The Wingo Network

Brian Rolapp Just Revealed the Future of the PGA Tour. Here Is the Full Breakdown.

24 min · 24. juni 2026
episode Brian Rolapp Just Revealed the Future of the PGA Tour. Here Is the Full Breakdown. cover

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Brian Rolapp Just Revealed the Future of the PGA Tour. Here Is the Full Breakdown. Get up to $200 off Square hardware when you sign up at square.com/go/WINGO #squarepod #sponsored Head to cozyearth.com and use code WINGO for an exclusive 20% off. Go to https://kachava.com and use code WINGO for 15% off your first order. This is the moment golf fans have been waiting for. Brian Rolapp, the PGA Tour CEO and soon-to-be commissioner, held his long-anticipated press conference at the Travelers Championship at TPC River Highlands today and laid out what professional golf is going to look like beginning in 2028. Trey Wingo was in the room. This is the full reaction and breakdown. The Two-Tour Structure Starting in 2028 the PGA Tour splits into two distinct tiers. The Championship Tour is the top level — the best players in the world competing against each other in 120-man fields with mandatory cuts every week and minimum purses of $20 million per event. No sponsors exemptions. Full stop. If you want to be on the Championship Tour you earn it. Nobody is handing you a spot because a title sponsor asked nicely. The Challenger Tour is the developmental level — legitimate, well-funded, and meaningfully different from what the Korn Ferry Tour has been. Minimum purses of $4 million per event. And the pathway up is clearly defined — win twice on the Challenger Tour and you automatically move up to the Championship Tour. No waiting. No politics. Two wins and you are promoted. The meritocracy angle is the thing that resonates most with Trey. Brian Rolapp made it explicit — the PGA Tour will decide who the best players are. Nobody else. When asked about pushback on eliminating sponsors exemptions, Rolapp's answer was simple. Do sponsors decide who plays in the NFL playoffs? Do they decide who makes the NBA Finals? No. The best players earn their way in. That is how it is going to work here too. The Regular Season Champion One of the more creative structural changes — the PGA Tour will now crown a regular season champion at the end of the February through August stretch, separate from and before the playoff format begins. This mirrors how every other major professional sport works. The NFL MVP is a regular season award. The NBA MVP is a regular season award. Baseball does the same. The best player over the course of the full season gets recognized for it, and then the postseason is its own separate competition with its own separate drama. This also solves a long-standing problem with the FedEx Cup — a points system so complicated that even people who work inside it need a computer to figure out where players stand. Brian Rolapp acknowledged this directly and said they are going to make the regular season standings simple and clear, so every fan knows exactly where their favorite player is and what they need to do to win. Match Play Playoffs After the regular season champion is crowned, the playoffs begin — and they will be played in match play format. This is the detail that got the loudest reaction in the room and on this show. Match play is the purest form of the game. Head to head. One player against one player. Every hole matters. The format creates moments that stroke play simply cannot — a journeyman player can beat the world number one on any given day if the putts fall at the right time. That unpredictability is exactly what makes it appointment viewing, and the PGA Tour is betting on it. The playoffs will rotate through some of the most hallowed courses in the country — and here is where the press conference went from interesting to genuinely electric. Rolapp mentioned Pine Valley. Cypress Point. Seminole. Courses that the PGA Tour has not visited in years, or ever. Courses that golf fans know by name and reputation but rarely get to see on television. Trey describes the moment he read those names in the press release as an immediate stop-everything moment. Justin Ray says if they actually get to Pine Valley and Seminole, it is a different level of excitement entirely. The Last Chance Series and International Events The season does not fully stop in August. After the regular season and playoffs conclude, the fall features two distinct additions. The Last Chance Series — a handful of events in the September through January window where players fight to keep their spot on the Championship Tour. This is built-in drama of the best kind. Players competing for their professional livelihood to stay at the highest level of the sport. Great for television. Great for engagement. Great for the sport. And international events — working with the DP World Tour to bring the strongest possible fields to national opens around the world. The Australian Open, potentially a Spanish Open at Valderrama, an Italian Open in Rome. Trey makes a point that is impossible to ignore — you cannot hear a PGA Tour CEO talk about international national opens without connecting it directly to what Scott O'Neill has been pitching to LIV Golf investors as their primary selling point. The PGA Tour just said we are going there too. That was not accidental. What We Still Don't Know Brian Rolapp was clear that not everything is settled yet. Five of the fifteen Championship Tour signature events have not yet been announced. The medical exemption structure has not been fully worked out — how does a player like Justin Thomas, coming back from back surgery, fit into this new system? The Korn Ferry Tour's future role has not been defined. The FedEx Cup sponsorship runs through the end of next season, and what replaces it or how it evolves is still an open question. And the specific cities and venues beyond the announced hallowed-ground courses have not been confirmed. Rolapp's framing of all of this — we want to be rigid on the vision and flexible on the details. And 2027 is a runway year to prepare for everything that changes in 2028. He will address more specifics at the Tour Championship later this season. Again, not accidental. Why This Matters The Rory McIlroy "glorified Korn Ferry tour" comment has been the loudest criticism of the two-track model since it was first floated. Rolapp addressed it directly — a minimum $4 million purse on the Challenger Tour is four times what the Korn Ferry Tour currently offers. The field strength will be significantly stronger. This is not a development league in the traditional sense. It is a legitimate second tier with a clear and meritocratic path to the top. The EPL parallel is real and Trey makes it explicitly — promotion and relegation, a regular season champion, a separate playoff format, the best clubs playing each other most of the time. The PGA Tour is taking the best of football's scarcity model and the best of soccer's structural clarity and building something new. Whether it works depends on the details still to come. But the vision, as Brian Rolapp laid it out today at the Travelers Championship, is the most compelling thing professional golf has put forward in years. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

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Andrew Brandt Explains Why Sports Business Has Never Been Bigger

Andrew Brandt Explains Why Sports Business Has Never Been Bigger Head to cozyearth.com and use code WINGO for an exclusive 20% off. Andrew Brandt joins Trey Wingo for a wide-ranging conversation on the business of sports, the NFL’s financial power, media rights, franchise valuations, league ownership and the behind-the-scenes stories that shaped his career. Brandt spent years as an agent, worked in the Green Bay Packers front office, became one of ESPN’s most trusted sports business voices, and now has a new book out called Smarter About Sports. Why Sports Business Is Everywhere Trey opens with the idea that 2026 has become the year of sports business. Andrew explains why the business side is no longer a niche part of sports coverage. Media deals, salary caps, ownership structures, franchise sales and private equity now shape almost everything fans see. They discuss the NBA tripling its media revenue, why the NFL may reopen its own media deals, and how the league’s next rights package could climb even higher. The NFL Money Machine Andrew and Trey break down the massive rise in NFL franchise values and what it says about the league’s power. They talk about the Seahawks sale, private equity entering the NFL, why team valuations keep climbing, and why past threats to the league’s dominance have not slowed it down. Trey also asks whether the NFL risks pushing too far by adding more games across more days of the week. Media Rights and Streaming The conversation also looks at the future of television. Traditional networks need the NFL. Tech companies like Apple, Amazon, Google and YouTube can afford to chase live sports in a completely different way. Andrew and Trey discuss what that could mean for the next era of sports media. Green Bay, Favre and Rodgers Andrew shares stories from his time with the Packers, including what it was like managing the transition from Brett Favre to Aaron Rodgers. He explains how difficult those years were inside the building and why the team eventually knew it was time to move forward. Stories From Inside Sports The interview also includes Andrew’s stories about Ricky Williams and Master P, the undrafted free agent who misunderstood a signing bonus, Daniel Snyder, stadium deals, LIV Golf, the World Cup and why sports business keeps getting bigger. This is a conversation about money, power, media and the decisions behind the games fans watch every week. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

