After 11 months, the DP World Tour season has just two events remaining in the DP World Tour Play-Offs, which conclude the Race to Dubai.

All season, players have been battling for points in the contest, with the goal of finishing high enough in the rankings to make it to the first of the Play-Offs, the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship.

Yas Links.

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They are all hoping to be in the top 50 of the rankings at the end of the tournament to make it to the last of the Play-Offs, the DP World Tour Championship.

Players who were eligible for the field but will not be competing include Jon Rahm, Viktor Hovland, Justin Rose and Sepp Straka, the latter of whom withdrew from the DP World Tour Play-Offs to care for his baby son.

However, there are still some high-profile players competing in the first Play-Offs event. Here are some of the big names to look out for.

winning the PGA Tour’s Pebble Beach Pro-Am and The Players Championship, before following that up with completing his career Grand Slam at The Masters, Rory McIlroy has since won the DP World Tour’s Amgen Irish Open and helped Team Europe win the Ryder Cup in the US for the first time since 2012.

Given that spectacular year, it’s reasonable to ask: could McIlroy’s year realistically go any better? As a matter of fact, it could!

The 35-year-old is also closing in on his seventh Race to Dubai title, and he is top of the rankings heading into the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship.

With his closest rival over 400 points behind, he’ll be confident of consolidating that position at Yas Links as he looks to make a stellar year even more memorable.

Fleetwood isn’t far behind.

For so long on the PGA Tour, it looked like he would endure another year as the nearly man, with several close calls before the Tour Championship.

However, Fleetwood demonstrated his remarkable ability to bounce back from disappointment at the East Lake tournament, where he finally claimed his maiden PGA Tour win and with it the FedEx Cup title.

He wasn’t done there. A month later, Fleetwood accumulated more points than anyone at the Ryder Cup as he helped Europe to victory before claiming his ninth DP World Tour win at the DP World India Championship.

He begins the DP World Tour Play-Offs 26th in the Race to Dubai rankings and in some of the best form of his life.

Dubai Desert Classic.

Hatton, who also played a pivotal role in Team Europe’s Ryder Cup win over the US, begins the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship third in the rankings and still in with a chance of claiming the season-long title for the first time.

Shane Lowry – who didn’t qualify for the first of the DP World Tour Play-Offs via his Race to Dubai ranking, with the Swede six places below the required position in 80th.

However, he takes his place by virtue of his appearance in the European Ryder Cup team, giving him the chance to accumulate the points necessary to make it to the DP World Tour Championship.

He should certainly be confident of managing at least that, having claimed his second PGA Tour win at February’s Genesis Invitational, with several more top-10 finishes since.

Aberg’s most recent DP World Tour start resulted in a T20 at the BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth, and he’ll be hoping for another solid performance in the penultimate tournament of the season.

split from long-term caddie Billy Foster in a bid to address his poor form, which had seen him slip well outside the world’s top 50, having previously enjoyed sizeable stints in the top 10.

Whether the parting of the ways with Foster ultimately had a bearing on his form, things have clicked for the Englishman in recent months, as evidenced by a T8 in the PGA Championship and a T4 at Royal Portrush in The Open, among several other impressive performances along the way.

Now back inside the world’s top 30, and having been impressive for Team Europe in the Ryder Cup, he will be confident of a strong performance in the DP World Tour Play-Offs, starting in Abu Dhabi.

maiden LIV Golf win in Dallas at the end of June.

He has also produced some good performances on the DP World Tour this season, notably third at the BMW PGA Championship, meaning he comfortably qualified for the Play-Offs in 22nd despite his schedule limiting his appearances on the circuit.

He’ll be hoping to continue his excellent year by consolidating his position in the top 50 of the Race to Dubai rankings in Abu Dhabi.

win at October’s Alfred Dunhill Links Championship.

MacIntyre also finished runner-up at this year’s US Open and T7 at The Open before acquitting himself well at the Ryder Cup for the second edition in a row, raising his profile to the highest it’s ever been.

He begins the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship sixth in the Race to Dubai rankings in his bid to lift the Harry Vardon trophy for the first time.

the Betfred British Masters for his first worldwide victory since 2018, followed by the BMW PGA Championship.

As a result, he is now in line for a PGA Tour card next season, thanks to his position of eighth in the Race to Dubai rankings, regardless of where he finishes in the FedEx Cup Fall rankings.

The Swede is also back inside the world’s top 20 for the first time since the end of 2018, and he will be hoping to continue his rich vein of form in the final phase of the DP World Tour season.

Bethpage Black match.

That’s because, even though he finished on the winning team, he was the only player not to contribute at least half a point, although in his defence, he only played in two sessions.

That’s not to take away from what has been an otherwise good season for the Dane, who qualified automatically for the match thanks largely to his performances on the DP World Tour.

Hojgaard finished the 2024 season runner-up to Rory McIlroy at the DP World Tour Championship, and he’ll be looking for a good start to the Play-Offs at the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship.