


Check out more profiles: Nos. 1-10 | Nos. 11-20

No. 21 BRETT WETTERICH
After a world-wind season in 2006, Brett Wetterich, a 2005 Q-school graduate, earned his first PGA TOUR victory at the 2006 EDS Byron Nelson Championship, competed on the U.S. Ryder Cup team and earned his first invitation to THE TOUR Championship presented by Coca-Cola (finished tied for 22nd). Wetterich has made the largest jump into the top 30 over the last three weeks to advance to the final FedExCup playoff event in Atlanta. He started at No. 50 and has moved to 21st thanks to a tied for second at the Deutsche Bank Championship. Wetterich has had a solid season with four top-10 finishes. He also finished second behind Tiger Woods at the World Golf Championship-CA Championship in March.
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No. 22 BOO WEEKLEY
Boo Weekley, who is making his first appearance in the TOUR Championship presented by Coca-Cola, returned to the TOUR for just the second time (he was a member in 2002) this year after finishing seventh on the 2006 Nationwide Tour money list. He has enjoyed a career season. He is 22nd in the standings for the PGA TOUR Playoffs for the FedExCup and has collected more than $2.2 million in 2007, which ranks 23rd on the TOUR's official money list. At The Honda Classic in March at PGA National's Champion Course, Weekley missed a 3-foot putt that would have given him the victory. In April, he captured the Verizon Heritage after he chipped in for par on the 71st and 72nd holes to collect his first TOUR title by one stroke over Ernie Els.
THIS IS WEEKLEY'S FIRST TOUR CHAMPIONSHIP

No. 23 JOHN ROLLINS
John Rollins is making just his second appearance in THE TOUR Championship presented by Coca-Cola, but his first since the 2002 season. Rollins started the year well, with two runner-up finishes on the West Coast. He lost in a sudden-death playoff to Charley Hoffman at the Bob Hope Chrysler Classic as Hoffman posted a birdie on the first extra hole. Three weeks later he finished runner-up for a second time, falling one stroke behind Aaron Baddeley at the FBR Open, thanks to a closing 8-under 63. Rollins took over the top spot in the FedExCup regular season standings with the finish at the TPC Scottsdale in February.
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No. 24 STEWART CINK
Stewart Cink will be making his sixth start at THE TOUR Championship presented by Cocal-Cola. Cink snuck back into the event that invites the top 30 in the FedExCup standings after posting a 6-under 65 Sunday at the BMW Championship to finish tied for seventh. He moved from 32nd on the FedExCup standngs to 24th. He started the FedExCup Playoffs at No. 28. The Atlanta resident has six top-10s this season, including a tie for third at THE PLAYERS Championship. Cink has not won on TOUR since the 2004 World Golf Championship-Bridgestone Invitational, but a win in Atlanta near his home would be a great way to finish out the year. He has been a member of three U.S. Ryder Cup teams (2002, 2004, 2006) and will play on his third Presidents Cup team (2000, 2005) later this year.
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No. 25 JONATHAN BYRD
Jonathan Byrd was the bubble boy during the BMW Championship at No. 30 in FedExCup standings, but he got off to a wonderful start in Chicago, holding the first- and second-round leads at Cog Hill after opening with a 7-under 64. He managed to tie for 10th at the BMW Championship to move from 30th in the FedExCup Playoff standings to 25th to secure his spot into his first-career TOUR Championship presented by Coca-Cola. Byrd collected his third PGA TOUR title when he won the John Deere Classic in July. His final round featured no bogeys and birdies on three of his last five holes. With his victory, he earned an invitation to the following week to the British Open, which marked his first time competing in that event. Byrd is currently the winningest active American player under age 30, with three TOUR victories.
THIS IS BYRD'S FIRST TOUR CHAMPIONSHIP

