Harrington thinks big

US Tour: The US Tour's inaugural FedExCup play-off series starts today with the Barclays Classic, and golfers are wondering …

US Tour:The US Tour's inaugural FedExCup play-off series starts today with the Barclays Classic, and golfers are wondering just how the four-tournament season finale will work out.

A €7.4-million bonus will be awarded to the points leader of the series, played over four successive weeks and ending with a field of 30 at the Tour Championship in Atlanta.

"I think it's a bigger thing if you win it than if you don't win it," the British Open champion, Padraig Harrington, told reporters at Westchester Country Club on Tuesday.

"It's a bit like the TPC (the Players Championship). If you win the TPC, it's the fifth major. If you don't win it, it's not the fifth major. That's kind of like the FedExCup. It will take a while for it to build up."

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The absence of world number one Tiger Woods from the first play-off event will slow the series right out of the gate. Woods, citing fatigue after posting back-to-back victories including a gruelling run at the US PGA Championship earlier this month at sweltering Southern Hills, is one of six players from the 144 who qualified on points skipping the Barclays. By virtue of his big points lead, Woods is assured of a berth in the Tour Championship regardless of results from the first three events.

Each tournament in the series has a €5.2-million purse and will pay €930,000 to the winner.

Golfers also earn points for field placing, and fields become progressively smaller.

The Deutsche Bank Championship next week in Boston will have a field of 120. Fifty players will be eliminated there for the 70-man field at the BMW Championship in Chicago, where the final 30 are determined for the Tour Championship in Atlanta.

Some players have expressed disappointment the big bonus is deferred, earmarked for retirement. Others are embracing the play-offs as an historic first as golf tries to mirror the season-ending play-off drama of other sports.

"It should be pretty simple to get yourself fired up to win something for the first time it's ever been around," said tour veteran Woody Austin, runner-up to Woods at the US PGA.

"It could be perfect for someone like me. I'm just a journeyman guy, I've been around for a long time, but I've never done anything spectacular or whatever."

Tour rookie Brandt Snedeker (26) jumped to ninth in the points after his first win last week, at the Wyndham Championship.

"It's very rare that everybody in the golfing world is a rookie at something, and we're all rookies this week," Snedeker said in reference to the chase for the €7.4-million prize.