* – Denotes a player who finished in the top 125 of the money list.
Bold text – Denotes a player who won in 2002.
Kite mostly retired from the PGA Tour after turning 50 in 1999 and fell to past champion status in 2003.
Rich Beem was promoted to this category after his PGA Championship win and earned an exemption through 2007.
Greg Norman declined membership.
Craig Perks was promoted to this category after his win and earned an exemption through 2007.
Nick Faldo declined membership. Ben Crenshaw mostly retired from the PGA Tour after turning 50 in January 2002.
Paul Lawrie declined membership.
Stadler finished in the 126–150 range and opted to use a top 50 career money exemption for 2003.
Darren Clarke declined membership.
Kevin Sutherland and Craig Parry were promoted to this category after their wins and earned exemptions through 2005.
Date | Player | Tournament |
---|---|---|
Apr 28 | Rocco Mediate | Greater Greensboro Chrysler Classic |
Sep 29 | Loren Roberts | Valero Texas Open |
Besides Rich Beem, who was in this category for two weeks between his wins as The International and the PGA Championship, eighteen players moved into this category during the season. K. J. Choi, Jerry Kelly, and Len Mattiace earned exemptions through 2004 with multiple wins.
Scherrer finished in the 126–150 range and, unsuccessful at Q School, settled for conditional status in 2003. Clark and Paulson finished outside the top 150 and, also unsuccessful at Q School, fell to past champion status (for good, in Clark's case).
Both focused on the senior tour.
Date | Player | Tournament |
---|---|---|
Jan 14 | Jerry Kelly | Sony Open |
Feb 3 | Matt Gogel | AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am |
Feb 17 | Len Mattiace | Nissan Open |
Feb 24 | Kevin Sutherland | WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship |
Mar 24 | Craig Perks | The Players Championship |
May 5 | K. J. Choi | Compaq Classic |
Jun 9 | Chris Smith | Buick Classic |
Jun 30 | Len Mattiace (2) | FedEx St. Jude Classic |
Jul 7 | Jerry Kelly (2) | Advil Western Open |
Jul 28 | J. P. Hayes | John Deere Classic |
Aug 4 | Rich Beem | The International |
Aug 18 | Rich Beem (2) | PGA Championship |
Aug 25 | Chris Riley | Reno–Tahoe Open |
Aug 25 | Craig Parry | WGC-NEC Invitational |
Sep 15 | Dan Forsman | SEI Pennsylvania Classic |
Sep 22 | K. J. Choi (2) | Tampa Bay Classic |
Frost, Blake, Yokoo, Sposa, Gow, Nobilo, May, Quigley, and Chamblee finished in the 126–150 range. Quigley was successful in Q School, while the rest fell to the conditional category for 2003.
Waite, Austin, Jiménez, Jerry Smith, Fryatt, Kraft, Watts, Dunlap, Simpson, Muehr, Mize, and Perry finished outside the top 150. Muehr, Mize, and Perry received major medical extensions and Watts a minor. Austin and Watts were successful in Q School. Waite, Kraft, and Simpson fell to past champion status. Jiménez, Jerry Smith, Fryatt, Dunlap became non-members; Jiménez and Fryatt would not reach the PGA Tour again (or rather, in the case of Jiménez, accept membership).
Date | Player | Tournament |
---|---|---|
Mar 10 | Matt Kuchar | Honda Classic |
Oct 6 | Charles Howell III | Michelob Championship |
Niclas Fasth, Pierre Fulke, Toru Taniguchi, and Toshimitsu Izawa declined membership.
Langham met his terms in May but finished outside the top 150, fell short at Q School, and became a non-member for 2003. Wiebe fell to conditional status after his extension ended in July; he made no cuts and fell to past champion status in 2003 (for good). Brown played in two events and did not receive a carry-over; he fell to past champion status and never played in a PGA Tour event again. McCumber spent his starts playing on the senior tour and fell to past champion status for good. Sutherland received a carry-over and also made it through Q School.
Brent Schwarzrock met the terms of his reshuffle medical extension in March and was promoted to this category, but ultimately required another medical for 2003.
