Q: You keep talking about the world golf rankings. Who exactly puts the world golf rankings out? Is it the PGA Tour?
A:Well, the PGA Tour is involved, but only in a small way.
The Official World Golf Rankings have been around 24 years as a way to quantify what golf fans had only been able to debate subjectively for decades: who is he best player in the game?
To produce the rankings, the powers of the game had to come together to put a legitimate system together. The six golf associations that are part of the International Federation of PGA Tours (the PGA Tour, the European Tour, the Japan Tour, the Asian Tour, the Australasian Tour and the Sunshine Tour), agreed to participate. So did the four major championships of the of the game, the Masters, the U.S. Open, the British Open and the PGA Championship.
Other tours, like the Canadian Tour, are also involved.
The approval of all those organizations was needed in order to use their tournaments as events where players could gain points in the rankings. At one time, the PGA Tour alone could be used to measure the greatest of a player, and no one argued the Jack Nicklaus was the game’s best played.
By the late 1980s, with European players like Nick Faldo and Seve Ballesteros winning majors and the European tam winning the Ryder Cup, a broader, more international formula was used. Still, the PGA Tour had the biggest tournaments and the strongest, deepest field.
The system takes into consideration 104 weeks, with more recent tournaments counting more. Points are awards for finishes in tournaments, with each tournament given a certain number of points based on the strength of the field.
Of the 14 players to hold the No. 1 rankings at least one week, only four have been Americans: Woods, Fred Couples, Tom Lehman and David Duval. Woods has held the title the longest at 623 weeks over three different spans. That’s one week short of 12 full years in the 24-year history of the rankings.
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