I've been going back and putting the ESPN Classic shows on DVD and I notice that they refer to the Tournament of Champions (sometimes just called the Firestone) as the most prestigious title you could win. Understandable, as it's an invitational tournament, only winners allowed.
A couple of years ago, when the Microsoft guys bought the PBA, they remade the World Championships into the major of majors. The whole "march to the World Championships" that they talked about all year long. That's where the big bucks were, that was the one that awarded the four- and five-year exemptions.
Now it's the US Open. They moved it to the end of the schedule, it's got the biggest prize fund, arguably the hardest oil pattern, it carries a three-year exemption versus the two-year exemption that the other majors offer.
Why do you think the prestige shifts like that? The ToC was the real jewel for, what? 40+ years? What makes one of them so much more prestigious than another? Why is it that the Masters is not quite in the same league with the other majors? Will it be the major of majors five years from now?
SH