PGTI 2026 Season Begins with Record Prize Money and New League Launch

The Professional Golf Tour of India's 2026 season has begun with a clear demonstration of growth, staging three high-value tournaments each with a ₹1.5 crore purse. The tour expanded its reach with events in Naya Raipur, Delhi, and Kolkata, won by Jhared Hack, Honey Baisoya, and Om Prakash Chouhan respectively. A significant innovation is the launch of 72 The League, a new team-based format designed to attract broadcast and commercial interest. Alongside a strengthened NexGen development tour, these moves indicate PGTI is building momentum through higher purses, geographic expansion, and format experimentation.

Key Points: PGTI 2026 Season: Record Purses, New League, and Strong Start

  • Three ₹1.5 crore events held
  • 72 The League team format launched
  • Prize purses increased across tours
  • Strong wins in Naya Raipur, Delhi, Kolkata
3 min read

PGTI's 2026 season off to cracking start

The 2026 PGTI season opens with three ₹1.5 crore events, the launch of 72 The League, and rising purses, signaling major growth for Indian golf.

"The opening month of the 2026 season has provided clear signs that the PGTI is growing in scale and strength. - PGTI Press Release"

New Delhi, March 1

The opening month of the 2026 season has provided clear signs that the PGTI is growing in scale and strength. In quick succession, the tour staged three high-value events in Naya Raipur, Delhi and Kolkata, and then added a fresh dimension with the announcement of 72 The League. Together, these developments show a tour that is expanding not only in reach but also in substance.

According to a press release from PGTI, the key measure of that progress is prize money. In the early domestic phase of the season, PGTI staged three events carrying prize purses of Rs 1.5 crore each, creating a combined purse pool of Rs 4.5 crore.

That marks an important rise in the financial scale of Indian professional golf. The SECL Chhattisgarh Open, for example, saw its purse increase from Rs 1 crore to Rs 1.5 crore year-on-year. For players, that means stronger incentives and more competitive weeks. For sponsors and partners, it reflects a tour with increasing value and credibility.

The season began in Naya Raipur with the SECL Chhattisgarh Open Golf Championship from February 3 to 6. The event stood out not only because of its Rs 1.5 crore purse, but also because it was staged in an emerging market rather than a traditional metro.

It showed that professional golf can attract attention and deliver strong competition outside its established centres. American golfer Jhared Hack underlined that with a memorable win, including a brilliant final-round 59, as he finished five shots clear in the season opener.

The tour then moved to Delhi, where the inaugural Players Championship was held at Qutab Golf Course from February 10 to 13. The tournament again offered Rs 1.5 crore in prize money and was won by Honey Baisoya, who collected Rs 22,50,000 for his victory.

A successful event in the capital carries added importance because Delhi brings together administrators, sponsors, policymakers and national media. In that context, the tournament added weight to PGTI's position in the Indian sporting landscape.

The third major stop came in Kolkata, where the Players Championship 2026 Powered by Urbana was played at Tollygunge Club from February 17 to 20. Once again, the purse stood at Rs 1.5 crore, and once again the winner earned Rs 22,50,000.

Om Prakash Chouhan emerged champion after a strong closing effort. The Kolkata event reinforced an important point: PGTI is beginning to build consistency in the size and quality of its tournaments, rather than depending on isolated big weeks.

Another notable step was the launch of 72 The League, which adds a team-based and more broadcast-friendly format to the larger golf calendar. The new league has the potential to bring in fresh audiences and commercial interest while existing alongside the merit-based structure of the main tour. It also reflects a willingness to experiment with formats that are better suited to television and digital platforms.

At the development level, the PGTI NexGen Tour has also got underway, beginning with its opening event in Faridabad. The tour remains important for expanding playing opportunities for emerging professionals and for taking competitive golf into Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities.

This year, each NexGen event has seen its prize purse rise from Rs 20 lakh to Rs 25 lakh. Abhishek Kumar, who won the opening event, is an example of the kind of young talent the platform is designed to support.

Taken together, the opening month of the season suggests that PGTI is building steady momentum. Stronger execution across cities, higher prize money, a clearer development pathway and format innovation are beginning to work together. If that continues, Indian professional golf could see stronger fields, wider attention and a broader presence in new markets.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Honey Baisoya and Om Prakash Chouhan winning big is so inspiring! It shows homegrown talent can thrive. Hope the increased purses help more Indian golfers compete internationally without financial stress. The league idea (72 The League) sounds interesting for attracting new fans.
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Rohit P
Good to see growth, but I have a respectful criticism. The article talks about 'broader presence' but all three main events were still in major cities or state capitals (Naya Raipur, Delhi, Kolkata). The NexGen tour in Faridabad is a start, but true expansion means more events in places like Indore, Guwahati, or Coimbatore.
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Sarah B
As someone new to following golf in India, the launch of 72 The League with a team format is a smart move. Individual tournaments can be hard to follow casually. A league with city-based teams, like in cricket or kabaddi, could really hook a wider audience. Hope it gets good broadcast deals.
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Vikram M
Jhared Hack shooting a 59 in the final round in Chhattisgarh is insane! That kind of world-class performance on our soil puts Indian golf on the map. It attracts international players, which raises the competition level for our guys. Win-win situation.
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Karthik V
The financial growth is impressive – Rs 4.5 crore in purses in one month is no small thing. This credibility will bring more corporate sponsorships. In a country obsessed with cricket, it's refreshing to see another sport building a sustainable professional structure. More power to PGTI!

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