2013 FedEx Cup Playoffs

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2013 FedEx Cup Playoffs
Tournament information
DatesAugust 22 – September 22, 2013
LocationLiberty National Golf Club
TPC Boston
Conway Farms Golf Club
East Lake Golf Club
TourPGA Tour
Statistics
Field125 for The Barclays
100 for Deutsche Bank
70 for BMW Championship
30 for Tour Championship
Prize fund$35,000,000 bonus money
Winner's share$10,000,000 bonus money
Champion
Sweden Henrik Stenson
4,750 points
 2012
2014 

The 2013 FedEx Cup Playoffs, the series of four golf tournaments that determined the season champion on the U.S.-based PGA Tour, were played from August 22 to September 22. It included the following four events:

These were the seventh FedEx Cup playoffs since their inception in 2007.

The point distributions can be seen here.

PlacePlayerPointsEvents
1United States Tiger Woods3,05912
2United States Matt Kuchar2,29319
3United States Brandt Snedeker2,21819
4United States Phil Mickelson2,16617
5United States Bill Haas1,50521
6United States Billy Horschel1,48722
7England Justin Rose1,44713
8United States Jordan Spieth1,43619
9Sweden Henrik Stenson1,42614
10United States Keegan Bradley1,41621

The Barclays

The Barclays was played August 22–25. Of the 125 players eligible to play in the event, two did not enter: Zach Johnson (ranked 18) and Steve Stricker (20).[1] Of the 123 entrants, 74 made the second-round cut at 142 (E).

Adam Scott won by one stroke over Graham DeLaet, Justin Rose, Gary Woodland, and Tiger Woods and moved from 11th place to second place in the standings.[2] The top 100 players in the points standings advanced to the Deutsche Bank Championship. This included five players who were outside the top 100 prior to The Barclays: Martin Kaymer (ranked 103rd to 90th), Camilo Villegas (110 to 100), Erik Compton (117 to 94), Greg Chalmers (122 to 93), and Stuart Appleby (123 to 96). Five players started the tournament within the top 100 but ended the tournament outside the top 100, ending their playoff chances: James Driscoll (ranked 93rd to 103rd), Ted Potter Jr. (96 to 105), J. J. Henry (97 to 106), Geoff Ogilvy (99 to 104), and Jeff Overton (100 to 108).[3]

FedEx Cup rank
PlacePlayerScoreTo parWinnings ($)AfterBefore
1Australia Adam Scott69-66-72-66=273−111,440,000211
T2Canada Graham DeLaet67-73-69-65=274−10528,000734
England Justin Rose68-68-70-68=27457
United States Gary Woodland69-64-68-73=2741060
United States Tiger Woods67-69-69-69=27411
T6United States Jim Furyk70-66-70-69=275−9268,0001423
United States Phil Mickelson71-69-70-65=27534
United States D. A. Points70-72-66-67=2751525
T9United States Matt Every67-72-69-68=276−8208,0004688
United States Rickie Fowler71-64-71-70=2762342
United States Jason Kokrak70-69-70-67=2765095
United States Nick Watney68-70-69-69=2763563
  • Par 71 course

Deutsche Bank Championship

The Deutsche Bank Championship was played August 30 – September 2. All 100 players eligible to play in the event did so. 76 made the second-round cut at one-under-par, 141.

Henrik Stenson won by two strokes over Steve Stricker and moved into first place in the standings. The top 70 players in the points standings advanced to the BMW Championship. This included seven players who were outside the top 70 prior to the Deutsche Bank Championship: Kevin Stadler (75 to 32), Brian Davis (80 to 49), Ian Poulter (77 to 52), Marc Leishman (76 to 58), Nicholas Thompson (73 to 59), Brendan Steele (89 to 69), and Ernie Els (91 to 70). Seven players started the tournament within the top 70 but ended the tournament outside the top 70, ending their playoff chances: Ryan Palmer (60 to 71), Freddie Jacobson (61 to 72), Martin Laird (63 to 74), David Lingmerth (64 to 75), Kyle Stanley (66 to 77), Cameron Tringale (69 to 79), and Tim Clark (70 to 80).

