Let me be straight with you: after 35 years of covering this tour, I’ve watched The Players Championship evolve into something that frankly defies easy categorization—and that’s exactly why it matters so much to the guys grinding it out week to week.
JJ Spaun finished second last month and walked away with $2.75 million. Not the winner’s check, sure, but here’s what strikes me as the real story—that runner-up payday is nearly three times what he’d pocket for winning most regular tour events. That’s not just a number. That’s a fundamental shift in how professional golf compensates excellence.
When a Second-Place Finish Changes Careers
I caddied for Tom Lehman back in the ’90s, and let me tell you, finishing second at a regular PGA Tour event felt like getting paid for a good effort. You were grateful. You moved on to next week. But The Players? This is different territory entirely.
“The runner-up will also benefit from more world ranking points than finishing in the same position at most other events. In fact, only The Majors offer more than the TPC Sawgrass event. While The Masters, PGA Championship, US Open and The Open hand 100 points to the winner and 60 to the runner-up, at The Players, the winner earns 80, with the player in second scooping 48.”
Those 48 world ranking points for second place—that’s nearly half what you get for winning The Open Championship. We’re talking about a non-major event that’s benchmarking itself against Augusta, Torrey Pines, and St. Andrews. From a pure résumé standpoint, that second-place finish at Sawgrass carries legitimacy that was unthinkable fifteen years ago.
In my experience, young guys looking to make their mark on tour, guys trying to climb into the top 50 in the world, they circle The Players on their calendar the same way they circle the majors. And why wouldn’t they? A strong finish here moves the needle in ways that finishing well at most other events simply doesn’t.
The FedEx Cup Advantage That Separates the Pack
Here’s where the real competitive advantage reveals itself. Take a look at the FedEx Cup points distribution:
- Players Championship Runner-up: 500 points
- Regular PGA Tour Event Winner: 500 points
- Signature Event Runner-up: 400 points
A player finishes second at Sawgrass and collects 500 FedEx Cup points. That same player finishes first at, say, the RBC Heritage the following week and gets the same haul. But here’s the thing—that 500-point second-place finish at The Players isn’t a consolation prize. It’s a legitimate pathway to the Playoffs.
“The good news for those competing in The Players Championship is that its FedEx Cup points distribution is identical to The Majors. That means the winner will amass 750 points, but there’s a huge haul of 500 available to the runner-up, too.”
I’ve covered fifteen Masters Tournaments, and I’ve seen how majors elevate careers. What’s happening with The Players is that same gravitational pull, but it’s happening in March at a venue that didn’t exist forty years ago. That speaks to the intentionality behind this event’s design and the tour’s commitment to building something that genuinely matters.
2026 and Beyond: The Presidents Cup Equation
With the Presidents Cup heading to Medinah this September, The Players Championship takes on another strategic layer. An eligible player finishing second will bank 1,000 Presidents Cup points—double what most tour events offer.
For international players, it’s the 48 world ranking points doing the heavy lifting in qualification conversations. For American players eyeing that top-six automatic qualifying spot? That’s as good a single event to build resume equity as exists on the calendar.
I’ve seen captains make their team selections, and I can tell you this: a strong finish at The Players doesn’t guarantee anything, but it definitely gets their attention. It shows up in the conversations differently than other victories would.
The Hierarchy Question That Refuses to Die
Look, the debate about whether The Players is already a major—that’s going to continue, and honestly, I think that’s healthy. In my three decades covering the tour, I’ve learned that golf’s traditions matter, and they should. You don’t casually bump something up to major status just because it’s become prestigious and well-funded.
But here’s what I think: The Players has already transcended its “glorified Signature Event” label. The purse, the points, the prestige—it’s operating at a level that most tournaments, major and otherwise, can’t touch. Whether we officially call it a major is almost beside the point now.
What matters is that a player finishing second at TPC Sawgrass in 2026 will earn $2.75 million, collect meaningful world ranking points, bank 500 FedEx Cup points, and accumulate 1,000 Presidents Cup points. That’s not second-tier compensation. That’s legitimacy.
The Players Championship has become what the tour needed it to be: a truly elite event where finishing second still means you did something exceptional. In my experience, that’s exactly how you build a tournament that matters—not through proclamations, but through resources, consistency, and results that speak for themselves.

