RIP To The PGA Tour’s Hawaiian Swing
News

RIP To The PGA Tour’s Hawaiian Swing

Support our Mission. We independently test each product we recommend. When you buy through our links, we may earn a commission.

RIP To The PGA Tour’s Hawaiian Swing

The PGA Tour confirmed this week that the Sentry Tournament of Champions and Sony Open would not be a part of the schedule moving forward.

I have conflicting thoughts about the Tour officially eliminating its two Hawaiian Swing events that have traditionally kicked off the Tour’s calendar year.

On one hand, the move is understandable and justified.

The Tour’s schedule has been bloated for ages, and this is a move toward the scarcity that new CEO Brian Rolapp recently espoused in his state of the union press conference last month.

PGA Tour CEO Brian Rolapp has publicly campaigned for not only a more cohesive schedule but a more energized start to the season. Instead of seeing sleepy Hawaii in January, we’re probably going to see the Tour start the year at Torrey Pines, the WM Phoenix Open or another event that has more buzz.

It’s been a forgone conclusion that these events were not going to survive the Tour’s newly constructed, more limited schedule. The Tour wanted to start later and cutting two smaller early-January events in a remote location was probably one of their easier decisions.

I tend to agree with this assessment. There is way too much Tour golf that means almost nothing to casual fans and that’s ultimately not helpful for your overall product. You want to rally the golf world—and the sports world—around the events you do have. Ratings and in-person attendance for the Hawaiian events have always been limited.

Some tournaments have to be cut or reimagined. The Hawaii events got clipped (although the Sony Open might be reimagined as a PGA Tour Champions event, a small consolation).

Having said that, I will deeply miss these tournaments

Put all Tour scheduling preferences aside for a moment.

I am very sad these Hawaiian events are going away.

There was something therapeutic and grounding about watching the Sentry Tournament of Champions at Kapalua. While many of us were stuck in frigid winter temperatures, the allure of watching golfers in paradise was strong for those golf-obsessed sickos among us.

Was Kapalua hard for the pros? Not particularly. It’s a resort course where the winner shoots something silly like 30-under.

Was Kapalua interesting for the pros? Absolutely.

Beyond the gorgeous and calming images of humpback whales splashing off the Maui coast, Kapalua offered uneven lies, interesting shots and fun elements brought on by the ever-present winds. It had an identity which is more than you can say for some other Tour events that are still in existence.

It was easily a top-10 golf watch on the year for me each season.

As for the Sony Open, I will lament the loss of Waialae, a classic Seth Raynor design that frustrated and challenged players despite being fairly short without many obvious hazards.

The defense of the course is interesting angles and tricky green complexes, much better than thick rough. Waialae always felt old-school and timeless, like a tournament stuck in 1995. I mean that in the best way possible.

And for both of these tournaments, getting to watch late into the night on the east coast was phenomenal viewing. Dark and dreary winter nights were lit up by sunny views on our TV screens.

This is a massive bummer but a necessary move

I really wish we could have kept these two events on the calendar. I feel terrible for Mark Rolfing and everyone in Hawaii who has poured so much heart into these tournaments for decades.

But if you were starting the Tour schedule over from scratch with no previous context of past schedules, you wouldn’t say, “Hey, we should get everyone’s juices flowing with two events in Hawaii.” You would go to a place with crowd support. A place that feels big.

The season starting should be an event for golf fans. It should feel elevated.

Baseball rallies around opening day. Why can’t golf?

The answer in the past is that there are way too many tournaments. Golf is always on and there is no off-season so it’s hard to get everyone excited about each event.

The future schedule is showing more restraint. It will be more selective. Fewer events and a more defined window of time where fans should care about pro golf.

And there is a good chance LIV won’t exist by 2027 so there could be even more oxygen available for golf fans to gather around for the PGA Tour.

In summary, it stinks that the Hawaii events are gone. I will truly miss them.

But, it’s probably time for the Tour schedule to look and feel much different.

What are your thoughts? Let me know in the comments.

Top Photo Caption: The 18th hole at Kapalua. (GETTY IMAGES/Ben Jared)

For You

For You

Best Active Players Without A Major Best Active Players Without A Major
News
Jun 24, 2026
The 10 Best Active Players Without A Major
Instruction
Jun 24, 2026
5 Golf Habits That Feel Productive But Don’t Lower Scores
Instruction
Jun 24, 2026
3 Drills To Help You Control The Clubface Through Impact
Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean is a longtime golf journalist and underachieving 10 handicap who enjoys the game in all forms. If he didn't have an official career writing about golf, Sean would spend most of his free time writing about it anyway. When he isn't playing golf, you can find Sean watching his beloved Florida Panthers hockey team, traveling to a national park or listening to music on his record player. He lives in Nashville with his wife, Anja, and dog, Hogan.