FedEx Cup rank
PlacePlayerScoreTo parWinnings ($)AfterBefore
1Sweden Henrik Stenson67-63-66-66=262−221,440,000113
2United States Steve Stricker66-68-63-67=264−20864,000828
3Canada Graham DeLaet67-68-62-69=266−18544,00057
T4Spain Sergio García65-64-65-73=267−17315,0002455
United States Matt Kuchar66-66-69-66=26744
United States Jordan Spieth67-66-72-62=267109
United States Kevin Stadler64-71-64-68=2673275
8England Brian Davis63-72-66-67=268−16248,0004980
T9United States Roberto Castro65-65-68-71=269−15208,0002534
Zimbabwe Brendon de Jonge69-65-69-66=2692638
United States Jason Dufner66-66-66-71=2691319
England Ian Poulter66-68-66-69=2695277
  • Par 71 course

BMW Championship

The BMW Championship was played September 12–16, after a one-week break. All 70 players eligible to play in the event did so. There was no cut. The tournament was scheduled to end on September 15 but the final round could not be completed on Sunday due to rain and finished on Monday.

Zach Johnson won by two strokes over Nick Watney. Two players played their way into the Tour Championship: Watney (ranked 34 to ranked 12) and Luke Donald (54 to 29). Two players played their way out of the Tour Championship: Harris English (28 to 31) and Lee Westwood (30 to 41).[4]

The top 30 players in FedEx Cup points after this event advanced to the Tour Championship and also earned spots in the 2014 Masters Tournament, U.S. Open, and (British) Open Championship.

With the FedEx Cup points reset after the BMW Championship, all 30 remaining players had at least a mathematical chance to secure the season crown, and any of the top five players could claim the FedEx Cup with a win in the Tour Championship.

FedEx Cup rank
PlacePlayerScoreTo parWinnings ($)AfterBefore
1United States Zach Johnson64-70-69-65=268−161,440,000427
2United States Nick Watney67-69-70-64=270−14864,0001234
3United States Jim Furyk72-59-69-71=271−13544,0001115
T4Australia Jason Day71-66-70-66=273−11315,0001412
England Luke Donald70-70-67-66=2732954
United States Hunter Mahan68-73-65-67=2731518
United States Steve Stricker66-71-64-72=27368
T8Australia Matt Jones69-71-67-67=274−10232,0003251
South Africa Charl Schwartzel66-70-69-69=2742329
United States Brandt Snedeker63-68-71-72=274109
  • Par 71 course

Reset points

The points were reset after the BMW Championship.

PlacePlayerPointsReset pointsEvents
1United States Tiger Woods4,3522,50015
2Sweden Henrik Stenson4,2292,25017
3Australia Adam Scott4,1222,00015
4United States Zach Johnson3,8431,80023
5United States Matt Kuchar3,3301,60022
6United States Steve Stricker3,1801,40012
7Canada Graham DeLaet3,0111,20025
8United States Phil Mickelson2,9391,00020
9England Justin Rose2,84280016
10United States Brandt Snedeker2,72660022

Tour Championship

The Tour Championship was played September 19–22. All 30 golfers who qualified for the tournament played, and there was no cut. Henrik Stenson won the tournament by three shots over Jordan Spieth and Steve Stricker, and the FedEx Cup.

FedEx Cup rank
PlacePlayerScoreTo parWinnings ($)AfterBefore
1Sweden Henrik Stenson64-66-69-68=267−131,440,00012
T2United States Jordan Spieth68-67-71-64=270−10708,000713
United States Steve Stricker66-71-68-65=27036
4United States Webb Simpson68-71-69-63=271−9384,0001121
5United States Dustin Johnson68-68-67-69=272−8320,0001330
6England Justin Rose68-68-70-67=273−7288,000109
T7United States Billy Horschel66-70-70-68=274−6264,0001622
United States Zach Johnson69-68-69-68=27454
T9United States Roberto Castro67-71-72-65=275−5227,7332124
United States Jason Dufner74-70-66-65=2751920
Spain Sergio García68-71-69-67=2752225
  • Par 70 course

Final leaderboard

PlacePlayerPointsWinnings ($)
1Sweden Henrik Stenson4,75010,000,000
2United States Tiger Woods2,7433,000,000
3United States Steve Stricker2,6502,000,000
4Australia Adam Scott2,2781,500,000
5United States Zach Johnson2,2381,000,000
6United States Matt Kuchar1,823800,000
7United States Jordan Spieth1,690700,000
8Canada Graham DeLaet1,415600,000
9United States Phil Mickelson1,313550,000
10England Justin Rose1,300500,000

For the full list see here.

Table of qualifying players

References

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