The Players Championship Major Debate: A 35-Year Perspective on Golf’s Most Tired Argument
Every March, like clockwork, we have this conversation. And I mean every March. I’ve been covering professional golf since 1989, caddied for Tom Lehman back in the day, and I can tell you with absolute certainty: this debate about whether The Players Championship deserves Major status is the golf equivalent of “Is a hot dog a sandwich?” We all have opinions, nobody’s going anywhere, and nothing ever gets resolved.
But here’s what strikes me after three and a half decades watching this game evolve: the real story isn’t whether The Players should become a Major. The real story is what this debate reveals about professional golf’s identity crisis in 2024.
The Elephant in the Fairway
Let’s be blunt about what’s actually happening here. One of Golf Monthly’s contributors nailed it when they wrote:
“I hate this debate with a passion. No, it shouldn’t be a Major. Why does it have to be? It’s simply a PR stunt from the PGA Tour, which is effectively trying to add a Major tag to an event LIV Golfers are excluded from.”
That’s the uncomfortable truth nobody wants to say out loud at a cocktail party. This entire conversation exists because the PGA Tour and LIV Golf are engaged in a cold war over legitimacy, prestige, and—let’s be honest—money. The Players has become a proxy war in a larger conflict.
I watched the USGA and R&A jealously guard Major status for over a century. The Masters, U.S. Open, Open Championship, and PGA Championship stood as golf’s four pillars because they were independently operated, globally inclusive, and historically sacred. Now we’re talking about handing Major status to a tournament run by a single tour that actively excludes the world’s best players from other circuits? That’s not tradition. That’s branding.
The Uncomfortable Math
Another contributor made a point that deserves more attention:
“It has to be a no from me, if only because The Players belongs to the PGA Tour. None of the other four Majors are run by a tour, and I think it would be an extremely sad day for the sport if and when that changes.”
This is the structural problem everyone’s dancing around. The Masters is operated by Augusta National Golf Club. The USGA runs two Majors. The R&A operates the Open Championship and technically oversees most of world amateur golf. The PGA of America runs the PGA Championship. None of these organizations are tour-dependent in the way the PGA Tour depends on The Players.
Having worked with some of the best players on tour for decades, I can tell you: they understand the distinction even if they don’t always articulate it. When Russell Henley says he considers The Players a Major, he’s really saying, “This event carries Major-level prestige and prize money.” That’s not the same thing as it actually being a Major.
The International Problem Nobody Wants to Admit
Here’s something that bothers me more than it probably should: we’re now having serious conversations about making four of five Majors exclusively American tournaments. Four of five. Let that sink in.
One contributor put it plainly:
“The US having another Major would be wrong, in my eyes. They already possess 75% of the big four, so adding another Major to the US would make it 80%.”
I’ve been to Masters Weeks when the international golf community felt genuinely left out. I’ve watched great players from Australia, South Africa, continental Europe, and Asia view American golf through a glass wall. Making The Players a Major doesn’t solve that problem—it exacerbates it. If anything, it signals that professional golf’s center of gravity has permanently shifted westward, and everyone else is invited to watch.
What This Actually Means
Here’s my take after three and a half decades: The Players Championship doesn’t need Major status because it already has everything that matters except the title. It has the money, the field strength, the prestige, the iconic venue, and the history that’s building with each passing year. It’s a phenomenal tournament that’s genuinely one of the best events in professional golf.
But calling it a Major would require fundamentally changing what a Major is—and not in a good way. It would mean accepting that tours can manufacture Majors for competitive advantage. It would mean surrendering the principle that all the world’s best players must be invited to qualify for Major championships. It would mean rewriting 150+ years of golf history to accommodate modern business disputes.
The PGA Tour under Brian Rolapp’s leadership has done extraordinary things. The investment, the purses, the venues—it’s genuinely impressive. But Major status isn’t something you buy. It’s something you earn through generations of independence and universal inclusion. You can’t manufacture legacy with billions of dollars, no matter how much you want to.
Moving Forward
Here’s what I think actually happens: The Players Championship continues to grow in prestige and significance as a PGA Tour event. Maybe eventually some alignment happens between the PGA Tour, LIV Golf, and the rest of professional golf. If that happens, and if The Players opens its field completely—not just to LIV players, but to anyone in the world who qualifies—then maybe we have a different conversation.
Until then? It’s the best non-Major tournament in professional golf. And honestly, that’s not a consolation prize. That’s a crown of its own.