Date | Player | Tournament |
---|---|---|
Feb 24 | Ian Leggatt | Touchstone Energy Tucson Open |
Sep 8 | John Rollins | Bell Canadian Open |
Oct 13 | Phil Tataurangi | Invensys Classic |
Oct 20 | Bob Burns | Disney Golf Classic |
Oct 27 | Jonathan Byrd | Buick Challenge |
Nov 4 | Luke Donald | Southern Farm Bureau Classic |
Tryon did not become a member until his 18th birthday in June.
Schwarzrock met the terms of his medical extension in March and was promoted to the major medical category, but ultimately required another medical for 2003.
Those who finished in the 126–150 range were Deane Pappas, Jones, Staton, Riegger, Armour, Elder, and Allan. Elder received a minor medical extension. None of the others were successful at Q School, so all had to settle for conditional status.
Bateman, Brehaut, Gove, Peterson, Freeman, Wetterich, Gangluff, Porter, Cochran, Long, Claxton, Daley, Hill, Van Pelt, Heintz, McCallister, Herrera, Allen, Jordan, Weekley, Brenden Pappas, Ellis, Lardon, Zokol, Nicklaus, and Tryon finished outside the top 150. Bateman, Brehaut, Brenden Pappas, and Lardon were successful in Q School. Ellis and Tryon received major medical extensions, and Zokol a minor. Freeman, Cochran, and McCallister settled for past champion status (for good, in Freeman's case). The other 16 became non-members; Peterson, Porter, Daley, Hill, Herrera, Jordan, Nicklaus would not reach the PGA Tour again.
Clark met his terms in October and was promoted to the major medical category. Dawson's extension expired in February and he became a non-member, but finished in the top 15 of the Buy.com Tour money list. Bryant's expired in October and he dropped to the non-exempt medical category; he then made it through Q School. Gallagher and Wadsworth and received carry-overs.
One player achieved this:
Both became non-members after their extensions expired in April and August, respectively; Barron finished in the top 15 of the Buy.com Tour money list, while Coughlan would never regain membership.
Date | Player | Tournament |
---|---|---|
Jul 21 | Spike McRoy | B.C. Open |
Two players finished inside the top 125 (including one winner). Goydos and Goggin finished in the 126–150 range, and both made it through Q School.
Mark Wiebe fell to this category in July after his medical extension ended. He made no cuts and fell to past champion status in 2003 (for good).
The remaining players all finished outside the top 150. Tryba received a medical extension. Hjertstedt fell to past champion status in 2003 (for good). Hughes, Ogilvie, Tolles, Isenhour, and Morland became non-members.
Bart Bryant fell to this category in October; he then made it through Q School.
Wentworth played four events, did not receive a carry-over, and became a non-member, never to reach the PGA Tour again.
The following past champions finished in the top 200 of the money list:
Date | Player | Tournament |
---|---|---|
Sep 1 | Gene Sauers | Air Canada Championship |
Two players finished inside the top 125 (including one winner). Jacobsen finished in the 126–150 range, earning conditional status for 2003. Hammond, Heinen, and Ken Green made it through Q School. Of the rest, only Pate and Pride would earn better status in the future.
The following non-members finished the equivalent of top 200 on the money list, including earnings in WGCs (^ denotes those eligible for full PGA Tour membership in 2003):
Cabrera, Campbell, Levet, and Norman accepted membership for 2003, while Harrington, Clarke, Faldo, and Lawrie declined (though Clarke accepted later after winning a tournament). Cabrera and Campbell accepted STM in March, Scott in April, Molder in June, and Bjørn and Levet in August.
Molder, Howser, and Price were unsuccessful in Q School; Kresge finished in the top 15 of the Buy.com Tour money list.
Twenty-two players not listed made it from the Buy.com Tour to the PGA Tour for 2003 (including European Tour winners Aaron Baddeley and Alex Čejka, the latter of whom who played 5 Buy.com events; 12 via the money list, 10 via Q School). Fourteen players with no PGA Tour or Buy.com Tour status in 2002 made it through Q School (including European Tour winners Richard S. Johnson and Carl Pettersson and Japan Golf Tour winners Kenichi Kuboya, Scott Laycock, and Dean Wilson).
