Labor Day is the time for The Deutsche Bank Championship. The Tournament Players Club of Boston is the private Norton, Massachusetts home to the tourney sponsored by the noble Deutsche Bank (listed on FWB and NYSE as a Frankfurt investment bank). Because it is held on a holiday, the event ends on a Monday to maximize revenues. The purse is a healthy 7.5 million dollars. Its last Champion is Mr. Steve Stricker, who earned 1.35 million dollars for winning. Adam Scott was the tournament's first champ in 2003. He held the top score with 20 under par until Vijay Singh shot two better in 2008. The tournament information has remained similar. It is played in late August or early September. This year Labor Day is the last day of the Championship again: September 6 at TPC Boston, Norton, Massachusetts. The event begins September 3.
Norton is a charming college town in Bristol County, Massachusetts. Nestled near by is one of the most famous schools on the East Coast. Wheaton College, a private University, is one of the oldest women's colleges in the U.S., founded in 1912. (It began admitting men in 1988.) Its small classes and top ranking correspond nicely to the qualities of nearby Tournament Players Club of Boston golf course. TPCB, too, is private, respected, and small. It is part of an elite group of FedEx Cup event holders: The Barclays, BMW Championship, and The Tour Championship are the other three participants. The rules are constantly being adjusted in the FedEx Cup. The new set of alterations address important topics to better the points of issue from the previous year. But the great venues, like the Deutsch Bank Championship, remain stoically unmoved by PGA logistics.
The FedEx Cup playoff tournament continues to showcase DBC as one of its stroke play formatted events. The successful uniquely scheduled holiday golf match has a strong sponsor, powerful following, and enjoys a field that possesses high skill'”all creating a turret from which commerce, skill and fun have a hopeful view of this tournament's future success.