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

 
Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm





    This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

      Clerveus aravna

      2 months ago

      Good

      Reply

      PCC

      2 months ago

      Get rid of the BORING Team thing in N’awlins. I’m watching (turning it off) now. Granted CBS’ tower of babble broadcast team only makes worse

      Reply

      Terry Sindt

      2 months ago

      This new CEO is nuts! This is not the NFL where you can’t wait for Sunday. Some of us like to see golf on a regular basis not just 7 months of the year. The limited field events are not good for the tour. There are so many good players that we don’t get to see due to the restrictive fields. Most of the majors are full field events except for The Masters. Why not have more full field events with only a few limited field events. It is nice when an underdog comes out of nowhere and wins a tourney.

      Reply

      Rich Douglas

      2 months ago

      Agree completely. Many players not eligible for the ToC skipped this trip each year.

      I’d like to see the ToC go to a different, stateside, venue. Perhaps replace the now-boring pro-am at Pebble. Still use the rota, but the entire field on the same course, rotating courses each day.

      Reply

      Fake

      2 months ago

      It’s a shame to lose that beautiful scenery. And I do feel bad for the people there who rely on the revenue that tournaments bring in. That stuff just doesn’t fall out of the sky.

      Reply

      Garrett D

      2 months ago

      Aside from the Majors and the Ryder/Presidents Cups, the ONLY part of the PGA Tour schedule I looked forward to every year was the West Coast Swing. This is getting massacred before my eyes.

      I think a better way to “avoid” coming into contact with football would have been to make tournaments before the Super Bowl Tuesday-Friday. Why is Thursday-Sunday so sacred?

      I am lucky enough to live in Hawai’i now, but I lived most of my life in cold weather spots. There was absolutely nothing cooler than watching the whales and seeing the lush vegetation when it there was a blanket of white outside my window. It reminded me that the cold was temporary and that better days were coming.

      I wish the PGA Tour would have kept at least one of these events. And bring the Pro Bowl back here once we have a new stadium while I’m ranting!!

      Reply

      Tom Sampson

      2 months ago

      Let me get this straight. The PGA Tour wants to lower the number of Tour events each year. This will give members more time for person space and activities (family). The PGA has recently created to bonus program to enhance members earnings. The money at each PGA event seems to have been kicked up over the last couple of years by a fair amount. Seems to me like Greg Norman and the LIV golfers got the PGA to do what they were asking for. Fewer events (more time for family), better sharing of revenue, and larger event purses.

      Seems like a lot of wasted time and friendships ended to get to the place that seemed obvious to an outsider of the PGA business.

      T

      Reply

      Mike in Pittsburgh

      2 months ago

      While I can see how reducing the tour schedule makes sense, I am not overwhelmed by the number of tour events in January. It is exactly what I need when the weather is going to blazes, no, California is not the same thing. I think this is a mistake that sends the wrong message. For tour players in the lower tier, worrying about keeping their cards, this was an opportunity to make a fast start to their season. Travel costs might have been a problem, but that can be overcome. I suspect the Hawaiian tourism industry would have been happy to charter a jet for the players rather than lose the event. Trying to put all the events near major cities is just stupid; the events make their money with attendance, but the tour makes its money from television revenue.

      Reply

      CB

      2 months ago

      Not only was Kapalua my favorite event, the location is beautiful and seems to be family favorite for pros and their families. Also couldn’t happen at a worst time for that island who offered up their hospitality for years only to be dumped and lose massive revenue in the aftermath of disasters that devastated the area. Talk about getting kicked while you’re down. And I lose interest in the tour once it leaves the west to all those courses that nobody can get on. Hawaii and west coast swing are the most egalitarian events. I don’t care if pros shoot ridiculous scores when it’s on a course I can play and appreciate how good these pros are. I don’t know enough billionaires to get on Augusta.

      Reply

      Greg

      2 months ago

      Imagine having a job that gives you the opportunity to go to Hawaii in January, and saying no, I’d rather not. Incredible. I will miss watching both tournaments on TV, especially Kapalua with its incomparable vistas.

      Reply

      Golfmiburk07

      2 months ago

      I am fine with being in the minority here, but just like MLB the PGA Tour season is way, way, way too long. I don’t need your events for 10-11 months of the year. And top players don’t want to play more than 16-18 weeks anyway. The Masters is the start of things if we’re all being honest, so the official tour season would be best served to start first week of March to give guys a few weeks prior to Augusta, obviously if there are other global events they can do that with other tours. But then you run events through August with Championship. It’s time for the tour to significantly cut back on lower tier events as well, we don’t need opposite field events either, it just dilutes the product. With condensing the schedule, guys will commit to more events and then there is more time for fun content creation like YouTube that more tour players are participating in. Still waiting for the Rahm and Homa show to start.

      Reply

      James Lipstate

      2 months ago

      Nothing beat the post-holiday winter blues than to watch Kapalua and the brilliant blue Pacific in primetime from the cozy comfort of my den. Always a highlight in the year. Of all sporting events golf is a product of place, history and personalities. The new commissioner is just wrong thinking golf must be played and broadcast from primarily big cities and traditional parland courses. Just the opposite. Golf has always been a pastoral sport and pastime. Bring to my living room interesting vistas and captivating courses. What a lost opportunity to kick off the season for winter wearied golfers longing for their opportunity to get out and play. Time to rethink PGA tour.

