The PGA Tour at a Crossroads: Why Rolapp’s ‘Scarcity’ Strategy Might Be the Right Medicine for the Wrong Disease
I’ve spent 35 years watching the PGA Tour evolve, and I can tell you with absolute certainty: I’ve never seen the membership more divided about where this thing is headed. In two days, Brian Rolapp will pull back the curtain on his vision for professional golf in America, and frankly, the anxiety level among players, sponsors, and longtime Tour advocates is palpable. The fog Peter Jacobsen mentioned? It’s not just meteorological—it’s existential.
Here’s what strikes me most about this moment: The Tour is being criticized simultaneously for moving too aggressively toward “scarcity” while also being blamed for not having moved decisively enough in the past five years. That’s not a strategy problem. That’s a communication problem wrapped inside a trust problem.
Understanding the Scarcity Argument
When Rolapp talks about scarcity, he’s essentially arguing that the Tour’s product has become diluted. There’s logic to this—if you watch 45 weeks of golf with field sizes that include everyone with a pulse and a tour card, does the regular season matter? The majors dominate viewership because they mean something. They’re scarce. They’re exclusive.
But here’s where I part ways with some of the hand-wringing: The NFL didn’t build its empire by eliminating Jacksonville. In fact, the article makes an excellent counterpoint that the NFL has done precisely the opposite—expanding markets, adding games, growing reach. So why should golf contract when football expands?
The answer, I think, is that golf and football aren’t playing the same game.
The Community Fabric Nobody’s Talking About
In my three decades covering this tour, I’ve watched the John Deere Classic in Silvis, Iowa grow roots deeper than most hometown traditions. I’ve seen the Arnold Palmer Invitational become woven into Orlando’s identity. These events raise millions for local charities. They employ hundreds of people in communities that don’t have major sports franchises competing for attention.
“The PGA Tour started and has always existed and has thrived based on the communities where we play and the charities that we support. I’m just worried that in the future we’re going to lose sight of the fact that people love their communities, and they love to support and strengthen their communities through charitable work in those communities.”
Peter Jacobsen isn’t being sentimental here—he’s being strategic. He understands something that gets lost in the modern analytics era: The Tour’s greatest asset isn’t its television ratings. It’s its footprint in American life. It’s the municipal golf course in Memphis that hosts a FedEx Cup playoff event. It’s the charity galas that happen the week before a tournament starts.
Having caddied for Tom Lehman back in the ’90s, I remember how different towns took genuine pride in hosting their events. That pride isn’t manufactured. It’s not a brand extension. It’s real economic and emotional investment.
The Real Problem Nobody’s Addressing
Here’s what I think is actually happening: The Tour’s leadership is treating a market share problem like a product problem. LIV didn’t kill the regular Tour season because the Tour had too many events. It killed interest because it offered an alternative that felt exclusive and revolutionary—even if it was ultimately hollow.
The instinct to contract, to make things “scarce,” is really an instinct to compete with LIV on its own terms. But that’s a trap. LIV doesn’t have 160 tour-sanctioned events generating local charitable impact across America. The PGA Tour does. That’s not a weakness to eliminate—that’s the actual competitive advantage.
“Going to scarcity is the worst thing they can ever do. When baseball starts avoiding football, I’ll worry. When basketball starts avoiding football, I’ll worry. But the Tour’s model didn’t fail. Golf’s already in the scarcity mode.”
Mac Barnhardt’s point deserves serious weight. The majors are already scarce. They’re already where eyeballs go. The regular season doesn’t need to become scarce—it needs to matter differently.
The Meritocracy Question
What I’m genuinely optimistic about hearing Wednesday is how Rolapp plans to restore competitive meaning to Tour membership without eliminating the community-focused events that built this organization. Sam Saunders makes an underrated argument about field size and legitimacy:
“There’s so many great players. It’s so hard to see some of the names that aren’t here sometimes. I would love to see more guys here…whoever walks away as champion, it should mean a lot to them.”
He’s right. When you invite only 72 players to an invitational event, you’re not creating exclusivity—you’re creating arbitrariness. A player who shoots 66-67-68-68 and finishes fourth in a 100-man field with a cut has earned that placement. A player who shoots the same scores but doesn’t make an 80-man no-cut field hasn’t proven anything except they’re not favored by the Tour office.
The solution isn’t cutting events. It’s reestablishing cuts at signature events. It’s letting competitive golf determine who plays and who doesn’t, rather than algorithmic favoritism.
What Needs to Happen
The PGA Tour’s identity crisis won’t be solved by becoming more like LIV. It will be solved by becoming more like itself—but better. Maintain the calendar breadth that serves communities. Restore the competitive structure that rewards players who earn their way into tournaments. Grow the tour’s reach into underserved markets like Boston and New York without abandoning the places that’ve been faithful partners for decades.
That’s not revolutionary. It’s not scarcity theater. It’s golf the way it’s supposed to work.
Wednesday’s press conference will tell us whether Rolapp understands the difference.