* – Denotes a player who finished in the top 125 of the money list.
Bold text – Denotes a player who won in 2002.
Kite mostly retired from the PGA Tour after turning 50 in 1999 and fell to past champion status in 2003.
Rich Beem was promoted to this category after his PGA Championship win and earned an exemption through 2007.
Greg Norman declined membership.
Craig Perks was promoted to this category after his win and earned an exemption through 2007.
Nick Faldo declined membership. Ben Crenshaw mostly retired from the PGA Tour after turning 50 in January 2002.
Paul Lawrie declined membership.
Stadler finished in the 126–150 range and opted to use a top 50 career money exemption for 2003.
Darren Clarke declined membership.
Kevin Sutherland and Craig Parry were promoted to this category after their wins and earned exemptions through 2005.
Date | Player | Tournament |
---|---|---|
Apr 28 | Rocco Mediate | Greater Greensboro Chrysler Classic |
Sep 29 | Loren Roberts | Valero Texas Open |
Besides Rich Beem, who was in this category for two weeks between his wins as The International and the PGA Championship, eighteen players moved into this category during the season. K. J. Choi, Jerry Kelly, and Len Mattiace earned exemptions through 2004 with multiple wins.
Scherrer finished in the 126–150 range and, unsuccessful at Q School, settled for conditional status in 2003. Clark and Paulson finished outside the top 150 and, also unsuccessful at Q School, fell to past champion status (for good, in Clark's case).
Both focused on the senior tour.
Date | Player | Tournament |
---|---|---|
Jan 14 | Jerry Kelly | Sony Open |
Feb 3 | Matt Gogel | AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am |
Feb 17 | Len Mattiace | Nissan Open |
Feb 24 | Kevin Sutherland | WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship |
Mar 24 | Craig Perks | The Players Championship |
May 5 | K. J. Choi | Compaq Classic |
Jun 9 | Chris Smith | Buick Classic |
Jun 30 | Len Mattiace (2) | FedEx St. Jude Classic |
Jul 7 | Jerry Kelly (2) | Advil Western Open |
Jul 28 | J. P. Hayes | John Deere Classic |
Aug 4 | Rich Beem | The International |
Aug 18 | Rich Beem (2) | PGA Championship |
Aug 25 | Chris Riley | Reno–Tahoe Open |
Aug 25 | Craig Parry | WGC-NEC Invitational |
Sep 15 | Dan Forsman | SEI Pennsylvania Classic |
Sep 22 | K. J. Choi (2) | Tampa Bay Classic |
Frost, Blake, Yokoo, Sposa, Gow, Nobilo, May, Quigley, and Chamblee finished in the 126–150 range. Quigley was successful in Q School, while the rest fell to the conditional category for 2003.
Waite, Austin, Jiménez, Jerry Smith, Fryatt, Kraft, Watts, Dunlap, Simpson, Muehr, Mize, and Perry finished outside the top 150. Muehr, Mize, and Perry received major medical extensions and Watts a minor. Austin and Watts were successful in Q School. Waite, Kraft, and Simpson fell to past champion status. Jiménez, Jerry Smith, Fryatt, Dunlap became non-members; Jiménez and Fryatt would not reach the PGA Tour again (or rather, in the case of Jiménez, accept membership).
Date | Player | Tournament |
---|---|---|
Mar 10 | Matt Kuchar | Honda Classic |
Oct 6 | Charles Howell III | Michelob Championship |
Niclas Fasth, Pierre Fulke, Toru Taniguchi, and Toshimitsu Izawa declined membership.
Langham met his terms in May but finished outside the top 150, fell short at Q School, and became a non-member for 2003. Wiebe fell to conditional status after his extension ended in July; he made no cuts and fell to past champion status in 2003 (for good). Brown played in two events and did not receive a carry-over; he fell to past champion status and never played in a PGA Tour event again. McCumber spent his starts playing on the senior tour and fell to past champion status for good. Sutherland received a carry-over and also made it through Q School.
Brent Schwarzrock met the terms of his reshuffle medical extension in March and was promoted to this category, but ultimately required another medical for 2003.