      Reply

      WYBob

      2 months ago

      Having played Kapalua, I will miss seeing the tournament, the scenery, and the golf course. Living in the Rocky Mountain West, the Sentry TOC allowed me to relive playing on Maui and not falling prey to Cabin Fever (or shooting “six holes in my freezer” (IYKYK)) during the sometime brutal winters we get. More than tournament saturation, the tour lacks imagination. Currently the tournaments are primarily “wash, rinse, repeat.” Maybe the PGA Tour could schedule it as match play as part of the Fall Season. Watching match play on Kapalua could be pretty compelling. That plus the pros might like a sojourn to paradise with their families before the holidays in lieu of traveling to Japan or two tournaments in Mexico. Just a chip shot from the fringe.

      Reply

      DG

      2 months ago

      The everyday golfer despises the PGA for this miscalculation. We attended this year’s event and it was a well run, fun, and heavily supported by volunteers / sponsors/ and fans. What a slap in the face to the state of Hawaii and everyone who made this magic happen for decades. We were there as fans for you players…where are you for us?

      Reply

      Nick

      2 months ago

      Could go either way. For me I hope to see reduced costs and easier travel when I go there during those times. Last year there wasn’t one car available to rent.

      Reply

      Kevin C

      2 months ago

      From a financial aspect I can certainly understand it but as a golf fan I really hate it. I don’t watch a ton of golf outside of the majors but I always loved the first tournaments of the year. I couldn’t wait to finally see golf again and, maybe because I’m a New Englander, I loved that it was in Hawaii. I know California is warm and sunny in the winter too but there are always tournaments there and it’s not Hawaii. I know the Tour doesn’t need Hawaii and Hawaii probably doesn’t need the Tour but I want golf in the new year in Hawaii and I will miss it.

      Reply

      The Swami

      2 months ago

      very disappointing. if they’re worried about schedule excess, move Hawaii swing to a season opening date in Feb after the Super Bowl or something and start the bloated PGA season from there and cut 4 others from schedule. ideally the entire playoff system (which of course won’t happen, but that is what should happen instead of ditching Hawaii).

      even if they start with the WM in Arizona or somewhere in CA in Feb, that’s still dicey-at-best weather a month later anyway. and half the point of easier resort Kapalua is to begin the grind but on a likely gentler note. i very much doubt the pros love leaving Hawaii behind either. would love to know if they had a vote what they’d say about that.

      unless you want rusty-tournament-play players starting season inexplicably at the Masters, there is never going to be other-team-sport dramatic Season Opener excitement on the PGA Tour. it’s apples to oranges comparison. technically every game counts in team sports. not in solo professional golf. if you can voluntarily take weeks off your schedule for personal desire/needs like golf, then the schedule as a whole doesn’t matter.

      despite trying to shove this ill-conceived FedEx playoff system down our throat for years to make it seem like a professional team sports league, no one outside any players who are obviously collecting huge cash actually cares about trying to determine a faux season ending “champion”.

      if they were truly serious about fixing the schedule, cut the garbage FedEx playoff out, distribute those extra purses to the other 15-20ish tournaments on the schedule that aren’t majors.
      money allocated, crap locations and tournaments no one cares about at fake season-ending “title” (which no pro cares about either) removed, problem solved.

      Reply

      Badbadgolf

      2 months ago

      100%. Could care less about FedEx cup made garbage. Really enjoyed watching the Hawaiian scenery from Chicago in the middle of a dark winter. Makes you feel like spring isn’t that far away.
      Always loved the Stevens Point Sentry World cam to give a nice contrast to the pictures from Kapalua.
      Hopefully they will reconsider. I know deep down they won’t.

      Reply

      Mike

      2 months ago

      What was ‘wrong’ about seeing beautiful Hawaii courses in the middle of the Winter? The PGA isn’t suffering from too many events, it’s suffering from too little “personalities” among the players. Granted, the days of Tiger, Phil, Vijay are long gone, but now golf to me is, w/ the exception of Rory & Scottie, “a bunch of guys named Lou”. Guys, are built the same, swing the same, everyone is, for the most part, very friendly w/ each other (i.e. no rivalries). It’s a strange paradox…more folks are playing yet non-major viewership is down. I wish it were the other way around.

      Reply

      burke lake pro

      2 months ago

      This decision blows. Kapalua was one of my favorite events of the season, a brief beacon of sunlight in the depths of winter. Love the course, the views…January’s gonna be a little darker without the Hawaiian swing…

      Reply

    Leave A Reply

    required
    required
    required (your email address will not be published)

    This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

    Best Active Players Without A Major Best Active Players Without A Major
    News
    Jun 24, 2026
    The 10 Best Active Players Without A Major
    Instruction
    Jun 24, 2026
    5 Golf Habits That Feel Productive But Don’t Lower Scores
    Instruction
    Jun 24, 2026
    3 Drills To Help You Control The Clubface Through Impact