PGA Tour Latinoamérica

PGA Tour Latinoamérica
Current season, competition or edition:
Current sports event 2016 PGA Tour Latinoamérica
Formerly Tour de las Américas
Sport Golf
Founded 2012
Founder PGA Tour
Countries Based in Latin America
Most titles Julián Etulain, Tommy Cocha,
Fabián Gómez, Rodolfo Cazaubón (3)
Official website PGA Tour Latinoamérica

The PGA Tour Latinoamérica is a third level professional golf tour formed in 2012 and operated by the PGA Tour. It was formed in concert with the now defunct Tour de las Américas.[1] Executives from the Tour de las Américas became employees of the new tour.[2] The initial 2012 season runs from September to December and consists of 11 tournaments in seven Latin American countries.[3] Subsequent years' schedules will run in two swings, March to May (Southern Hemisphere autumn) and October to December (spring).[3]

The PGA Tour Latinoamérica is one of a number of lower-tier tours that factor into the Official World Golf Ranking, awarding a minimum of six points to the winner and points to the top six plus ties. The top five in the tour's Order of Merit earn status on the Web.com Tour, with the money leader being fully exempt. The Order of Merit Winner also receives the Roberto de Vicenzo Award, named after one of the first golf stars to come out of Latin America. Players finishing 6th-50th retain privileges on the PGA Tour Latinoamérica, but can also advance to the Web.com Tour's qualifying school depending on position. Those 2nd-5th can also improve their status at Web.com Tour Q School, gaining entry into the final stage.

The fields will consist of a maximum 144 players, with the top fifty plus ties making the cut.

History

2012 season

The 2012 season was the inaugural season of the tour and ran a series of 11 tournaments from September to December. Colombian Jesus Rivas teed the first shot on the new tour.[4] The Order of Merit winner for the season was Ariel Cañete and the five players to graduate to the Web.com Tour based on their Order of Merit positions were Cañete, Oscar Fraustro, Clodomiro Carranza, Matías O'Curry, and Tommy Cocha.

2013 season

The 2013 season was the first full season of play on the tour with an increased schedule of 14 tournaments running in 2 distinct swings with events played from March to May and October to December. Under the new format the number of tournaments was increased. In April 2013, the NEC Corporation became the sponsor of the PGA Tour Latinoamérica and the tour was renamed NEC Series - PGA Tour Latinoamérica.[5] The Order of Merit winner for the season was Ryan Blaum and the five players to graduate to the Web.com Tour based on their Order of Merit positions were Blaum, José de Jesús Rodríguez, Timothy O'Neal, Jorge Fernández-Valdés, and Manuel Villegas.

2014 season

The 2014 season continued to be played in the 2 swing format as in 2013 but was extended to a total of 18 tournaments for the season. A notable addition to the schedule was the Bridgestone America's Golf Cup, a new unofficial money event on the tour; the event has the highest purse of any event on the tour at $600,000. Initially it was confirmed that Tiger Woods and Matt Kuchar would play in the team event; however, following Woods's injuries in 2014, they did not compete.[6] The Order of Merit winner for the season was Julián Etulain and the five players to graduate to the Web.com Tour based on their Order of Merit positions were Etulain, Marcelo Rozo, Tyler McCumber, Brad Hopfinger, and Jorge Fernández-Valdés.

2015 season

The 2015 season had one more event than the 2014 season, with one event dropped from the schedule, the TransAmerican Power Products CRV Open, and two added: the Honduras Open and the PGA Tour Latinoamérica Tour Championship.[7][8] Rodolfo Cazaubón led the Order of Merit to earn a Web.com Tour card. Also exempt are Kent Bulle, Rafael Campos, Alexandre Rocha, and Tommy Cocha.

Developmental Series

In 2013, the tour organized other events from the region into a Developmental Series. The top five finishers from each event qualify for the Dev Series Final, and the top fifteen finishers at the Final earn status on PGA Tour Latinoamérica for the following year. Events on the Dev Series include the Abierto del Sur, Abierto Norpatagónico, Abierto del Litoral, and Abierto de Venezuela.[9]

Order of Merit winners

YearWinnerCountryEarnings (US$)
2015 Rodolfo Cazaubón  Mexico 129,203
2014 Julián Etulain  Argentina 92,394
2013 Ryan Blaum  United States 99,135
2012 Ariel Cañete  Argentina 91,396

Notes and references

External links

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