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In what may be considered a further blow to the dwindling opportunities of rank-and-file PGA Tour players, the Masters has eliminated automatic invitations to the winners of the tour’s seven fall series events. In their place, the tournament will extend invitations to the winners of six select national open championships across several international tours.
“The Masters Tournament has long recognized the significance of having international representation among its invitees,” Fred Ridley, chairman of Augusta National Golf Club and the Masters, said in a news release issued jointly with the R&A on Tuesday regarding aligning aspects of the qualification criteria for the Masters and the Open Championship.
“We, along with the R&A, have a shared commitment to the global game and are proud to work together. Today’s announcement strengthens our organizations’ collective vision of rewarding top talent around the world who rise to the top of historic national open championships. We hope this formal recognition shines a bright light on these players and the events they will represent at the Masters and the Open, beginning next year.”
Starting with the 2026 Masters, current winners of the Australian, South African, Scottish, Spanish, Japan and Hong Kong Opens will receive automatic invitations to both the Masters and Open Championship. The winner of the Genesis Scottish Open already receives both Masters and Open invitations as a co-sanctioned PGA Tour and Open Qualifying Series event, so 2025 winner Chris Gotterup had a place in the 2026 Masters field even before Tuesday’s announcement.
To make room for these national open champions at Augusta National in April – the Masters prefers to keep its field size below 100 players – the tournament amended its qualification criteria, specifically qualification No. 17, to invite only individual winners of PGA Tour events that award a full FedEx Cup point allocation applied to the season-ending Tour Championship. That means the winners of the seven remaining tour events this fall from the Procore Championship in Napa, California (Sept. 11-14) to the RSM Classic at Sea Island in Georgia (Nov. 20-23) will no longer be extended Masters invitations.
All eight winners of the 2024 PGA Tour’s fall series tournaments were invited to the 2025 Masters for winning those events, including five first-time Masters participants – Rafael Campos, Nico Echavarria, Matt McCarty, Maverick McNealy and Kevin Yu. Puerto Rico’s Campos, Colombia’s Echavarria and Taiwan’s Yu qualified exclusively on the back of those fall victories. Fall winners McCarty, McNealy, J.T. Poston and Echavarria each made the Masters cut in April.
The R&A has used the Open Qualifying Series since 2013 to offer players entry into the Open via prestigious tour events across the world. Beginning later this year players can qualify for the 2026 Open at Royal Birkdale through 15 events in 13 countries. The schedule for the Open Qualifying Series and the list of exemptions for the 154th Open will be announced in September.
“We take great pride in the range of qualification routes we offer to players around the world through the Open Qualifying Series,” said Mark Darbon, CEO of the R&A, in the joint release. “We share the same goal as Augusta National to offer places in both the Open and the Masters to players competing in national opens and by doing so to help to showcase and strengthen our sport in those regions. This creates an outstanding opportunity for players in all parts of the world to qualify and we firmly believe this will continue to enrich the quality of the fields in both major championships.”
While the reach to boost international events – most of which are older than the Masters itself – makes sense, the cost for PGA Tour players is another stinging example of contracting opportunities.
While the Masters has not created any direct qualifying criteria for LIV Golf, the selected international opens offer pathways to LIV players who compete in them. Four of the last five Australian Open winners going back to 2018 are current LIV golfers, including Joaquin Niemann, whose Aussie Open win in 2023 was cited for the Masters offering him a special international invitation to the 2024 tournament. Three of the last seven South African Open winners since 2018 are also LIV golfers: Dean Burmester, Louis Oosthuizen and Branden Grace. Jon Rahm, the 2023 Masters champion, has won three recent Spanish Opens while Patrick Reed, the 2018 winner at Augusta, won the 2024 Hong Kong Open.
The five national opens outside the Scottish receiving Masters invitations are coming up from October through December. Each of them has a long history – South African dating to 1903, Australian to 1904, Spanish to 1912, Japan to 1927 and Hong Kong to 1959. Had the criteria been in place last year, the Masters would have welcomed four new participants – Ryggs Johnston (Australia), Dylan Naidoo (South Africa), Ángel Hidalgo (Spain) and Shugo Imahira (Japan).
It is a curious choice from DP World Tour options to double tap the already invited winner from the Scottish Open, which dates to 1972, instead of elevating more historic European circuit events like the French (1906) or Irish (1927) opens. The only continent not represented in the national open invitations is South America, where the Argentine Open dates to 1905 with a roster of winners that boasts four Masters (including Ángel Cabrera) and 11 major champions.
While the reach to boost international events – most of which are older than the Masters itself – makes sense, the cost for PGA Tour players is another stinging example of contracting opportunities. The PGA Tour has already reduced the number of tour cards from 125 to 100 as well as field sizes across the board starting in 2026. Last week, the tour announced a ninth signature event that takes one more full-field playing opportunity away from competitors who aren’t in that top tier. And there are rumblings that the schedule might be reduced further when the future competition committee created by new tour CEO Brian Rolapp eventually offers its recommendations for changes down the road.
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