PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – Fans of match play rejoice: the head-to-head format may be returning to the PGA Tour before too long and it could be incorporated to add some spice to the FedEx Cup Playoffs.

“We are exploring ways to add even more drama to the postseason, including the potential integration of match play, creating win‑or‑go‑home moments as the season reaches its conclusion,” Rolapp said during his opening remarks to his State of the Tour press conference held on Wednesday at the Tour’s Global Home.

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Match play has a long history on the PGA Tour, and was the format used for the PGA Championship until 1958. It has been used at other times through the years, most recently beginning in 1999 with the formation of the World Golf Championships. The WGC Match Play moved from California to Arizona and finally Texas before it was dropped from the schedule in 2023.

Brian Rolapp, CEO of the PGA Tour, speaks to the media prior to the 2026 Players Championship at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida.

It is a beloved format at the Ryder Cup and U.S. Amateur and has been used to determine the NCAA men’s and women’s team champs, but it hasn’t been popular with TV partners because of the possibility of upsets leaving two lesser-known players battling it out in the finals and too few players on the course.

Crowning the Tour season with match play has long been bandied about as a compelling conclusion to the season. Golfweek, for one, has suggested starting the Tour Championship in its current stroke-play format on Wednesday with the winner of the Tour Championship crowned Saturday. Then, send out the top four finishers for match play on Sunday — semis in the morning with the two winners advancing to duke it out for the FedEx Cup.

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