ORLANDO, Fla. — The PGA Tour University “Accelerated” program for underclassmen was appropriately named because two players made up a lot of ground in a short period of time.
The difference is the way Luke Clanton and Jackson Koivun accumulated their points.
What You Need To Know
- The Arnold Palmer Invitational in Orlando will start Thursday at Bay Hill Club & Lodge
- Auburn's Jackson Koivun will play in the event on a sponsor exemption
- Jordan Spieth's request for a sponsor exemption was denied so he won't be playing this week
- See a list of the field for the Arnold Palmer Invitational below
Clanton, a junior at Florida State, hit the 20-point mark to earn a PGA Tour card in just over nine months. It started with him qualifying for the U.S. Open last June and then making the cut.
Clanton earned 14 of his 20 points through his performance in PGA Tour-sanctioned events. He made the cut in nine of 12 tournaments, had four top 10s and twice was runner-up, at the John Deere Classic and the RSM Classic.
The other six points came from reaching No. 1 in the world amateur ranking (5 points) and staying No. 1 for at least 26 weeks (1 point).
Koivun, a sophomore at Auburn, is playing in the Arnold Palmer Invitational this week on a sponsor exemption. He has 18 points, meaning he can secure a PGA Tour card by finishing in the top 10. Making the cut would put him at 19 points.
Koivun won twice (including the SEC Championship) and was five times a runner-up (including the NCAA Championship). He won the three versions of college player of the year with the Haskins Award, Hogan Award and Nicklaus Award. Each of those awards were worth three points, even though all of them are based on a vote from various committees.
That adds to 11 points for Koivun.
He also earned one point for being selected to play in the Palmer Cup, and he received four points for being No. 2 in the world amateur ranking. He played only three PGA Tour events, making the cut at the Memorial (52nd) and Farmers Insurance Open (tie for 56th).
The PGA Tour has tweaked the requirement, such as adding an additional point for a top 10 on the PGA Tour and a top 20 in a major. But it has not recommended changes to criteria that give three points for winning what amounts to the same award.
Imagine if Alabama football received credit for an additional national title in the four years (before title games were created) they finished No. 1 in the AP and the coaches poll.
The Haskins Award is the oldest, dating to 1971, and is a vote of college players, coaches and media. The Nicklaus Award dates to 1988, and the winner is picked by the Golf Coaches Association of America. The Hogan Award began in 1990 and includes all tournaments for a college player. It is determined by a selection committee that includes past winners.
Koivun became the eighth player to sweep all three awards, most recently done in 2023 by Ludvig Aberg.
Spieth’s week off
One reason Jordan Spieth was a late entry into the Cognizant Classic was awaiting word from the Arnold Palmer Invitational on his request for a sponsor exemption so he could make travel and scheduling plans.
The answer was not this year, a perplexing decision given Spieth is a three-time major champion, moves the needle whenever he gets on the fringe of contention and is coming off surgery last August for a left wrist that has ailed him since May 2023.
Exemptions are a touchy subject — “play better” applies to everyone — and there has been some chatter about exemptions to the $20 million signature events going to the same players, such as Adam Scott and Justin Thomas last year.
In terms of drawing interest, it was a peculiar omission. But that’s the tournament’s choice. In terms of Spieth, he will have The Players Championship and the Valspar Championship, where he first secured a PGA Tour card in 2013 and won in 2015 on his way to a Masters title.
Spieth left the Cognizant Classic with a subtle dig.
“I’m bummed not to be there next week,” he said. “It’s been a great, great place for me, and I really wish I was getting that start, but I needed to play better injured golf last year, I guess.”
Field for 2025 Arnold Palmer Invitational
Top 50 on prior year's FedExCup Points List
- Scheffler, Scottie
- Schauffele, Xander
- Morikawa, Collin
- Theegala, Sahith
- Henley, Russell
- Scott, Adam
- Im, Sungjae
- Clark, Wyndham
- McIlroy, Rory
- Matsuyama, Hideki
- Lowry, Shane
- Burns, Sam
- Hovland, Viktor
- Thomas, Justin
- Pendrith, Taylor
- Åberg, Ludvig
- Cantlay, Patrick
- MacIntyre, Robert
- Pavon, Matthieu
- Fleetwood, Tommy
- Bradley, Keegan
- An, Byeong Hun
- Horschel, Billy
- Finau, Tony
- Rai, Aaron
- Bhatia, Akshay
- Kirk, Chris
- Straka, Sepp
- Bezuidenhout, Christiaan
- Hoge, Tom
- Harman, Brian
- Kim, Si Woo
- Day, Jason
- Thompson, Davis
- McCarthy, Denny
- Davis, Cam
- Zalatoris, Will
- Conners, Corey
- Fitzpatrick, Matt
- Poston, J.T.
- Detry, Thomas
- Jaeger, Stephan
- Young, Cameron
- Eckroat, Austin
- Homa, Max
- Hadwin, Adam
- Greyserman, Max
- Dunlap, Nick
- Cole, Eric
Aon Next 10 (through Cognizant Classic)
- Nick Taylor
- Maverick McNealy
- Harris English
- Joe Highsmith
- J.J. Spaun
- Brian Campbell
- Michael Kim
- Patrick Rodgers
- Daniel Berger
- Sam Stevens
Aon Swing 5 (through Cognizant Classic)
- Aldrich Potgieter
- Jacob Bridgeman
- Ben Griffin
- Isaiah Salinda
- Max McGreevy
Sponsor exemptions — Members not otherwise exempt
- Campos, Rafael
- Hughes, Mackenzie
- Lee, Min Woo
- Rose, Justin
Sponsor exemption — Palmer Cup Award winner
- Koivun, Jackson
Top 30 in the Official World Golf Ranking
- Kim, Tom
Current FedExCup Points List
- Novak, Andrew
- Glover, Lucas