Photo by Ben Jared/PGA TOUR
Let playoff season begin for the PGA Tour! Up first is the FedEx St. Jude Championship, so here is the Top 70 who will compete.
The PGA Tour’s regular season is over, and there are three events left to decide the FedEx Cup winner.
Up first is the FedEx St. Jude Championship at TPC Southwind in Memphis, Tenn.
Now that Matt Kuchar has finished the Wyndham Championship, the Top 70 for this first playoff tournament is official.
Who made it, and who missed out on the postseason?
Let’s look at the official Top 70 on the FedEx Cup rankings.
The Final Top 70 in FedEx Cup Standings
70. Victor Perez
69. Emiliano Grillo
68. Jhonattan Vegas
67. Nick Dunlap
66. Seamus Power
65. Brendon Todd
64. Mark Hubbard
63. Jordan Spieth
62. Min Woo Lee
61. Peter Malnati
60. Taylor Moore
59. Maverick McNealy
58. Erik van Rooyen
57. Viktor Hovland
56. Ben Griffin
55. Justin Rose
54. Eric Cole
53. Patrick Rodgers
52. Nick Taylor
51. Harris English
50. Jake Knapp
49. Will Zalatoris
48. Mackenzie Hughes
47. Max Greyserman
46. Adam Scott
45. Denny McCarthy
44. Cam Davis
43. Tom Kim
42. Alex Noren
41. Austin Eckroat
40. Matt Fitzpatrick
39. Keegan Bradley
38. Si Woo Kim
37. Adam Hadwin
36. J.T. Poston
35. Max Homa
34. Thomas Detry
33. Stephan Jaeger
32. Tommy Fleetwood
31. Cameron Young
30. Corey Conners
29. Sam Burns
28. Chris Kirk
27. Taylor Pendrith
26. Jason Day
25. Aaron Rai
24. Davis Thompson
23. Billy Horschel
22. Christiaan Bezuidenhout
21. Tom Hoge
20. Brian Harman
19. Justin Thomas
18. Sepp Straka
17. Robert MacIntyre
16. Matthieu Pavon
15. Akshay Bhatia
14. Tony Finau
13. Russell Henley
12. Byeong Hun An
11. Patrick Cantlay
10. Shane Lowry
9. Sungjae Im
8. Hideki Matsuyama
7. Sahith Theegala
6. Ludvig Åberg
5. Wyndham Clark
4. Collin Morikawa
3. Rory McIlroy
2. Xander Schauffele
Scottie Scheffler
The Top 10 are known as the Comcast Business Tour Top 10. These players received bonuses for finishing inside the Top 10 on the Fed Ex Cup points.
Scottie Scheffler finished No. 1 with six wins and 14 top 10s. He received a bonus of $8 million. That moves his season-long earnings to $36,148,691.
The former Texas Longhorn continues to set the record for most money won in a single season.
Xander Schauffele came in at No. 2 with two victories and 12 Top 10s. He earns a $6 million bonus and is now up to $21,867,160 on the season.
Rory McIlroy is third with two wins and six Top 10s. He takes home a $4.8 million bonus. That check moves his season-long total to $15,153,190.
Collin Morikawa is No. 4 with no wins but seven Top 10 finishes. He gets a $4.4 million check, which will bring his total to $12,430,477 in 2024.
Wyndham Clark is coming in at No. 5 with one win and six Top 10s. He gets a $4 million bonus.
Ludvig Åberg is No. 6 with seven Top 10s and earned a $3.4 million bonus. Sahith Theegale is No. 7 with seven Top 10s and will take home an extra $2.8 million.
Hideki Matsuyama is No. 8 and received a $2.4 million bonus; Sungjae Im is No. 9, and his bonus is $2.2 million.
Rounding out the Top 10 is Shane Lowry. He has one win and six top 10s. His bonus is $2 million.
These bonuses do not account for the PIP (Player Impact Program) or how much money they could win in the FedEx Cup playoffs. The first two tournaments have a $20 million purse, while the Tour Championship winner will receive $25 million alone.
Savannah Leigh Richardson is a golf staff writer for SB Nation’s Playing Through. For more golf coverage, follow us @_PlayingThrough on all major social platforms. You can also follow her on Twitter @SportsGirlSL and Instagram @golf_girl_sl.