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Shriners is ending its sponsorship of the PGA Tour event in Las Vegas

The 18th tee at 2024 the Shriners Children's Open 2024 at TPC Summerlin on October 20, 2024 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images)
The 18th tee at 2024 the Shriners Children's Open 2024 at TPC Summerlin on October 20, 2024 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images)

The LPGA lost Cognizant as a sponsor four days ago. Now the PGA Tour is seeing one of its sponsors back out.

Shriners Children's Hospitals is no longer going to be title sponsor of the fall event at TPC Summerlin, which was first reported by the Las Vegas Review-Journal. Shriners has had its name on the event since 2007.

"We have enjoyed a tremendous 18 years as the host and title sponsor of the Shriners Children's Open," Bob Roller, vice president of sports for Shriners, told the Review-Journal. "The opportunity to tell our incredible stories of the more than 1.6 million children that have received care from Shriners was, and always is, our primary goal."

More from the Review-Journal story:

Should officials fail to find a new title sponsor, it is conceivable the tour would step in and sponsor the tournament for one year to maintain its place on the schedule. That’s something that has been done for legacy tournaments in the past, but not recently. The tour has been fully sponsored for the past seven years.

Changes in tournament sponsorships are not uncommon on the PGA Tour, with seven new title sponsors added among the 49 events on the 2024 schedule.

But the fall schedule has had the most issues recently. Since LIV Golf burst on the scene three years ago and the PGA Tour responded with a series of big-money, signature events during the regular season, getting stars and eyeballs on the fall events has been a challenge.

A PGA Tour official has confirmed the report to Golfweek.

The event has been part of the Vegas sports scene for 42 years. It was one of eight tournaments on the PGA Tour's FedEx Cup Fall series in 2024.

PGA Tour prize money in Vegas

In its second year of competition in 1984, Vegas became the first Tour event to showcase a purse of more than $1 million ($1,122,500 to be exact).

Here's a look at all the winners and their prize money since its inception:

Year

Winner

Score

To par

Total purse

2024

J.T. Poston

262

-22

$7,00,000

2023

Tom Kim

264

-20

$8,400,000

2022

Tom Kim

260

-24

$8,000,000

2021

Im Sung-jae

260

-24

$7,000,000

2020

Martin Laird

261

-23

$7,000,000

2019

Kevin Na

261

-23

$6,600,000

2018

Bryson DeChambeau

263

-21

$7,000,000

2017

Patrick Cantlay

275

-9

$6,800,000

2016

Rod Pampling

264

-20

$6,600,000

2015

Smylie Kaufman

268

-16

$6,400,000

2014

Ben Martin

264

-20

$6,200,000

2013

Webb Simpson

260

-24

$6,000,000

2012

Ryan Moore

260

-24

$4,500,000

2011

Kevin Na

261

-23

$4,400,000

2010

Jonathan Byrd

263

-21

$4,300,000

2009

Martin Laird

265

-19

$4,200,000

2008

Marc Turnesa

263

-25

$4,100,000

2007

George McNeill

264

-24

$4,000,000

2006

Troy Matteson

265

-23

$4,000,000

2005

Wes Short Jr.

266

-21

$4,000,000

2004

Andre Stolz

266

-21

$4,000,000

2003

Stuart Appleby

328

-31

$4,000,000

2002

Phil Tataurangi

330

-29

$5,000,000

2001

Bob Estes

329

-30

$4,500,000

2000

Billy Andrade

332

-28

$4,250,000

1999

Jim Furyk

331

-29

$2,500,000

1998

Jim Furyk

335

-25

$2,000,000

1997

Bill Glasson

340

-20

$1,800,000

1996

Tiger Woods

332

-27

$1,650,000

1995

Jim Furyk

331

-28

$1,500,000

1994

Bruce Lietzke

332

-28

$1,500,000

1993

Davis Love III

331

-29

$1,400,000

1992

John Cook

334

-26

$1,300,000

1991

Andrew Magee

329

-31

$1,500,000

1990

Bob Tway

334

-26

$1,300,000

1989

Scott Hoch

336

-24

$1,250,000

1988

Gary Koch

274

-14

$1,388,889

1987

Paul Azinger

271

-17

$1,250,000

1986

Greg Norman

333

-27

$1,150,000

1985

Curtis Strange

338

-17

$950,000

1984

Denis Watson

341

-15

$1,00,000

1983

Fuzzy Zoeller

340

-18

$750,000

The 2024 tournament saw a reduction in total prize money as well as first-place money compared to the year prior.

Names of PGA Tour event in Las Vegas over the years

Tournament of Champions, 1967-1968

Sahara Invitational, 1969-1976

Las Vegas Invitational, 1983-1999

Invensys Classic at Las Vegas, 2000-2002

Las Vegas Invitational, 2003-2006

Frys.com Open, 2007-2008

Justin Timberlake Shriners Hospitals for Children Open, 2008-2012

Shriners Hospitals for Children Open, 2013-2020

Shriners Children's Open, 2021-2023

This article originally appeared on Golfweek: Shriners is ending its sponsorship of the PGA Tour event in Las Vegas