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Cog Hill welcomes Tours Best

September 8th 2010 23:24


from Mike McAllister PGATour.com

Matt Kuchar already has his top-five spot locked up.

Charley Hoffman doesn't have that kind of guarantee, but he can basically count on it.

Steve Stricker merely needs to play better than five other players this week.

But Jason Day has to play better than 63 other players, and Luke Donald has to play better than 66 other players.


Call it the battle within the battle within the battle at this week's BMW Championship.

Seventy players will tee off Thursday at Cog Hill seeking to win the third event in the PGA TOUR Playoffs for the FedExCup. Thirty of those players will accumulate enough points to advance to the final event in two weeks, THE TOUR Championship presented by Coca-Cola.

But just five of those players will reach East Lake controlling their own destiny when the FedExCup points are reset after this week. If any of the top five players in reset points wins THE TOUR Championship, then he automatically wins the FedExCup title and the $10 million bonus that comes with it.

Everybody else must hope for help, with their fate decided on how others play and how the 30-man East Lake leaderboard shakes out.

Kuchar, Hoffman, Stricker, Day and Donald enter this week as the top five players, respectively, in FedExCup points. Their goal, in addition to winning this week's tournament, is to maintain their top-five status after the final putt drops on Sunday.

"That's kind of the magic number," No. 5 Donald said Wednesday on the eve of the first round. "If you can get to THE TOUR Championship still in that position, then obviously you have the FedExCup kind of in your hands, so to speak."


Added No. 3 Stricker: "That's where you want to be. You want to be in that top five or higher just because you can control your own destiny."

As you can see, however, being in the top five this week and feeling comfortable about it are two different things. It's likely that Day or Donald will drop out after this week if the BMW winner comes from outside the top five.

Kuchar, The Barclays winner, can finish dead-last in this week's no-cut event and still be assured of a top-five spot. That's the benefit of having a consistent regular season (a TOUR-high nine top-10 finishes), winning a Playoffs event (worth 2,500 points) and having a decent result in the other (tie for 11th at the Deutsche Bank Championship).

Hoffman has only the remotest of chances of slipping outside the top five, thanks to winning the Deutsche Bank last week. Hoffman's appearance in the top five indicates just how critical it is to win a Playoffs event. With points worth five times more than the regular season, Hoffman, who tied for 27th at The Barclays the previous week, won the right event at the right time.

The reasons that Stricker has such a firm grasp on a top-five spot are, essentially, two-fold. First, he won two events during the regular season, and each of those events was worth 500 FedExCup points. Second, he's played well in the first two Playoffs events, with a tie for third at The Barclays and a ninth at the Deutsche Bank. The last two weeks have given Stricker another 1,275 FedExCup points.

In other words, Stricker is an example of the player who is rewarded both for his regular-season play and his performance in the Playoffs. Of Stricker's total FedExCup points going into the BMW, 77 percent came from four events -- the two regular-season wins and the first two Playoffs.

For Day and Donald, the reasons their grasps on a top-five spot are so much more tenuous than Stricker's is simple -- they didn't play nearly as well as Stricker did during the regular season.

While Day broke through with his first TOUR win earlier this year at the HP Byron Nelson Championship, he had just two other top-10 finishes during the regular season and he missed five cuts.

Donald didn't win at all and he missed four cuts, including two majors, which offer slightly more FedExCup points than regular-season events. Stricker, meanwhile, did not miss a cut this season. Again, there's the reward for a better regular season.
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