Date | Player | Tournament |
---|---|---|
Feb 24 | Ian Leggatt | Touchstone Energy Tucson Open |
Sep 8 | John Rollins | Bell Canadian Open |
Oct 13 | Phil Tataurangi | Invensys Classic |
Oct 20 | Bob Burns | Disney Golf Classic |
Oct 27 | Jonathan Byrd | Buick Challenge |
Nov 4 | Luke Donald | Southern Farm Bureau Classic |
Tryon did not become a member until his 18th birthday in June.
Schwarzrock met the terms of his medical extension in March and was promoted to the major medical category, but ultimately required another medical for 2003.
Those who finished in the 126–150 range were Deane Pappas, Jones, Staton, Riegger, Armour, Elder, and Allan. Elder received a minor medical extension. None of the others were successful at Q School, so all had to settle for conditional status.
Bateman, Brehaut, Gove, Peterson, Freeman, Wetterich, Gangluff, Porter, Cochran, Long, Claxton, Daley, Hill, Van Pelt, Heintz, McCallister, Herrera, Allen, Jordan, Weekley, Brenden Pappas, Ellis, Lardon, Zokol, Nicklaus, and Tryon finished outside the top 150. Bateman, Brehaut, Brenden Pappas, and Lardon were successful in Q School. Ellis and Tryon received major medical extensions, and Zokol a minor. Freeman, Cochran, and McCallister settled for past champion status (for good, in Freeman's case). The other 16 became non-members; Peterson, Porter, Daley, Hill, Herrera, Jordan, Nicklaus would not reach the PGA Tour again.
Clark met his terms in October and was promoted to the major medical category. Dawson's extension expired in February and he became a non-member, but finished in the top 15 of the Buy.com Tour money list. Bryant's expired in October and he dropped to the non-exempt medical category; he then made it through Q School. Gallagher and Wadsworth and received carry-overs.
One player achieved this:
Both became non-members after their extensions expired in April and August, respectively; Barron finished in the top 15 of the Buy.com Tour money list, while Coughlan would never regain membership.
Date | Player | Tournament |
---|---|---|
Jul 21 | Spike McRoy | B.C. Open |
Two players finished inside the top 125 (including one winner). Goydos and Goggin finished in the 126–150 range, and both made it through Q School.
Mark Wiebe fell to this category in July after his medical extension ended. He made no cuts and fell to past champion status in 2003 (for good).
The remaining players all finished outside the top 150. Tryba received a medical extension. Hjertstedt fell to past champion status in 2003 (for good). Hughes, Ogilvie, Tolles, Isenhour, and Morland became non-members.
Bart Bryant fell to this category in October; he then made it through Q School.
Wentworth played four events, did not receive a carry-over, and became a non-member, never to reach the PGA Tour again.
The following past champions finished in the top 200 of the money list:
Date | Player | Tournament |
---|---|---|
Sep 1 | Gene Sauers | Air Canada Championship |
Two players finished inside the top 125 (including one winner). Jacobsen finished in the 126–150 range, earning conditional status for 2003. Hammond, Heinen, and Ken Green made it through Q School. Of the rest, only Pate and Pride would earn better status in the future.
The following non-members finished the equivalent of top 200 on the money list, including earnings in WGCs (^ denotes those eligible for full PGA Tour membership in 2003):
Cabrera, Campbell, Levet, and Norman accepted membership for 2003, while Harrington, Clarke, Faldo, and Lawrie declined (though Clarke accepted later after winning a tournament). Cabrera and Campbell accepted STM in March, Scott in April, Molder in June, and Bjørn and Levet in August.
Molder, Howser, and Price were unsuccessful in Q School; Kresge finished in the top 15 of the Buy.com Tour money list.
Twenty-two players not listed made it from the Buy.com Tour to the PGA Tour for 2003 (including European Tour winners Aaron Baddeley and Alex Čejka, the latter of whom who played 5 Buy.com events; 12 via the money list, 10 via Q School). Fourteen players with no PGA Tour or Buy.com Tour status in 2002 made it through Q School (including European Tour winners Richard S. Johnson and Carl Pettersson and Japan Golf Tour winners Kenichi Kuboya, Scott Laycock, and Dean Wilson).