2015 FedEx Cup Playoffs

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2015 FedEx Cup Playoffs
Tournament information
DatesAugust 27 –
September 27, 2015
LocationPlainfield Country Club
TPC Boston
Conway Farms Golf Club
East Lake Golf Club
TourPGA Tour
Statistics
Field125 for The Barclays
100 for Deutsche Bank Ch.
70 for BMW Championship
30 for Tour Championship
Prize fund$35,000,000 bonus money
Winner's share$10,000,000 bonus money
Champion
United States Jordan Spieth
3,800 points
 2014
2016 

The 2015 FedEx Cup Playoffs, the series of four golf tournaments that will determine the season champion on the U.S.-based PGA Tour, were played from August 27 to September 27. It included the following four events:

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

The point distributions can be seen here.

PlacePlayerPointsEvents
1United States Jordan Spieth4,16921
2Australia Jason Day2,45916
3United States Bubba Watson2,40715
4United States Jimmy Walker2,01420
5England Justin Rose1,74216
6United States Robert Streb1,72026
7United States Dustin Johnson1,71817
8United States Patrick Reed1,59323
9Northern Ireland Rory McIlroy1,5679
10New Zealand Danny Lee1,56132

For the full list see here.

The Barclays

The Barclays was played August 27–30. Of the 125 players eligible to play in the event, five did not enter: Rory McIlroy (ranked 9), Louis Oosthuizen (28), Sergio García (31), Francesco Molinari (99) and Retief Goosen (111).[1] Of the 120 entrants, 72 made the second-round cut at 142 (+2).

Jason Day won by six strokes over Henrik Stenson and moved from second place to first place in the standings.[2] The top 100 players in the points standings advanced to the Deutsche Bank Championship. This included eight players who were outside the top 100 prior to The Barclays: Zac Blair (ranked 106th to 45th), Spencer Levin (115 to 80), Jason Dufner (103 to 82), Carlos Ortiz (112 to 83), Mark Wilson (114 to 85), Luke Donald (119 to 87), Johnson Wagner (101 to 92) and Camilo Villegas (123 to 99). Eight players started the tournament within the top 100 but ended the tournament outside the top 100, ending their playoff chances: Pádraig Harrington (ranked 87th to 103rd), Greg Owen (90 to 104), John Peterson (93 to 105), Adam Scott (94 to 106), Adam Hadwin (95 to 107), Charl Schwartzel (96 to 108), John Huh (97 to 110) and Francesco Molinari (99 to 111).[3]

FedEx Cup rank
PlacePlayerScoreTo parWinnings ($)AfterBefore
1Australia Jason Day68-68-63-62=261−191,485,00012
2Sweden Henrik Stenson68-66-67-66=267−13891,000441
3United States Bubba Watson65-68-67-69=269−11561,00033
T4United States Zac Blair69-68-67-66=270−10363,00045106
United States Zach Johnson69-65-67-69=270511
T6South Korea Bae Sang-moon69-67-63-72=271−9276,3752334
United States Ryan Palmer69-67-65-70=2713356
United States Daniel Summerhays67-70-68-66=2714066
T9United States Jason Bohn71-64-72-65=272−8231,0002433
United States Dustin Johnson70-70-67-65=27267
  • Par 70 course

Deutsche Bank Championship

The Deutsche Bank Championship was played September 4–7. Of the 100 players eligible to play in the event, Sergio García (ranked 43) and Will Wilcox (89) did not play.[4][5] Of the 98 entrants, 75 made the second-round cut at 145 (+3).

Rickie Fowler won by one stroke over Henrik Stenson and moved into third place in the standings.[6] The top 70 players in the points standings advanced to the BMW Championship. This included four players who were outside the top 70 prior to the Deutsche Bank Championship: Hunter Mahan (91 to 52), Keegan Bradley (71 to 63), Jerry Kelly (94 to 65), and William McGirt (88 to 68). Four players started the tournament within the top 70 but ended the tournament outside the top 70, ending their playoff chances: Marc Leishman (61 to 72), Jim Herman (64 to 74), Kevin Streelman (65 to 75) and Boo Weekley (70 to 76).[7]

