The PGA Tour has reignited debate over whether the Players Championship should be recognized as golf's fifth major through a new promotional video featuring the tagline 'March is going to be major.' The video highlights dramatic moments from past tournaments at TPC Sawgrass and underscores the event's prestige amid the Tour's push for greater influence. Defending champion Rory McIlroy enters the 2026 edition as a two-time winner.
The PGA Tour released a provocative promotional video for the 2026 Players Championship on Thursday during coverage of the WM Phoenix Open. The ad opens with an upside-down reflection of J.J. Spaun, referencing his dramatic 2025 finish in the lake at the 17th hole, followed by Sepp Straka staring at the iconic island green. It then showcases recent champions: Scottie Scheffler (2023 and 2024), Rory McIlroy (2019), and Justin Thomas (2021), with moody, desaturated shots building tension. Underwater scenes transition to the stadium-like 17th hole, featuring moments like Corey Conners, Tony Finau, Collin Morikawa in anguish, Shane Lowry's hole-in-one, Brooks Koepka's grin, Ryan Moore's leap, and Tiger Woods' fist-pump. The video ends with the tagline 'MARCH IS GOING TO BE MAJOR,' subtly positioning the event alongside golf's four established majors.
In response to inquiries, the PGA Tour stated: “Fans and players have long discussed THE PLAYERS Championship’s status as a major. We understand that is not for us to decide. Ultimately it is up to our sport and its fans to recognize what the professionals who play the game already know.” This comes under new CEO Brian Rolapp, who began in mid-2025 and has pursued aggressive strategies, including recruiting players from LIV Golf and reimagining the schedule with input from Tiger Woods and Theo Epstein.
The Players Championship, held annually since 1974 at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, features a $25 million purse—the largest in golf—with $4.5 million for the winner. The field includes the top 50 world-ranked players, top 125 from the prior FedEx Cup, and recent PGA Tour winners, drawing up to 100,000 attendees. Past victors include Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy, and Scottie Scheffler. Six-time major winner Lee Trevino, the 1980 champion, has advocated for its elevation, saying last year on Golf Channel: “there’s no question in my mind” it should be the fifth major, citing its “absolutely unbelievable” viewing.
While the tournament is the PGA Tour's flagship event, it lacks LIV Golf participants, unlike the majors, which serve as neutral grounds. The debate persists because no single body defines majors; they are the Masters, U.S. Open, Open Championship, and PGA Championship, agreed upon by tradition and consensus among players and media. The Tour owns no majors, a point of contention for investors like Strategic Sports Group, who injected $3 billion in 2024. The 2026 Players is scheduled for March 12-15, with McIlroy defending after his 2025 playoff win over Spaun.