This professional understands the PGA Tour best. He may surprise you

Next week, the future direction of the PGA Tour (which has been whispered about for months at the driving range) will finally be made public as its new CEO, Brian Rolapp, addresses the media, tour staff and the world live at the Players Championship.
Can you wait a few more days?
Yes, you can. Mainly because you’ve been waiting a long time now, with set events, high events, signature events. But also because the Future Competition Committee has been meeting. And meeting. And meeting. For more than six months they have been grinding models – and not in easy terms – to solve everything. Patience was important for everyone.
Meanwhile, golf fans who really care about these things — those who tune in to ESPN+ to catch a round earlier than to yell “Wake Up” in the morning — got an amazing window into the truth about The next one On Wednesday this Wednesday. All from Joel Dahmen.
You remember Joel, the self-absorbed media darling who starred in the first two seasons of ‘Full Swing’ just because … he was. While the likes of Tiger Woods, Adam Scott and Patrick Cantlay are deciding the future of the Tour, guys like Dahmen are just trying to be a part of it. For the first time in nearly a decade, Dahmen holds just “conditional status” as a member of the Tour this season. His 2025 was not good enough, leaving his 2026 plan up in the air. Anyone looking for a streamlined, compact, low-maintenance and highly competitive travel model can say, “Sorry Joel — that’s one of our principles. Play better.“
The biggest difference between Joel and many others in his performance bracket is that he probably agrees. Dahmen showed an understanding that the Tour is shaping his entire career, but he is well aware that, right now, “there are certain voices in the game of golf, and I’m not one of them.” It was six years ago now that he explained to GOLF.com the theory of the PGA Tour and the PGB Tour, where the past consists of a lovely life, for sure, just one clear under the popular tee times, big events with the highest purses, sponsor exemptions, flying in private, flying your family in private, maybe even flying your dog in private.
“I’m looking forward to coming back and seeing some of my old friends that I haven’t seen in a few years,” said Dahmen coming off the Arnold Palmer Invitational, where his intensity earned him a spot in the field. “It’s nice to be with the big kids this week.”
Dahmen explained that 2026 is the first time in a long time that he faces a schedule full of “unknowns.” Every beginning he makes has become a big start. He had to behave himself, he said, in these first few months of the year – the urgency was that he didn’t have to be nine years ago when he had a full-time position. This year, Dahmen had to wait patiently to be called up to the field at Torrey Pines and PGA National (where he finished in the top ten at each event), all as a result of that one bad season. He finished last fall ranked 122nd in the rankings. The future PGA Tour will not be kind to No. 122.
Twenty-two will certainly fall on the side of the PGB Tour, in a mixed program with a narrow margin in between. It would be easy for Dahmen to hate that, knowing he could be locked in some of the biggest events and biggest prize money in sports, at least for a full season. But he sees what most people like him can’t: shrinking the PGA Tour should strengthen whatever lives under it.
“I jokingly call it the PGA Tour and the PGB Tour for a few years,” he said. “But I think the bags should be raised for Korn Ferry as it is, and if you want to do eight, 10, 12 of those events where the top guys from the Korn Ferry Tour come and play.
“I’m not smart enough about how the points work for both, but if you graduate from the Korn Ferry Tour and you get to play in this, you call them the top events of the Korn Ferry Tour, their points still count towards the Korn Ferry Tour, that kind of thing. And then you still have the opportunity for guys who finished outside the top 125 last year, and you add a 7’50 that you’ll never get. You’ll have a lot of young talent to showcase and if you want to bring in guys from on the DP World Tour I think it makes sense to fill a field of 125 guys which would be great.
You’d have to be a special kind of golfer to understand how players will set their course on this sensational tour, but Dahmen is no slouch. These are ideas that circulate not only on golf driving ranges but in boardrooms, too. If the PGA Tour can invest and create a strong, second division, where players know exactly where they are on Jan. 1, even those who are not allowed to play next to Scottie Scheffler will eliminate at least one “unknown” in their program. They will have a very clear promotional plan and if good golf is followed, PGA Tour fortunes are expected with more certainty than the “what tour should I play” limbo Dahmen has been in this season.
One of the last questions of his press conference hinged on that idea of limbo. Dahmen was impaled in the fall. How willing was he to grind and fight back? A few minutes before he answered, you could see the familiarity on his face. He had thought about it.
“I asked myself that question in December a little bit,” began Dahmen, “even when I go back again, I have to play some events on the Korn Ferry Tour no matter what. To be honest, I don’t know if I’m doing it. The road is very difficult. You see some guys come down and come back … We’re really spoiled here on the Tour. We can play court games for the best money. Back off and swallow your pride and going to these small towns and small bags can be difficult and, and I’m thankful that my family is walking slowly with me.
Many of his fans hope that he is not eligible either. But if he does, the people trying to sell a more profitable, attractive product at the top of professional golf – the Tour recently revived the tag line ‘Where the Best Belong’ – will tell him. that’s part of the deal.
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