Patrick Reed’s DP World Tour Grind Is a Masterclass in Making Your Own Path
I’ve been covering professional golf since 1989. I’ve watched players reinvent themselves, bomb out spectacularly, and occasionally—very occasionally—pull off something genuinely rare. Patrick Reed’s current run on the DP World Tour falls squarely in that last category, and frankly, it’s become impossible to ignore.
When Reed walked away from LIV Golf and decided to rebuild his PGA Tour standing through the DP World Tour, plenty of people in the press box rolled their eyes. Fair assessment? Maybe. But here’s what I’ve learned over 35 years: never underestimate a guy who’s genuinely hungry and knows exactly what he needs to do. Reed knows. And right now, he’s executing at a level that should have every golf fan—PGA Tour devotee or otherwise—adjusting their morning coffee routine.
The Numbers Don’t Lie
Let’s talk about what Reed has actually accomplished in four tournaments. He’s sitting at 2,260 points in the Race to Dubai. To put that in perspective, last season Jordan Smith claimed the final guaranteed PGA Tour card with 2,203 points. The year before that, Tom McKibbin got the nod with 1,897 points. Reed isn’t just on pace—he’s already nearly across the finish line, and we’re still in the opening stretch.
But here’s the part that really catches my eye:
“Reed’s point total has already reached 2,260 through four tournaments. Last season, Jordan Smith claimed the final PGA Tour card through the Race to Dubai with just 2,203 points.”
The man has won two of his last three starts—the Dubai Desert Classic and Qatar Masters, with only a playoff loss at the Bahrain Championship interrupting an otherwise devastating stretch.
I’ve seen hot streaks before. I’ve seen guys get warm for a month. But this is different. This is a 35-year-old with something to prove operating in an entirely different ecosystem, against a different caliber of competition, and frankly, doing it his way.
A Rivalry Rekindled?
What strikes me most is the subplot nobody’s talking about loudly enough. Rory McIlroy is chasing his fifth consecutive Race to Dubai title—something that would tie Colin Montgomerie’s all-time record of eight. McIlroy is averaging 5,755 points across his four straight wins. Reed is roughly 40 percent of the way there through just four events.
Those two have history. Real history. I was covering the 2016 Ryder Cup when Reed and McIlroy went at it in singles—all the hooting, hollering, and finger waving that defined that match. Then there was the tee incident in Dubai a few seasons back. That stuff doesn’t just vanish.
“That has the potential to be rekindled. Those two could share meaningful tee times on a stage that is not a major championship.”
And you know what? That possibility alone makes the DP World Tour schedule must-watch television this season.
The Reality of Modern Golf
Here’s where I have to be honest about something that bothers me: it would be better if this was happening on the PGA Tour. Full stop. American golf fans wake up, pour coffee, and tune in to watch domestic players on courses they recognize. That’s the rhythm of professional golf in this country, and it’s been that way for decades.
But let’s not pretend the middle east swing and the international stretch of the DP World Tour are somehow inferior golf. The competition is excellent. The courses are world-class. And the players Reed is beating? They’re not amateurs. This is legitimate, high-level professional golf.
The system that got us here—where Reed couldn’t simply come back to the PGA Tour despite being a former Masters champion—deserves scrutiny. The Returning Player Program conjured up for Brooks Koepka seems like it had different standards. That’s a fair conversation to have. But what’s not fair is dismissing what Reed is actually doing because of a grudge about where it’s happening.
A Lesson in Grit
In my three decades covering this tour, I’ve learned that the players who truly matter are the ones who don’t make excuses. Reed could’ve complained about the rules. He could’ve argued the PGA Tour owed him a path back. Instead,
“he’s taking the time to watch a man going about it his own way, making his way back through the only way he knows how.”
That’s not poetry—that’s just the reality of what’s happening.
Here’s what I think matters most: Reed could become the first American to win the Race to Dubai while playing a full-time DP World Tour schedule. That’s genuinely historic. Not many guys are willing to spend four straight weeks grinding through Dubai, Bahrain, and Qatar to prove a point. Not many have the game to make it stick.
So yes, adjust your morning schedule. Set the alarm a little earlier if you need to. Watch Patrick Reed accumulate points and trophies on courses you may not have heard of, against players with names you might need to Google. Because what you’re watching isn’t just a comeback story—it’s a masterclass in how to make your own path when the front door gets locked.
That’s worth waking up for.