No. 26 ROBERT ALLENBY
Robert Allenby will be making his first appearance since 2003 in THE TOUR Championship presented by Coca-Cola, but it is the fifth time he has qualified for the event. He played in the tournament four straight years from 2000-2003. Allenby has had a solid season in 2007 with eight top-10 finishes. He opened the year with six top-10s in his first eight starts, including four in a row to start the season. He also finished eighth at the Deutsche Bank Championship to help him maintain his position inside the top-30 in the standings for the PGA TOUR Playoffs for the FedExCup. He started the Playoffs in the 27th position and comes into THE TOUR Championship at 26th.
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No. 27 TIM CLARK
Tim Clark is returning to THE TOUR Championship presented by Coca-Cola for just the second time -- the first since 2005. Clark played a limited schedule in the early part of the season due to a bulging disk in his neck but had a strong finish to the year. In April he held a share of the 36-hole lead at the Masters Tournament before finishing tied for 13th. Clark, who is still searching for his first TOUR title, was one stroke off the 54-hole lead of Nathan Green at the John Deere Classic and held a four-shot lead early on the back nine, but stumbled down the stretch with two bogeys to finish tied for second, one stroke behind Jonathan Byrd. One week later, he played in the final group on Sunday for the second consecutive week at the U.S. Bank Championship and finished tied for second, four shots behind Joe Ogilvie. He started the Playoffs in 36th position and moved to 27th after posting a final-round 4-under 67 to finish tied for fifth at the BMW Championship, the third leg of the FedExCup Playoffs.
THIS IS CLARK'S FIRST TOUR CHAMPIONSHIP
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No. 28 CAMILO VILLEGAS
Camilo Villegas has move up 24 spots since the start of the PGA TOUR Playoffs for the FedExCup to climb into the top-30 (28th) and earn his first invitation to THE TOUR Championship presented by Coca-Cola. Villegas played in the 2001 U.S. Amateur at East Lake. Villegas finished fourth in the stroke-play portion and lost in the third round to the eventual champion and his teammate at the University of Florida, Bubba Dickerson. After a slow start to the 2007 campaign, he finished tied for second at The Honda Classic after a four-man playoff. He closed with a final-round 66 at PGA National's Champion Course to tie Mark Wilson, Jose Coceres and Boo Weekley at 5-under-par 275. Villegas was eliminated from the playoff on the second extra hole on Monday morning after he and Weekley made bogeys on the par-4 10th hole. The Colombian has had a nice run during the FedExCup Playoffs. He held the first-round lead at the Deutsche Bank Championship after a career-best 8-under 63, but finished tied for ninth. At the BMW Championship he was among the leaders all week at Cog Hill Golf Club. He closed with a 4-uner 67 to finish tied for seventh, his fifth top-10 of the year.
THIS IS VILLEGAS' FIRST TOUR CHAMPIONSHIP

No. 29 HEATH SLOCUM
Heath Slocum will be making his first trip to THE TOUR Championship presented by Coca-Cola. The Atlanta resident made the cut in all three Playoff events leading up to the TOUR Championship to maintain his position inside the top 30. He began the Playoffs at No. 29 and headed to the final event in 29th place. Slocum had a chance to collect his third PGA TOUR title at the PODS Championship in March, but came up short when he missed a par putt on the 72nd hole of regulation to give the 46-year-old Mark Calcavecchia the title. In 2007, Slocum has four top-10 finishes and has collected a career-best $1,679,154 to rank 36th on the season money list.
THIS IS SLOCUM'S FIRST TOUR CHAMPIONSHIP

No. 30 PADRAIG HARRINGTON
Padraig Harrington will be making his third appearance in THE TOUR Championship presented by Coca-Cola. Harrington won the 2007 Open Championship, defeating Spain's Sergio Garcia in a four-hole playoff despite making a double bogey on his 72nd hole. Harrington broke Europe's eight-year major championship drought in becoming the first European golfer to win a major since Scotland's Paul Lawrie at the 1999 British Open at the same venue. With his victory at Carnoustie, Harrington is the second Irishman to claim the Claret Jug. He joins Fred Daly, who won the title in 1947 at Royal Liverpool in Hoylake. After collecting his first major championship title he moved to sixth on the Official World Golf Ranking (this week he is 7th), the first time he has ever been in the top-10.
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