
PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — Officially, new PGA Tour CEO Brian Rolapp‘s Players Championship press conference changed the future of pro golf as we know it.
Speaking from the dais in his first press conference as the leader of the Tour at the Tour’s flagship event, Rolapp revealed his shiny new six-pronged vision for the future. That vision is predicated on 120-player fields, a 21- to 26-event seasons that start with a “marquee, primetime” event out west (likely the Pebble Beach Pro-Am), and a new playoff format that could include match play.
But if you were watching Wednesday’s press conference with clear eyes, you probably weren’t paying attention to the minutiae of the new schedule (which still needs to be ratified by the Tour’s governing bodies) or the feasibility of a world without sponsor exemptions. You probably weren’t even looking at Rolapp at all.
No, if you wanted to see the most radical change of Rolapp’s PGA Tour leadership, you actually had to look in the other direction, where nearly 1,100 people crammed into every nook and cranny of the Tour’s glittering new building to see Rolapp speak.
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Public relations — good public relations — is as much about optics as about substance, and the optics of this week’s press conference projected an interesting new vision for the Tour. Gone were the sanitized overhead lights of the press room at TPC Sawgrass; the stilted and overly rehearsed axioms from prior Tour leader, Jay Monahan; and the overall sentiment of the Tour as something that could be fixed with a punchy catchphrase and a few hundred million in extra sponsor dollars.
In its place, Rolapp seemed to be doing his best to imbue the Tour with a sense of power and influence, projecting the forthcoming innovations more as a necessary eventuality of a functioning business than as a hostile takeover of an otherwise flourishing business model.
To deliver this message, he welcomed the full brunt of the Tour’s bureaucratic class and many of its most influential partners. Representatives from the Strategic Sports Group, DP World Tour chief Guy Kinnings, and CBS Sports lead producer Sellers Shy were among the many golf dignitaries who arrived on Wednesday to hear Rolapp speak extemporaneously for 47 minutes about what amounted to a very simple thesis.
“The sports business is not that hard,” Rolapp said. “Just think like a fan, and nine and a half times out of ten, that’s probably the right answer.”
Of course, nothing about Rolapp’s vision will be as simple as Wednesday made it seem. He will need more than just good ideas to win over the balance of Tour players needed to execute sweeping changes — he will also need a deft hand, a strong sense of political instincts, and the kind of rugged flexibility required to string together many disparate groups with very different priorities.
“You pull one thread here and it impacts another thread,” Rolapp said. “It’s always sort of a balance.”
But any new vision of the Tour’s future requires a change in the Tour’s present — a course-correction of much more than a few degrees for a corporate behemoth. It takes time and charisma to turn the culture of a company, but Wednesday showed Rolapp has already done more than his fair share of tugging at the wheel.
Time will tell if he’s the leader to steer the Tour into a new, fabulously wealthy future. But more than any change announced on Wednesday’s press conference from the Players Championship, Rolapp showed he’s not afraid of the path ahead.
Or the change of scenery needed to get there.