FedEx Cup rank
PlacePlayerScoreTo parWinnings ($)AfterBefore
1United States Rickie Fowler67-67-67-68=269−151,485,000322
2Sweden Henrik Stenson67-68-65-70=270−14891,00044
3United States Charley Hoffman67-63-76-67=273−11561,000617
T4United States Jim Furyk71-65-70-70=276−8311,025911
Australia Matt Jones67-67-68-74=2763357
United States Hunter Mahan69-73-64-70=2765291
United States Sean O'Hair68-67-67-74=2763866
United States Patrick Reed72-67-67-70=2761012
T9United States Jerry Kelly71-66-68-72=277−7222,7506594
United States Matt Kuchar69-72-65-71=2772027
United States Daniel Summerhays71-68-70-68=2772640
  • Par 71 course

BMW Championship

The BMW Championship was played September 17–20, after a one-week break. All 70 players eligible to play in the event did so, and there was no cut.

Jason Day won by six strokes over Daniel Berger.[8] The top 30 players in the points standings advanced to the Tour Championship. This included four players who were outside the top 30 prior to the BMW Championship: Daniel Berger (46 to 9), Scott Piercy (44 to 20), Kevin Na (34 to 27), and Harris English (32 to 30). Four players started the tournament within the top 30 but ended the tournament outside the top 30, ending their playoff chances: Daniel Summerhays (26 to 31), Russell Knox (29 to 34), Ben Martin (25 to 35) and Jason Bohn (28 to 40).[9]

FedEx Cup rank
PlacePlayerScoreTo parWinnings ($)AfterBefore
1Australia Jason Day61-63-69-69=262−221,485,00011
2United States Daniel Berger65-64-70-69=268−16891,000946
3United States Scott Piercy67-65-67-70=269−15561,0002044
T4United States Rickie Fowler69-66-66-69=270−14341,00033
United States J. B. Holmes70-65-67-68=2701719
Northern Ireland Rory McIlroy68-65-67-70=2701117
T7United States Dustin Johnson71-62-68-70=271−13257,12578
Japan Hideki Matsuyama72-63-70-66=2711516
United States Cameron Tringale72-64-69-66=2713655
T10United States Kevin Na65-66-70-71=272−12206,2502734
Sweden Henrik Stenson71-63-71-67=27244
United States Bubba Watson65-70-72-65=27255
  • Par 71 course

Reset points

The points were reset after the BMW Championship.

PlacePlayerPointsReset pointsEvents
1Australia Jason Day6,6802,00019
2United States Jordan Spieth4,3921,80024
3United States Rickie Fowler3,9581,60020
4Sweden Henrik Stenson3,6321,44015
5United States Bubba Watson3,6091,28018
6United States Zach Johnson2,4641,12024
7United States Dustin Johnson2,45496020
8United States Charley Hoffman2,36480027
9United States Daniel Berger2,32064030
10United States Patrick Reed2,20548026

Tour Championship

The Tour Championship was played September 24–27. Of the 30 golfers qualified for the tournament, only Jim Furyk (wrist injury), did not play.[10] There was no cut.

Jordan Spieth won the tournament and the FedEx Cup, beating Danny Lee, Justin Rose, and Henrik Stenson by four strokes.[11]

FedEx Cup rank
PlacePlayerScoreTo parWinnings ($)AfterBefore
1United States Jordan Spieth68-66-68-69=271−91,485,00012
T2New Zealand Danny Lee69-72-69-65=275−5618,750919
England Justin Rose70-68-71-66=275812
Sweden Henrik Stenson63-68-72-72=27524
T5England Paul Casey65-70-71-70=276−4302,5001322
United States Dustin Johnson69-72-71-64=27677
United States Bubba Watson70-71-68-67=27655
T8United States J. B. Holmes68-72-68-69=277−3255,7501417
United States Zach Johnson66-70-71-70=27766
T10Australia Jason Day69-71-70-68=278−2228,52531
United States Matt Kuchar71-70-69-68=2781921
  • Par 70 course

Final leaderboard

PlacePlayerPointsWinnings ($)
1United States Jordan Spieth3,80010,000,000
2Sweden Henrik Stenson2,3073,000,000
3Australia Jason Day2,2902,000,000
4United States Rickie Fowler1,8381,500,000
5United States Bubba Watson1,6801,000,000
6United States Zach Johnson1,450800,000
7United States Dustin Johnson1,360700,000
8England Justin Rose1,235600,000
9New Zealand Danny Lee1,123550,000
10United States Charley Hoffman992500,000

For the full list see here.

Table of qualifying players

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI