this past March only to Nico Echavarria of Colombia. Because he hadn't won on the PGA Tour, though, he was still ineligible for the FedEx Cup playoffs until he broke through to the winner's circle. When he sank the putt from the back of the green, he had forty points in the modified Stableford system the Barracuda uses.

(Before I go further, I should remind y'all of the scoring values under this special system. The points are capped at eight at best for an albatross. Five are given for an eagle and two for a birdie. One point is deducted for a single bogey and three for not even getting that. The system rewards aggressive play and risk-taking in a way stroke play never could, making the Barracuda Championship a favourite PGA Tour event of mine.)

Rodgers did his best to respond, but when his own birdie putt missed by inches, his tap-in for par only got him into a playoff. Then, on the ensuing playoff hole (also 18 at Old Greenwood), Bhatia got an excellent tee shot off, whereas Rodgers landed in a fairway divot. Rodgers missed the GIR and then failed on the up-and-down, suffering bogey. Bhatia then two-putted for par to secure not only the tall-boy trophy...but also secure PGA Tour membership for real at long last. Storytime over, right? Well, it's just beginning, so hold on to your golf bags.

Akshay Bhatia may have a trophy, but he didn't get points with it.

When the dust had settled on the trophy presentation, Bhatia collected a winner's check worth $684K and prepared for his next event, thinking a decent showing at the Wyndham Championship would be enough to secure every event under the sun for 2024 (except maybe the Masters Tournament or the U.S. Open). But as an article from Golf Digest indicates, a couple hours later, his agent told him that he had actually lost ground in the FedEx Cup relative to his previous, nonmember equivalence of points. In other words, he hadn't received a single point from his win, and to make matters worse, his Barbasol Championship nonmember points from the week prior wouldn't convert either!

The problem, as PGA Tour regulations indicate, lies in the co-sanctioned nature of the two events. You see, as part of the Tour's "strategic partnership" (whatever that means) with the DP World (formerly European) Tour, three events between the two tours last year became part of both tours' calendars and began to involved players receiving order of merit points on both tours as applicable. In addition to the two mentioned above, the Genesis Scottish Open is also co-sanctioned, largely as a result of high-profile players using its timing ahead of the Open to play it as prep for that major. Confusingly enough, though, the Scottish Open is given the usual perks of any PGA Tour event, probably because of its enhanced status on the DPWT. By contrast, the other two are opposite-field events, so they have lesser profile.

The Barbasol and Barracuda also only offer one year's PGA Tour exemption to the winner if he isn't already a Tour member. This was moot point for the former this year, as Vince Norrman of Sweden was in the reshuffle of Korn Ferry grads from the Class of 2022, so he got the full two-year exemption given most golfers who win on the PGA Tour. With Bhatia only being an STM prior to breaking through and accepting membership, though, he'll likely face a contract year in 2024 if he doesn't win again this year or next. (Ironically, if he had accepted DPWT membership, he would have been eligible over there the year after as well in Category 3 of the priority list for that tour.)

It's too late, obviously, to change Bhatia's failure to make the playoffs this year if he doesn't finish on the Wyndham Championship podium, so to speak. (At least he'll have the Sentry, the Players and the PGA Championship to look forward to in 2024.) But as a compromise, I propose a rule that I named after him called the "Bhatia Rule." It goes a bit like this:

  1. If a nonmember of the PGA Tour wins the Barbasol Championship, all nonmember points previously accrued plus 150 points--half the winner's share under normal circumstances--would transfer to his FedEx Cup total.
  2. If such a player does not win the Barbasol Championship but does win the Barracuda Championship, all nonmember points won prior to the Barbasol Championship plus half of any such points earned in that event plus 150 points would transfer.

This assumes, of course, that the PGA Tour maintains about the same schedule as previous years and doesn't co-sanction any further opposite-field events with the DPWT. The reason I suggest 150 rather than 300 member points is the one-year exemption, which seems a good compromise.

As usual, feel free to leave your suggestions and comments below, and spread the word about this idea if the mood takes you.

Edward the Scop

Tuesday, August 1, 2023

Upper Midwest Connection of the Week Ending 30 July 2023

 As the 2022-23 PGA Tour regular season gives way to the FedEx Cup playoffs, it bears repeating five things:

  1. The field for the playoffs from this year is only seventy strong, which will impact plans for less highly achieving players.
  2. Missing the playoffs isn't necessarily a death sentence, as 125 players will still retain their cards on account of FedEx Cup points. Fifty-five players who miss the playoffs, of course, will do so via the seven FedEx Cup Fall events, and that's before other forms of exemption like the multiyear reprieve given to winners on tour.
  3. If one does miss the playoffs, he will need to earn his way into the next designated event the hard way, either by winning a FedEx Cup Fall event or by performing well enough otherwise during that "sprint" to earn his way in.
  4. But even if the same player does make the playoffs, it's not a guarantee of qualification because only the top fifty after the quarterfinals--the FedEx-St Jude Championship--get into the designated events all next season. Otherwise, the third consideration applies.
  5. Major criteria concerning event victories are unlikely to change. The Players Championship, which the Tour runs, will still admit all remaining 2023 winners, as will the PGA Championship, which the PGA of America (not the PGA Tour) runs. Furthermore, with the last opposite-field event having taken place at the Barracuda Championship (the technically surviving WGC-HSBC Champions is effectively dead, or the Bermuda Championship would have been an opposite-field event), Augusta National will likely admit all remaining winners this year for next year's Masters, and the USGA is bound to count them towards the multiple-wins criterion for exemption into next year's U.S. Open.
It's a lot to digest, but even for those who fail to qualify for the playoffs, there is still much to play for. I bring this up because for the first time since 2019, when Troy Merritt stood alone as an Upper Midwest connection among playoff participants, I anticipate only one Umcee making the playoffs this year, and that is Tom Hoge. As a result of his tie for 20th at last week's 3M Open, Hoge moved up to #41 in the FedEx Cup standings. He won't compete this week at the Wyndham Championship, and it's possible he'll drop out of the top fifty by week's end, leaving him with work to do to reach the designated events for next year. Even so, he was one of only five Umcees to make the cut anywhere in the world this past week. The other four were Frankie Capan III, also at the 3M, and Thomas Longbella, Will Grevlos and George Kneiser at the Osprey Valley Open in Caledon, Ontario (near Toronto) on PGA Tour Canada. Except for Longbella, who finished T17 to move up to #28 in the Fortinet Cup, none of the four was sufficiently impressive to warrant consideration for the honours. Even then, Longbella has some way to go to secure a placement in Q-school comparable to last year, when he finished 23rd in the Fortinet Cup to enter directly at Second Stage.
Showing up at TPC Twin Cities again.

Hence, the new Upper Midwest Connection of the Week is Tom Hoge, simply because he has secured a shot at the new series of designated events on next year's PGA Tour. His performance at TPC Twin Cities in Blaine, Minnesota, coupled with a good showing at the Renaissance Club in Scotland two weeks earlier, also puts him in contention for Upper Midwest Connection of the Month of July 2023. Will it be enough? Stay tuned.

Edward the Scop

Memorial Tournament et al. Recap and Weekly Preview

Last week saw some Umcee noise...but not from the places you'd expect. At the Memorial Tournament in the Columbus, Ohio suburb of Dublin...