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Scheffler, Rahm and McIlroy still at the top

Scottie Scheffler, Jon Rahm and Rory McIroy remain on the podium of the world golf rankings at the gates of the third major of the season, the US Open, which will be held starting Thursday in Los Angeles.

Ranking, results
The Canadian Open, in which Nick Taylor became the first local winner since 1954, has not changed the top thirteen places on the list.

The first change is the promotion to fourteenth place of English Tyrrel Hatton, third in Toronto. Thus, Scheffler commands the classification with an average of 11.54 points, compared to Rahm’s 10.41 and McIlroy’s 8.26, ninth this Sunday.

Patrick Cantlay (7.10) and the Norwegian Viktor Hovland (6.63) follow the leading trio. Rahm, on the other hand, remains at the top of the FedExCup standings with 3,042 points, 402 more than Scheffler, 1,087 more than fellow American Max Homa and 1,419 more than Viktor Hovland.

Pablo Larrazábal drops two places in the world list and goes to 52, Adrián Otaegui drops to 82 and Adri Arnaus to 96. The impetus for the creation of the Official World Golf Rankings came from the tournament committee of the Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews, which in the eighties realized that the system it adopted, i.e.

sending invitations to participate in the British Open by analyzing each tour individually, was leading to the exclusion of more and more top-level players because they split their schedules on several different tours, and by the influential sports manager Mark McCormack, who became the first chairman of the international committee overseeing the creation of the league table.

The system used to develop the rankings was developed based on that of McCormack’s World Golf Rankings, which had previously been published in his World of Professional Golf Annual from 1968 to 1985, which was an unofficial ranking and was not used for other purposes such as selecting players to invite to tournaments.

The first ranking was published before the 1986 edition of The Masters. The top six players were: Bernhard Langer, Severiano Ballesteros, Sandy Lyle, Tom Watson, Mark O’Meara and Greg Norman. The top three were therefore European players, but among the top fifty thirty-one were Americans.

Over the years the method of calculating the ranking has changed a lot. Initially the ranking was calculated over a three-year period, with the current year’s score multiplied by four, that of the previous year by two and that of two years before left unchanged.

The ranking was compiled with the total score and the overall points rounded to the nearest integer. All tournaments recognized by the professional tours and some of the invitational tournaments were classified into categories, ranging from “major tournaments” (where the winner received 50 points) to “other tournaments” (where the winner received a minimum of 8 points).

). In each tournament, the other classified players also received points in proportion to their placement, starting with the runner-up who received 60% of the points due to the winner.

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