I går54 min
episode Royal Birkdale Is Firm, Fast and Wide Open cover

Royal Birkdale Is Firm, Fast and Wide Open

Royal Birkdale Is Firm, Fast and Wide Open Go to https://kachava.com and use code WINGO for 15% off your first order. The Open Championship is here, and Royal Birkdale already looks like it is going to have a huge say in who wins. Trey Wingo and Justin Ray start this Golf Live breakout by talking about why the Open has become their favorite major. The history, the links golf, the global feel, the old venues — all of it makes this week feel different. And this year, the golf course itself may be the biggest story. Royal Birkdale Is Already Running Justin is on site in Liverpool and says he has never been at an Open Championship on a Tuesday where the fairways looked this brown. The course is firm, fast and already running. Trey compares it to Muirfield in 2013, when the conditions were so dry that Tiger Woods hit a five-iron from 290 yards and watched it run over the green. That is the kind of setup this could become. Why That Changes Everything When the course plays this firm, power does not mean the same thing. Trey and Justin explain why these conditions could bring more players into the mix. Bombers may have to throttle back. Accurate players who can control their ball flight may suddenly have a bigger edge. The shorter guys are not automatically behind if the ball is running like this. That is why this Open feels so open. The Bounces Will Matter Royal Birkdale is also going to ask players to live with some uncertainty. Balls are going to run out. Good shots may end up in bad spots. Bad shots may catch a break. Trey says players hate that kind of vagary, but Justin points out that for fans, it adds to the drama. At a course like this, one bounce can change a hole. One big number can change a championship. Why Birkdale Is So Interesting Royal Birkdale may not have the instant signature identity of St. Andrews or Carnoustie, but it has plenty going on. Justin points to the dunes that frame the holes, the changes to the fifth, the new green on seven and the straightened 18th hole bringing more bunkers into play. It is a course that is going to ask a lot of questions. And if the forecast stays calm, scoring might be there. But that does not mean this place will be easy. At Royal Birkdale, the winner may not be the guy who overpowers the course. It may be the guy who handles it best when Birkdale bites back. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

I går20 min
episode Open Championship Preview: Royal Birkdale, Final Picks, Scottie Scheffler, Nelly Korda and Mailbag cover

Open Championship Preview: Royal Birkdale, Final Picks, Scottie Scheffler, Nelly Korda and Mailbag

Open Championship Preview: Royal Birkdale, Final Picks, Scottie Scheffler, Nelly Korda and Mailbag Go to https://kachava.com and use code WINGO for 15% off your first order. Golf Live is back for Open Championship week. Trey Wingo is in California after surviving the American Century Championship in Lake Tahoe. Justin Ray is in Liverpool getting ready for the Open at Royal Birkdale. Naturally, the show starts with a missing rental car key fob, European ice issues, Bucky’s, and why the Open Championship has become the favorite major for both of them. Then it gets to the real point: Royal Birkdale, firm and fast conditions, and the final men’s major of the year. The Open Championship at Royal Birkdale Trey and Justin break down why this Open feels especially wide open. Royal Birkdale is already firm, brown and running fast. Justin says he has never been to an Open on a Tuesday where the fairways looked this brown. Trey compares it to Muirfield in 2013, when Tiger Woods hit a five-iron from 290 yards and watched it run over the green. That kind of setup changes everything. Bombers do not have the same advantage. Accurate drivers and elite ball-strikers come back into the mix. The rub of the green matters. Bad bounces are coming. And whoever wins will need the patience to survive the chaos. Final Picks for the Open Justin is looking past the obvious Rory and Scottie answers and lands on Matt Fitzpatrick as his winner. Fitzpatrick has completely rebuilt his approach play, going from 127th on the PGA Tour in strokes gained approach a few years ago to first this season. Justin also likes Russell Henley for a top-five finish and Min Woo Lee for a top-ten finish. Trey also picks Matt Fitzpatrick, largely because of how cerebral and mentally strong he is. If Royal Birkdale gets unpredictable, Trey trusts Fitzpatrick’s ability to stay disciplined and think his way around the golf course. Trey also likes Collin Morikawa, who has already won an Open on a quirky links setup, and Justin Rose, whose Open Championship story began at Royal Birkdale in 1998 when he holed out on 18 as a 17-year-old amateur. Scottie Scheffler and Nelly Korda Miss the Cut The show also gets into a wild week across golf: Scottie Scheffler missed the cut at the Scottish Open and Nelly Korda missed the cut at the Evian Championship. Justin notes that it is the first time the reigning men’s world No. 1 and women’s world No. 1 both missed the cut in the same week. Evian still delivered its usual chaos, with Brooke Henderson making six eagles for the week and three on Sunday alone. For Scottie, Trey and Justin are not worried. Statistically, he is still elite across the board. But the missed cut did bring up another reminder of how absurd Tiger Woods’ 142-cut streak really was. Tom Kim Gets Back in the Winner’s Circle Tom Kim winning the Scottish Open was another major topic. Trey and Justin talk about how quickly Kim arrived, how hard the game pushed back, and why this win could matter going forward. He was the youngest two-time and three-time PGA Tour winner since Tiger Woods, then hit a difficult stretch. Now, after contending at the US Open and winning in Scotland, his game looks like it is trending again. For a player with that much talent and personality, that is good news for golf. Mailbag The episode wraps with your questions. Trey and Justin answer who benefits most from Royal Birkdale’s firm conditions, whether the major setups have been good this year, whether Scottie’s season would be a failure without another major, and which non-mainstream Open winner would create the best story. They also get into Tom Kim’s ceiling, the future of the DP World Tour, and whether it has become more entertaining than the PGA Tour in certain weeks. Plus, Trey shares what it was actually like playing competitive golf at the American Century Championship, why Steve Young wanted to leave after one tee shot, and why a six-foot par putt in a celebrity event can suddenly feel like the biggest putt in the world. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

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episode Is It Put Up or Shut Up Time for Jordan Spieth? Plus Early Open Championship Picks | Mailbag cover

Is It Put Up or Shut Up Time for Jordan Spieth? Plus Early Open Championship Picks | Mailbag

Is It Put Up or Shut Up Time for Jordan Spieth? Plus Early Open Championship Picks | Mailbag Go to https://kachava.com and use code WINGO for 15% off your first order. Golf Live mailbag is back. Trey Wingo and Justin Ray answer your questions this week on Jordan Spieth, Justin Rose, early Open Championship picks, Sergio Garcia missing the field, US Open setups, dream courses and why Justin somehow has not played golf yet this year. Duncan is also back from paternity leave, which means the disembodied voice has officially returned. Jordan Spieth and Sponsor Exemptions The first question gets right to it. If sponsor exemptions are going away, what does that mean for Jordan Spieth? Trey’s answer: play better and stop hitting it crooked. Justin’s answer is basically the same. If the PGA Tour is leaning harder into meritocracy, even someone as accomplished and popular as Spieth cannot just be a famous name and expect to get into events. At some point, it becomes put up or shut up. Trey also points out the stat that still feels hard to believe: Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson have both won majors more recently than Jordan Spieth has won on the PGA Tour. Where Is Justin Rose’s Game? Justin Rose came out hot this year, but the bigger point is where his focus is now. Justin Ray says Rose’s best weeks are still coming in the events he cares about most. Third at the Masters. Top ten at the PGA. Tied for 11th at the US Open. He is gearing everything toward the biggest championships because, at this stage of his career, those are the weeks that matter. Trey compares it to the veteran mindset. The majors, the old courses, the events with history. That is where the energy comes from. Early Open Championship Picks The mailbag then turns to Royal Birkdale. Justin starts with Scottie Scheffler. Everyone keeps asking what is wrong with him because he only has one win this year, but statistically he is still almost exactly where he was at this point last season. Trey brings up Rory McIlroy, who has only one Open Championship win, back at Hoylake in 2014. If Rory is going to keep chasing the second leg of a double career grand slam, this is another real opportunity. Matt Fitzpatrick also gets mentioned as a strong fit because Birkdale is not only about power. It is about avoiding the right trouble, managing the bunkers and playing smart. And then there is Jon Rahm. A strong Scottish Open week could send him right back up the Open odds board. Sergio Garcia Missing the Open The biggest surprise non-qualifier? Sergio Garcia. Justin says it first, and Trey agrees immediately. Sergio has played the Open Championship 26 times, with ten top-ten finishes and two runner-up finishes. For a generation of golf fans, he has always been part of this championship. For European players, the Open is different. It is their championship. And with Seve Ballesteros as Sergio’s idol, never winning it is probably going to stick with him more than anything else. US Open Setups and Bad Breaks One viewer was tired of “tricked up” US Open courses, where good shots can roll away and bad misses sometimes get better breaks. Trey gets the frustration, but he is fine with the US Open making players suffer a little. There are plenty of weeks where the PGA Tour sets up for low scores. The US Open is supposed to be different. Justin’s view is simple: you cannot please everybody. Some of the bad breaks, good breaks and strange bounces are part of what makes the US Open unique. The One Course Question One course for the rest of your life turned into about 30 answers, which feels right. Trey loves links golf, but if he had to play one course forever, he wants something fun. Cabot Cliffs is near the top of his list. He also mentions Lanai, Pinehurst No. 4 and Pinehurst No. 10. Justin refuses to pick something he has not played, so Augusta is out for now. He considers Carnoustie, Pebble Beach and Kapalua, then lands on Pebble because of the balance of beauty, shot-making and fun. Why Justin Has Not Played Golf This Year Finally, the question everyone needed answered: how has Justin Ray not played golf yet this year? His answer: business building, young family, too many jobs and Dallas heat. Trey’s answer: because Justin has 74 jobs. Justin takes the L, but he does have rounds planned during his upcoming UK trip, including Formby. Trey, meanwhile, is headed to the American Century Championship in Tahoe, where his goal is simple: enjoy the weekend and not hurt anyone. Low bar. Clear it first. Then reassess. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

10. juli 202624 min
episode Nelly Korda Is Still the Story. But Evian Is the Wild Card. cover

Nelly Korda Is Still the Story. But Evian Is the Wild Card.

Nelly Korda Is Still the Story. But Evian Is the Wild Card. Go to https://kachava.com and use code WINGO for 15% off your first order. The Evian Championship is the fourth major of the LPGA season, but it is not the last one. And even after everything that happened at the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship, the conversation still starts in the same place. Nelly Korda. She is still the main story. The only question is whether Evian lets this week play out the way everyone expects. The Nelly Standard Justin Ray puts it in perspective right away. An eighth-place finish at a major somehow felt like a letdown for Nelly Korda. That says everything about the level she has been playing at. Through the first three majors of the season, Nelly has gained more than 46 strokes total. That is 16 more than anyone else. Gabby Lopez is second, and the gap is still massive. So yes, Nelly is the favorite. She is still the player everyone is chasing. And if you are asking which of the final two majors she is more likely to win, Justin still leans toward the AIG Women’s Open. Not because Nelly cannot win Evian. Because Evian has a way of turning normal Sundays into something completely different. Why Evian Is the Wild Card Justin went back and watched highlights from last year’s Evian Championship, which he admits is a perfectly normal thing for a person to do on a summer Sunday night. And honestly, he had a point. Last year’s finish was insane. Jeeno Thitikul had a 98.6 percent win probability standing on the 18th tee. Grace Kim made eagle in her group. Jeeno missed an eight-footer that would have won it outright. Then they went to a playoff. On the first playoff hole, Grace hit her approach into the water, took a drop, then holed out from off the green for birdie. Jeeno made her birdie putt to extend it. Then Grace came back and made eagle on 18 to win her first major. Eagle. Birdie from the water. Eagle. That is why this tournament is so hard to predict. It is beautiful. It is dramatic. And it has created enough Sunday chaos that Justin thinks it may be the hardest women’s major to forecast. Who Could Pop This Week Trey asks Justin for a name that could make sense if Evian gives us another unusual outcome. Justin points first to big-name players who could bounce back after missing the cut at the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship. Charley Hull. Minjee Lee. Hannah Green. Players with enough talent to win anywhere if the week turns their way. Then there is Miyu Yamashita, the reigning AIG Women’s Open champion. She is 4-foot-11, does not overpower golf courses, and does incredible work in and around the greens. If you have never watched her play, Justin says she is worth your time. Lottie Woad is another name to watch, even if Justin admits that is not exactly a deep cut. She is fourth in the world and nearly won this event as an amateur last year. Gabby Lopez also deserves attention. She has built her schedule around the majors and has been one of the best major performers this season. Lauren Coughlin’s ball striking continues to show up too, even if the putting has come back down a little. That is the thing about Evian. It does not always give you the obvious answer. The Four-Major Question Then Trey gets to the bigger question. If Nelly wins the final two majors of the season, she would have four major championships in the same year. But because the LPGA has five majors, what do we actually call that? Justin’s answer is careful, because golf history is not as fixed as people sometimes think. The definition of a major has changed over time, especially in the women’s game. The du Maurier Championship used to be a major. The Titleholders Championship used to be a major. Evian became a major in 2013. Even on the men’s side, Jack Nicklaus was once described during a Masters broadcast as going for his 20th major because they were including his two U.S. Amateur wins. The point is simple: golf history changes. The labels change. The way we talk about records changes. So if Nelly wins four majors in a five-major season, maybe it is not a clean single-season Grand Slam. But it would still be one of the greatest major seasons the sport has ever seen. What Counts as a Major Anyway? Trey makes the point that there is no official bylaw that permanently defines what a major is. There is no article, code, paragraph or governing-body rule that says these are the majors forever and nothing can ever change. A lot of it is history. A lot of it is perception. A lot of it is what the golf world decides to value. That is what makes the Nelly conversation so interesting. If she wins Evian and the AIG Women’s Open, the label may be complicated. The achievement would not be. Four majors in one season is four majors in one season. But first comes Evian. And at Evian, nothing ever feels guaranteed. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

9. juli 202612 min