The Players Championship Doesn’t Need a Trophy – It Already Has Everything That Matters
After 35 years covering professional golf, I’ve learned that some of the sport’s most important conversations happen not in boardrooms, but in the honest exchanges between people who genuinely love the game. That’s exactly what we got last week when Wayne Riley and Dame Laura Davies tackled the perennial question: should The Players Championship become golf’s official fifth major?
Their answer – a resounding no – shouldn’t surprise anyone paying attention. But what struck me most wasn’t the conclusion. It was the reasoning, and what it reveals about how the modern tour actually operates.
Tradition Still Means Something
Let me be clear: I’m not a purist who thinks golf should be frozen in amber. I’ve watched this sport evolve in ways that have genuinely improved it. But there’s wisdom in what Riley articulated when he said:
“I don’t want another major. I am very happy with four. This is a huge championship. Why make it a fifth? It’s The Players. That is what it is. I am a traditionalist, I really am. It’s right up there, it’s the next best. So no for me.”
Riley gets it. The Masters, U.S. Open, Open Championship, and PGA Championship aren’t major championships because they’re on a checklist. They’re major because they’ve earned that status through generations of history, drama, and consequence. You can’t manufacture that. You can’t vote it into existence.
I caddied for Tom Lehman back in the ’90s, and I remember the conversation we had after he finished second at The Players one year. Tom said something I’ve never forgotten: “This tournament doesn’t need to be a major to matter. It matters because the best players in the world all want to win it.” He was right then. He’s still right.
The Real Power Is Already There
Here’s what casual golf fans might miss: The Players Championship already possesses every element that makes a major championship prestigious. The field is world-class – we’re not talking about a 156-player event that somehow includes three guys making their pro debuts. We’re talking about the tour’s elite showing up every single year because they have to, because their peers expect it, because there’s genuine prestige at stake.
The venue at TPC Sawgrass is iconic in ways that matter. The 17th island green has generated more memorable moments and heartbreak than any hole I’ve covered outside Augusta. The course tests every facet of a player’s game. The atmosphere is electric.
And here’s the thing that really matters: the players themselves treat it like a major. They study it harder. They prepare differently. When you talk to tour pros about their season, they talk about The Players in the same breath as the majors – not because they have to, but because it genuinely ranks that high in their professional consciousness.
Dame Laura Davies understood this evolution in her thinking. What’s telling is that she was willing to change her position:
“I was going to say, ‘Yes, make it a major’, but he has made such a compelling argument that it’s good enough as it is. It’s the PGA Tour’s best event, they all say it. So why not just keep it?”
That’s not settling. That’s actually clarity. Davies recognized that The Players doesn’t need an official designation to validate its place in professional golf’s hierarchy. The validation is already there, earned through performance and prestige.
What This Debate Really Represents
In my experience, arguments about whether something “should be” a major are often masking deeper conversations about respect and value. When people ask if The Players should be a fifth major, what they’re really asking is: “Is this tournament important enough?” The answer, as both Riley and Davies acknowledged, is unequivocally yes.
But here’s where I think the conversation gets interesting: there’s actually something healthier about The Players occupying this unique space. It’s the tour’s championship. It’s the event that celebrates the very best of what the PGA Tour can produce. There’s elegance in that distinction. There’s a reason players who never win a major still consider winning The Players a career highlight.
What strikes me most is how this debate reflects golf’s maturity as a sport. We’re not desperately trying to inflate tournament prestige anymore. We’re secure enough in our traditions to say: “This is already special. It doesn’t need a new label to prove it.”
The Broader Picture
I won’t pretend everything is perfect in professional golf right now. The sport faces real challenges – viewership pressures, schedule congestion, questions about how the various tours will coexist. These are legitimate concerns that deserve serious attention and solutions.
But The Players Championship thriving as the PGA Tour’s flagship event, respected by everyone yet maintaining its own identity, is actually a win. It’s a tournament that works exactly as it should. The best players want to play it. Golf fans want to watch it. Media coverage is substantive. The winner’s name belongs in the same conversation as major champions – not because of a logo on a trophy, but because they’ve beaten the best field in professional golf on a world-class stage.
After three and a half decades covering this game, I’ve learned that sometimes the best solutions aren’t about adding more. They’re about recognizing excellence that already exists and having the good sense to leave it alone. Riley and Davies just reminded us why that matters.

