18/02/2021
2020-21 PGA Tour Schedule
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By Athlon Sports, 2/15/21, 1:00 PM EST
A look at the season ahead in golf
After having its 2020 calendar impacted in a major way by the coronavirus pandemic, the PGA Tour is planning on a full 2020-21 schedule jam-packed with tournaments and signature events — in all, 50 official FedExCup tournaments, including six major championships.
More than a dozen tournaments that were postponed or canceled since the middle of March are part of the super-sized 2020-21 schedule, the most in a season since 1975 (51). This also means six majors will be played in a span of 10 months, as the U.S. Open and Masters were held in September and November, respectively, and are slated to return to their traditional spots on the calendar in 2021. The PGA Tour will take a break in late July for the postponed men's Olympic golf competition at the Summer Olympics in Tokyo.
The 2020-21 schedule, which PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan has dubbed a "super season," officially began with the Safeway Open in Napa, California, on Sept. 10-13 and will culminate with the TOUR Championship, the final event of the FedEx Cup playoffs, in Atlanta on Labor Day weekend (Sept. 2-5).
The 2021 majors themselves will signal a return to normalcy for the PGA Tour with the Masters scheduled for April 8-11 at Augusta National Golf Club, followed by the PGA Championship at The Ocean Course at Kiawah Island Golf Resort in Kiawah Island, South Carolina, from May 20-23. The U.S. Open returns to Torrey Pines in San Diego (June 17-20), with the British Open, which was canceled this year, slated to return in 2021 at Royal St. George's in Southern England (Sandwich, Kent) from July 15-18.
And even though it's an odd-numbered year, the upcoming season also will include the Ryder Cup. Originally scheduled for Sept. 25-27, 2020, at Whistling Straits in Kohler, Wisconsin, it was moved to Sept. 24-26, 2021. Likewise, the Presidents Cup, originally scheduled for Sept. 30-Oct. 3, 2021 at Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, North Carolina, will be moved to Sept. 22-25, 2022. The next Ryder Cup, scheduled for 2022 in Rome, will be pushed back a year as well. 2020-21 PGA Tour Schedule
Home / Golf / 2020-21 PGA Tour Schedule
By Athlon Sports, 2/15/21, 1:00 PM EST
A look at the season ahead in golf
After having its 2020 calendar impacted in a major way by the coronavirus pandemic, the PGA Tour is planning on a full 2020-21 schedule jam-packed with tournaments and signature events — in all, 50 official FedExCup tournaments, including six major championships.
More than a dozen tournaments that were postponed or canceled since the middle of March are part of the super-sized 2020-21 schedule, the most in a season since 1975 (51). This also means six majors will be played in a span of 10 months, as the U.S. Open and Masters were held in September and November, respectively, and are slated to return to their traditional spots on the calendar in 2021. The PGA Tour will take a break in late July for the postponed men's Olympic golf competition at the Summer Olympics in Tokyo.
The 2020-21 schedule, which PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan has dubbed a "super season," officially began with the Safeway Open in Napa, California, on Sept. 10-13 and will culminate with the TOUR Championship, the final event of the FedEx Cup playoffs, in Atlanta on Labor Day weekend (Sept. 2-5).
The 2021 majors themselves will signal a return to normalcy for the PGA Tour with the Masters scheduled for April 8-11 at Augusta National Golf Club, followed by the PGA Championship at The Ocean Course at Kiawah Island Golf Resort in Kiawah Island, South Carolina, from May 20-23. The U.S. Open returns to Torrey Pines in San Diego (June 17-20), with the British Open, which was canceled this year, slated to return in 2021 at Royal St. George's in Southern England (Sandwich, Kent) from July 15-18.
And even though it's an odd-numbered year, the upcoming season also will include the Ryder Cup. Originally scheduled for Sept. 25-27, 2020, at Whistling Straits in Kohler, Wisconsin, it was moved to Sept. 24-26, 2021. Likewise, the Presidents Cup, originally scheduled for Sept. 30-Oct. 3, 2021 at Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, North Carolina, will be moved to Sept. 22-25, 2022. The next Ryder Cup, scheduled for 2022 in Rome, will be pushed back a year as well.