PHOENIX — Steven Alker joined a select group Sunday.
Alker shot a final-round 5-under 66 to finish in a tie second place at the 2024 Charles Schwab Cup Championship, and that was enough to clinch the 2024 Charles Schwab Cup, the season-long points race on the PGA Tour Champions.
A day after shooting a 63 to tie for low round of the week, Alker carded six birdies under warm, sunny skies during the nicest day of the week at Phoenix Country Club. He battled most of the day with Richard Green for second, with Green hanging around with a shot at the season title as well. But a series of unfortunate events for Bernhard Langer on the back nine brought both men into contention for the tournament title and the points title.
Langer held a five-shot lead on the front nine but back-to-back bogeys on Nos. 10 and 11 and another on 17, after his second shot banged off a tree, brought him back to the pack.
In a span of a few minutes, Green birdied the 18th hole, Alker birdied the 17th and Langer bogeyed the 17th. Suddenly, there was a three-way tie at the top of the leaderboard.
Alker says he’s not normally a scoreboard watcher but did ask about where he stood late in the day Sunday.
“The first time I asked my caddie was what has Ernie Els done today on the golf course and that was walking off 17 tee,” he said. Alker started the week in pursuit of Els in the points race. “I knew Richard was right there as well, we had to kind of fend him off as well. But with birdie on 17 and now I’m like I’m tired and trying to win a golf tournament, defend a golf tournament.”
He added that he knew standing on the 18th tee exactly where things stood.
“One of the Golf Channel guys got me and said ‘Yeah, you’re tied, Richard made a putt at the last.’ It was exciting,” he said.
On the closing hole, Alker drilled his second shot, and it rolled across the green before coming to a stop on the back fringe.
After Langer made a dramatic putt for birdie to get to 18 under, Alker faced a birdie of his own from about 10 feet to tie and force a playoff but he left it short.
“It means a lot. It’s a season-long race, so consistency, you want to try to get some wins in there as well. I’m proud of the fact that I kept that consistency over the last few years,” said Alker, who won the season opener for his lone win in 2024. “Just competing with Bernhard and everybody out here on the Champions tour, it’s just made me a better player. I’m very grateful for that.”
Alker joined a group of six golfers with more than one Cup title: Bernhard Langer, who won the 2024 Charles Schwab Cup Championship on Sunday for his 47th tournament title on the circuit, leads the way with six. Hale Irwin, Tom Lehman, Jay Haas, Tom Watson and Loren Roberts each have two. And now, so does Alker, who has won it twice in three seasons.
Alker picked up $276,000 for the week.
In addition to tournament prize money, there’s more cash on the line as part of the season-long Schwab race. The top five in the final points standings split $2.1 million that will be distributed in lump sum deposits into a Schwab brokerage accounts.
The breakdown:
1st: $1 million, Steven Alker
2nd: $500,00, Ernie Els
3rd: $300,000, Richard Green
4th: $200,000, Padraig Harrington
5th: $100,000, Stephen Ames
That money is considered bonus money and doesn’t count toward a player’s official career earnings.
How it works
Unlike the PGA Tour’s post-season – where the Tour Championship winner is declared the FedEx Cup champion – it’s possible to have someone win the final tournament while someone else captures the Schwab season title.
The winner of the tournament wins the Charles Schwab Cup Championship. The winner of the season-long race is the Charles Schwab Cup champion.
Only three golfers have won both in the same season.
The Charles Schwab Cup Championship is the biggest event on the PGA Tour Champions after the five majors. The event is the season finale where the golfer who enjoyed the most season-long success is crowned champion.
Unlike the PGA Tour’s post-season – where the Tour Championship winner is declared the FedEx Cup champion – it’s possible to have someone win the final tournament while someone else captures the Schwab season title.
The winner of the tournament wins the Charles Schwab Cup Championship. The winner of the season-long race is the Charles Schwab Cup champion.
Bernhard Langer, a 46-time winner on the PGA Tour Champions, holds a one-shot lead at the 2024 Charles Schwab Cup Challenge after a third-round 4-under 67.
Langer, 67, entered the week ranked 22nd in the Charles Schwab Cup points list, but is projected to end the season at No. 7 if he goes on to win at Phoenix Country Club in Arizona.
The German has done everything but win in 2024. In 15 starts, Langer finished inside the top-25 11 times, inside the top-10 seven times and was the runner-up at the Ascension Charity Classic.
The two-time Masters champion is looking for his first win since the 2023 U.S. Senior Open.
As for the points race, Steven Alker, who entered the week ranked No. 2 behind Ernie Els, has taken over the top spot. He’s shot rounds of 70-68-63 and is 12-under total, alone is second.
Els hasn’t played his best golf this week, sitting at 3 under after rounds of 69-70-71. Stewart Cink, the 36-hole leader, struggled throughout the day, eventually signing for a 4-over 75. He’s solo sixth at 8 under, five back.
The shot of the day went to Langer, who used this beauty on the 16th to make his fifth birdie on the round.
First place at the Schwab is good for $528,000, with $300,000 going to the runner-up, $252,000 for third place, $210,000 for fourth and $180,000 to fifth place. Everyone in the field earns a paycheck, with 35th place getting $17,250.
The winner of the tournament wins the Charles Schwab Cup Championship. The winner of the season-long race is the Charles Schwab Cup champion.
The 14th tee box at Phoenix Country Club can be quite the scare, especially from the tips.
PHOENIX — For mere mortals, the 14th tee box at Phoenix Country Club can be quite the scare, especially from the tips.
The par 4, which is playing at 438 yards for the 2024 Charles Schwab Cup Championship, runs alongside Osborn Road, with green scrim on the fence the only thing separating golfers from a steady stream of vehicles heading east and west.
It’d be quite easy for someone to slice a ball into traffic but that’s not something pros do. However, there is a significant change to the hole from a year ago and that’s the removal of a giant tree that was down the left side.
It provided just enough of an obstacle for the pros, but after another brutal summer of Arizona desert heat, that tree died and was removed.
Phoenix Country Club head professional Paul Griffin confirmed that a number of trees died last summer but it’s the loss of one on 14 that may alter things the most this week when it comes to strategy at the par-71 track that’s playing 6,860 yards.
The tree on 14 was about 265 yards from the tee and about 10 yards left of the center of the fairway.
“The one on 14 for me, trying to hit a draw in a left-to-right wind with out-of-bounds on the right was no fun,” said 2022 Charles Schwab Cup Championship winner Padraig Harrington, who enters this week fourth in the points race. “Now without that tree there we can hit a low straight one and you’re good to go.”
Steven Alker, won the tournament a year ago and the Cup two years ago, lives in Scottsdale and has played the course often.
“I think maybe the target line is maybe slightly more left than it used to be, but not really. You’re still just trying to hit a good drive out there and you still have to hit a good drive,” Alker said. “Knowing that tree’s not there, you’ve got more room on the left, kind of frees you up a little bit. Yeah, the same plan, straight down the middle.”
How it works
The Charles Schwab Cup Championship is a four-round, 72-hole, no-cut tournament.
Unlike the PGA Tour’s post-season – where the Tour Championship winner is declared the FedEx Cup champion – it’s possible to have someone win this event while someone else captures the Schwab season title.
The winner of the tournament wins the Charles Schwab Cup Championship. The winner of the season-long race is the Charles Schwab Cup champion.
As the circuit reaches the season finale, there are 10 golfers who have a chance to win the Cup.
PHOENIX — A year ago, Steve Stricker had such a commanding lead in the Charles Schwab Cup standings that he was able to skip all three of the playoff events on the PGA Tour Champions and still claim the Cup.
This time around, as the circuit reaches the season finale at the Charles Schwab Cup Championship there are still 10 golfers who have a chance to win it.
Of those 10, four are a long shot, as they each would need to win and have a lot of other things go their way. Of the top six, if any of them win the tournament at Phoenix Country Club, they’d claim the Cup.
And of those six, it’s most likely that it’ll come down to just two golfers.
Nonetheless, there’s certainly more drama heading into the week than in recent years.
How it works
The tournament is a four-round, 72-hole, no-cut event.
Unlike the PGA Tour’s post-season – where the Tour Championship winner is declared the FedEx Cup champion – it’s possible to have someone win this event while someone else captures the Schwab season title.
The winner of the tournament wins the Charles Schwab Cup Championship. The winner of the season-long race is the Charles Schwab Cup champion.
The 10 golfers in contention
If any of these players win the Charles Schwab Cup Championship, they will win the Charles Schwab Cup, regardless of where anyone else finishes:
Ernie Els
Steven Alker
Stephen Ames
Padraig Harrington
Y.E. Yang
Richard Green
Els has been atop the points standings for the last 12 tournaments.
Cup most likely comes down to two
The PGA Tour Champions stats crew reports that these are the “two most reasonable outcomes”:
Els, No. 1 in points and tied for most wins in 2024 with three, can claim the Cup by winning but it’s possible he could also clinch it by finishing second, third or fourth.
Alker can win the Cup with a win but also a second- or third-place finish but he would need Els to finish outside the top 5.
What some top contenders are saying
“For me to have led the money list for a long time is something, but it doesn’t mean anything if you don’t win the Charles Schwab Cup,” Els said. “So hey, if I end up not winning it, it will sting a little bit obviously because of my consistent play throughout the year but not winning it, you know.”
Alker won the tournament last year and the Cup two years ago.
“Defending a tournament is always great, too. You come here and, as I said, you just bring those vibes forward, bring them into the week. But that’s a good feeling to come here as defending champ,” he said.
Harrington won the last PGA Tour Champions event two weeks ago to put himself in the conversation. And he knows the scenarios well.
“If I or any, I think six of us, if we win outright, we win it outright, nobody can interfere,” he said. “Which is tough for Ernie [Els]. Ernie’s had a great year, he’s No. 1 and he hasn’t really got. … I won’t say he wasn’t got rewarded, but he needs to win as well this week. He’s not going to get away with not winning.”
Don’t count these guys out
Green is the lone golfer among the contenders without a tournament win in 2024.
These golfers have a chance at the Cup but each needs to win this week and have the contenders finish well down the leaderboard:
K.J. Choi
Ricardo Gonzalez
Paul Broadhurst
Jerry Kelly
The math is not working here
These golfers cannot mathematically win the Cup:
Stewart Cink
Doug Barron
Tim O’Neal
Retief Goosen
Thomas Bjorn
Darren Clarke
Ken Tanigawa
Alex Cejka
Rocco Mediate
Bob Estes
Bernhard Langer
Miguel Angel Jimenez
Ken Duke
Joe Durant
Tim Petrovic
Thongchai Jaidee
Greg Chalmers
Mark Hensby
Vijay Singh
Shane Bertsch
Hiroyuki Fujita
Rod Pampling
Stuart Appleby
Jason Caron
Cameron Percy
The top 36 qualified for Phoenix but there’s only 35 in the field, as Steve Stricker, No. 8 in the points ahead of the finale, is skipping the tournament.
As for Harrington, he won the tournament two years ago but this may be his best chance to claim the Cup.
“I know with the Charles Schwab Cup, I’m not getting any younger,” Harrington said. “You want to take it when you get a chance. There’s more good players coming out every year, so whatever advantage you have when you’re young, that’s being eroded. Yeah, you want to take it when you get the chance.”
Ernie Els heads to Phoenix Country Club at No. 1 in the points.
This story has been updated because an earlier version included an inaccuracy.
The field for the 2024 Charles Schwab Cup Championship was made official Friday afternoon. There were 36 who qualified but there will only be 35 heading to Phoenix Country Club, as Steve Stricker did not commit to the event.
Ernie Els, who tied for the most wins on the circuit this season with three, comes into the PGA Tour Champions season finale No. 1 in the points. He’s been No. 1 for the last three months.
Steven Alker is second. Stephen Ames and Padraig Harrington, each with three wins, are third and fourth, with Y.E. Yang checking in at No. 5. Alker and Yang each have one win.
Charles Schwab Cup rankings
Rank
Golfer
Events
Wins
1
Ernie Els
22
3
2
Steven Alker
21
1
3
Stephen Ames
23
3
4
Padraig Harrington
14
3
5
Y.E. Yang
26
1
6
Richard Green
25
0
7
K.J. Choi
24
1
9
Ricardo Gonzalez
24
1
10
Paul Broadhurst
23
2
11
Jerry Kelly
19
1
12
Stewart Cink
10
1
13
Doug Barron
18
1
14
Tim O’Neal
25
1
15
Retief Goosen
20
1
16
Thomas Bjorn
19
0
17
Darren Clarke
23
0
18
Ken Tanigawa
27
1
19
Alex Cejka
19
0
20
Rocco Mediate
18
1
21
Bob Estes
23
0
22
Bernhard Langer
15
0
23
Miguel Angel Jimenez
23
0
24
Ken Duke
26
0
25
Joe Durant
25
1
26
Tim Petrovic
25
0
27
Thongchai Jaidee
21
0
28
Greg Chalmers
19
0
29
Mark Hensby
23
0
30
Vijay Singh
21
0
31
Shane Bertsch
25
0
32
Hiroyuki Fujita
5
0
33
Rod Pampling
26
0
34
Stuart Appleby
24
0
35
Jason Caron
9
0
36
Cameron Percy
15
0
Richard Green is sixth, the highest ranking for anyone who has yet to win in 2024.
Other notables in the field include Miguel Angel Jimenez, Jerry Kelly, Bernhard Langer, Retief Goosen and Darren Clarke as well as three first-time winners making their Charles Schwab Cup Championship debut: Ricardo Gonzalez, Stewart Cink and Tim O’Neal.
Jason Caron, No. 35th in the points, is a full-time club pro in New York who has earned his card for the 2025 PGA Tour Champions season. He last had status on the PGA Tour in 2009.
How it works
The tournament is a four-round, 72-hole, no-cut tournament.
Unlike the PGA Tour’s post-season – where the Tour Championship winner is declared the FedEx Cup champion – it’s possible to have someone win this event while someone else captures the Schwab season title.
The winner of the tournament wins the Charles Schwab Cup Championship. The winner of the season-long race is the Charles Schwab Cup champion.
Only three golfers have won both in the same season:
Bernhard Langer: 2010, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2018
Tom Lehman: 2012
Kevin Sutherland: 2017
Charles Schwab Cup Championship winners
Year
Winner
2023
Steven Alker
2022
Padraig Harrington
2021
Phil Mickelson
2020
Kevin Sutherland
2019
Jeff Maggert
2018
Vijay Singh
2017
Kevin Sutherland
2016
Paul Goydos
2015
Billy Andrade
2014
Tom Pernice Jr.
2013
Fred Couples
2012
Tom Lehman
2011
Jay Don Blake
2010
John Cook
2009
John Cook
2008
Andy Bean
2007
Jim Thorpe
2006
Jim Thorpe
2005
Tom Watson
2004
Mark McNulty
2003
Jim Thorpe
2002
Tom Watson
2001
Bob Gilder
2000
Tom Watson
1999
Gary McCord
1998
Hale Irwin
1997
Gil Morgan
1996
Jay Sigel
1995
Jim Colbert
1994
Raymond Floyd
1993
Simon Hobday
1992
Raymond Floyd
1991
Mike Hill
1990
Mike Hill
Charles Schwab Cup champions
Year
Name
2023
Steve Stricker
2022
Steven Alker
2020-21
Bernhard Langer
2019
Scott McCarron
2018
Bernhard Langer
2017
Kevin Sutherland
2016
Bernhard Langer
2015
Bernhard Langer
2014
Bernhard Langer
2013
Kenny Perry
2012
Tom Lehman
2011
Tom Lehman
2010
Bernhard Langer
2009
Loren Roberts
2008
Jay Haas
2007
Loren Roberts
2006
Jay Haas
2005
Tom Watson
2004
Hale Irwin
2003
Tom Watson
2002
Hale Irwin
2001
Allen Doyle
Because of his regular-season dominance a year ago, Stricker won the season-long title without having to enter any of the three postseason events.
How to watch
The Charles Schwab Cup Championship will have four days of live coverage, with two hours each day on Golf Channel, from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. ET.
Prize money payouts
First place is good for $528,000, with $300,000 going to the winner, $252,000 for third place, $210,000 for fourth and $180,000 to fifth place. Everyone in the field earns a paycheck, with 35th place getting $17,250.
“Every record out here started at 50. They should never lower it. That’s what it is and what it should always be”
(Editor’s note: This is the second part of a two-part series examining the PGA Tour Champions and its eligibility age from Golfweek’s PGA Tour senior writer Adam Schupak. The first part of the series, on Tiger Woods and his potential involvement in the PGA Tour Champions, is linked here.)
Carl Pettersson is stuck in what many PGA Tour professionals over the age of 40 refer to as no man’s land.
Pettersson, 46, aka the Swedish Pancake, has made 443 career Tour starts, won five times, reached as high as No. 23 in the world in 2006 and earned more than $22 million on the PGA Tour, but injured a wrist in 2016 and has cashed a check just once since October 2017. He’s made just 10 starts in the last six years since turning 40 and underwent surgery on both hips a year ago – three months apart – to repair torn labrums that had limited his mobility.
“I’m just getting back into the swing of things,” he said during a recent phone interview with Golfweek. “I’d like to make a run on the Champions Tour in a few years.”
That is a common refrain of pro golfers as they approach the half-century mark. In no other profession do workers welcome turning 50 more than PGA Tour pros, who blow out all those candles and instantly become eligible for golf’s great mulligan, PGA Tour Champions, the 50-and-older circuit. But getting to an age that often sets off a mid-life crisis in others and transitioning to a life of (mostly) no cuts and suddenly being one of the longer players again can be tricky business. As the Tour becomes younger and deeper, it’s become harder than ever to keep a card and remain relevant after age 40, demoting some pros to eke out a living on the Korn Ferry Tour, others to become talking heads on TV or, in Pettersson’s case, Uber Dad around town.
Is 50 still the right age for eligibility to PGA Tour Champions? It’s a question that has surfaced every few years since the senior circuit came into fruition in 1980. Opinions are sharp and divided.
“It could possibly help both tours,” Jeff Sluman, 66, said. “Get some more youth in there, more access for the Korn Ferry Tour pros on the PGA Tour.”
“Every record out here started at 50,” Scott McCarron, 58, said. “They should never lower it. That’s what it is and what it should always be.”
When Golfweek asked PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan if he felt age 50 still is the right criteria to become eligible for the PGA Tour Champions and has there been any consideration of lowering that number, he essentially brushed the question aside for another day.
“The only way I would respond to that is that 50 has worked very well, and when you look at the impact you can have by lowering the age level and thinking about who is going to start playing on PGA Tour Champions versus continuing to play here competitively and thinking about those that are on PGA Tour Champions today and the records that are there, it’s complicated,” Monahan said. “But we’re dealing with a lot of complexity, so that’s something that we’ll continue to look at.”
Four years ago, before COVID-19 or LIV Golf emerged to focus their attention, members of the PGA Tour policy board pushed for PGA Tour Champions to evaluate if the time was right to lower the age of eligibility. One suggestion was to staircase the age down one year at a time until it would be lowered to 45 to avoid the shock and make it more palatable for current members of the senior circuit. The reality is there’s no equitable way to do it – someone is going to feel as if he’s been screwed.
Justin Ray, head of content at Twenty-first Group, provided several stats that confirm what seems obvious by now: the PGA Tour is getting younger. From 2000 through the 2012-13 season, 18.2 percent of PGA Tour winners were age 40 or older. Since 2013-14, that number is significantly lower — 8.4 percent.
From 2000 through 2011, there were nine different seasons where 15 percent or more of the wins on Tour went to players age 40 or older. There has not been a single season where 15 percent or more were age 40 or older since.
In the 2021-22 season, there was only one player in his 40s all season to win — Chez Reavie at the Barracuda Championship, and he was 40 years old. Since 1990, there have been four seasons where there were two or fewer winners on the Tour age 40-plus — wait for it — two of them are 2020 (2 wins) and 2022 (1 win) and this season could be headed to a third. Camilo Villegas, 41 at the time, Justin Rose, 42, and Lucas Glover, who won twice at age 43, were the only 40-somethings to lift a trophy last season. Just one player 40 or older has tasted victory so far this season: Brice Garnett, 40, at the Puerto Rico Open, an opposite-field event with a diluted field.
In fact, since Phil Mickelson’s win at the 2021 PGA Championship at age 50, only seven events have been won by players 40 or older – a ratio of just 4.8 percent. Nobody older than 43 has won during that span. Stewart Cink won at 47 (Sept. 2020 and April 2021) and Brian Gay at 48 (Nov. 2020) but they have been the exception to the rule.
This season, there were eight players age 45 or older that were fully exempt on the Tour, including Matt Kuchar (46), Zach Johnson (48) and Scott Gutschewski (47) and only one of them, Charley Hoffman at No. 82, is currently in the top 125. The trend of younger winners and 40-somethings trying to hold on to status for dear life as they count the days to 50 has been hard to ignore and was the impetus for the PGA Tour policy board approaching the Champions Tour policy board to investigate the issue. A study was conducted that found that neither sponsors nor players were in favor of it.
So, the idea of lowering the eligibility age died on the vine.
James Hahn, 42, one of the policy board members at the time, recalled this being the final verdict: “They said, ‘We don’t want PGA Tour rejects. If you’re still competitive on the PGA Tour (in your late 40s) and have status, why would you want to play on the Champions Tour?’ ”
Indeed, the players who do move the needle tend to stay competitive longer and try to delay their transition to the senior circuit as long as possible for a simple reason: Nearly all of the Champions Tour’s regular-season purses are approximately $3 million, or less than first prize at a PGA Tour Signature event. It’s a case of simple economics why a player such as Cink continues to spend the majority of his time on the PGA Tour despite having turned 51. But Hahn, for one, questioned how much the members of the Champions Tour policy board – at the time David Toms, Paul Goydos and Joe Durant, who had each earned more than $7 million since turning 50 – were able to separate their own self-interest with what’s best for the future of the senior circuit.
“We’re in a room full of hypocrites,” Hahn said. “Joe Durant lost his card and then went on the Champions Tour. Now he’s on the board. You don’t want a PGA Tour reject but you were a Tour reject.”
Hahn said he supports seeing the eligibility age reduced to 47 or 48 – calling 45 “too young” – but claimed that Durant, Goydos and Toms didn’t want younger competition fearing they’d have instant success “and take money out of their pockets.”
“They don’t want that to happen,” Hahn said. “They are looking out for themselves and their friends more than for their business. There wasn’t a chance to pass the regulation of lowering the age because the people on their board are irrational and don’t see the benefit, or if they do see the benefit, it’s at the expense of them and their friends and affecting their personal income. After this conversation, it was put quickly on the sideburner because we didn’t want to have conflict between our boards.”
Kevin Kisner, 40, who served on the board at the time and supported lowering the eligibility age, agreed with Hahn’s assessment saying, “It’s dead in the water for now.”
To those on the Champions Tour, the attitude can best be summed up by the expression if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.
“We looked at it extensively as an organization and we looked at it in concert with the player directors on the regular tour. We were open to it because to be honest with you there’s been some push to lower it,” PGA Tour Champions President Miller Brady said. “My response to that after looking at it, the guys that are going to move the needle out here, when they’re 48 the big names are still competitive on the regular tour, and they’re not going to come out here. At 48 I think Jim Furyk was still ranked in the top 10 in the world. I don’t need to lower the age for other journeymen, that doesn’t help us sell our product and it may have pushed out a Tom Kite or Ben Crenshaw. While Kite may not have been competitive anymore, he was fantastic in the pro-am and he’s a Hall of Famer. So I don’t need to bring in a 48-year-old who’s going to push out a big name. Now I may be told I have to do that at some point. But at least right now, everyone appreciates that it’s not something we should do.”
But the problem remains that being sentenced to “no man’s land” is happening a lot earlier for pros than ever before. More and more players are biding time in their 40s.
For Woody Austin, 60, who has banked more than $9 million on the senior circuit, the question is rather simple: “Do you get to collect anything else at any other endeavor at 45? I think not. It doesn’t need to get younger,” he said.
Austin blames equipment and the emphasis on the power game for dumbing down the ability to make a living on the Tour.
“I get that because the game has changed and these guys are better at 20 because the game is so frigging easy now you want to make it easier for the guys who get kicked out at 40, but no. You’re not a senior at 40 or 45,” he said. “Pretty soon the high school kids are going to be professionals if they keep making the game so easy. These guys aren’t any better at 19 than they were back in the day; you don’t have to know golf anymore. All they know is clubhead speed and go hit it. We had to know everything, they have to know nothing. Stop making it so easy and you wouldn’t have so many good 20-year-olds.”
Interestingly enough, Steve Stricker, 57, who led the Champions Tour money list with nearly $4 million in earnings last season and thus with the most to lose with an age change, has been one of the leading proponents of lowering the age. Stricker, who hosts the American Family Insurance Championship in his native Wisconsin, recalled being in the equipment trailer during a rain delay at his event in Madison in 2022 with Brady and discussing lowering the eligibility age.
“Wouldn’t 47 be a great time with Tiger about to turn 47 shortly?” he asked at the time. “It would boost this tour. We’re losing Lee Westwood and some other LIV guys. So I texted Tiger and he responds right away. No chance. When he comes out here he wants to compare his time out here to the greats – to Bernhard Langer and Hale Irwin. That’s him, right? Taking those records and having them in a spot where he can try to erase those records.”
But Stricker remains resolute that lowering the age would only strengthen the senior circuit.
“I still think we can change it to 48,” Stricker continued. “That doesn’t mean Tiger has to start at 48. But let Carl Pettersson come out and play and stay relevant. I support that concept, I really do. A couple years younger, somewhere in that range 45-50, 45 is a little aggressive but I’m thinking the 47-48 age would be a good boost for us. I think it is even more important now with some LIV guys going away. If we lower the age, there will be 10 more Steven Alkers that are 48 and hungry to play.”
That touches on another future concern: Will players be motivated to play into their 50s?
While Alker is the model for the journeyman making good from the fountain of youth — he earned $841,849 for his career on the PGA Tour and more than $8 million and counting since joining the Champions Tour — Hunter Mahan, 42, could be the archetype of the modern star player. He won six times and earned more than $30 million in prize money before walking away from the game in 2021 to spend more time at home with his family and began coaching high school golf.
When he joined the Tour, Kenny Perry, Vijay Singh and Jay Haas experienced some of their best years after 40. Before them, Jack Nicklaus, Lee Trevino and Raymond Floyd all won majors in their 40s.
“I don’t see that happening again,” Mahan predicted. “The idea of a 40-year-old being the Player of the Year seems impossible. Guys are going to be like ‘I have so much money, do I want to grind at this at 45 and travel all the time?’ Some guys will, but it’s not going to be the game where guys play into their 60s.”
Davis Love III concurred that careers are trending shorter and the eligibility age may need to be lowered down the road.
“You might get to a point where guys have made so much money that they don’t care about playing at 50,” he said. “If someone had my career starting now, they’d make $620 million. If a guy does that by their 40s, why would he want to come out here and play? Our purses are staying the same.”
But that hasn’t stopped Pettersson from counting the days until he’s eligible for one of the two exemptions for players aged 48-49 into Korn Ferry Tour fields every week based on his position on the career money list and likely at least a year of exempt status on PGA Tour Champions when he turns 50. Does Pettersson think 45 is the right age?
“I see both sides, where 45 makes a lot of sense but everyone else has had to wait to 50 so keep it at 50,” he said.
It seems inevitable that the data supporting lowering the age will become so convincing that the powers-that-be will have a hard time sticking their head in the sand for too long. Does being two months away from turning 47 and unlikely to benefit from an age reduction color his opinion? Pettersson chuckled and said …
Ames eagled the par-5 sixth and par-4 13th at TPC Sugarloaf on Sunday.
Two of the seven events so far in 2024 have been won by a Steve: Steven Alker at the season opening Mitsubishi Electric Championship in Hawaii in January and Stephen Ames, who won the Chubb Classic in February.
Now, make it a third.
This follows a 2023 in which 13 of the 28 events were won by some form of a Steve, including Alker, Ames, Steve Stricker and Steve Flesch.
This week at the 2024 Mitsubishi Electric Classic at TPC Sugarloaf in Duluth, Georgia, it was Ames riding the strenth of two eagles in the final round to win by four shots over Paul Broadhurst and Doug Barron.
On the sixth hole Sunday, which is his 60th birthday, Ames grabbed a share of the lead after holing out for his first eagle of the day.
Ames took a three-shot lead on 13 when he carded his second eagle of the day after driving the green on the 310-yard par 4 to get to 14 under. From there, he had two birdies and two bogeys to close with a 67 to claim his eighth win but more impressively his sixth in his last 29 starts on the tour.
“Two reasons to celebrate tonight,” Ames said, noting the win on his birthday, which is also his third in this event. “The first day wasn’t that bad, I hit two bad shots, made two doubles. It was like, you know what, it felt good, I didn’t really kick myself down at all. Then I came out the next day and I was like it was a little calm unlike today and I just played golf and didn’t make any mistakes and I made eight birdies. So that just kind of vaulted me straight back up the board there. I was like, hey, now I give myself an opportunity and I took the opportunity in hand, which was nice.”
K.J. Choi and Steven Alker tied for fifth at 9 under.
Chip shots
Broadhurst, who led by a shot after 36 holes, was seeking to be the first to win back-to-back tournaments on the PGA Tour Champions since Steve Stricker won consecutive majors in May of 2023 and also the first to win back-to-back weeks on the Champions tour when Bernhard Langer did it in 2017.
Langer, out since February after tearing his Achilles playing pickleball, has announced his return to the Champions tour will come next week at the Insperity Invitational near Houston.
Jay Haas, 70, beat his age by three shots with a 5-under 67 in the second round. It’s the fourth time he’s shot his age or better during the 2024 season.
John Daly, not in the field this week, turned 58 on Sunday.
Work is what’s enabled Alker to become one of golf’s greatest second acts.
With Bernhard Langer’s quest to become the first golfer to win three consecutive Chubb Classic championships derailed by an Achilles injury, Steven Alker’s quest for his own three-peat takes center stage this weekend in Naples.
The 52-year-old New Zealand native will go for his third consecutive PGA Tour Champions victory after capturing January’s season-opening Mitsubishi Electric Championship at Hualalai and the 2023 season-ending Charles Schwab Cup Championship last November. He would become the 10th player in Champions Tour history to win three straight events.
“Obviously the wins build confidence, so I’m just feeling good about my game,” Alker said Wednesday at Tiburón Golf Club. “I’ve worked on my game and my swing, and just everything is good, kind of where I want it. This is the strongest field we’ve had for a while, so just got some work to do and go low.”
Work is what’s enabled Alker to transform what was once a middling pro career into what’s rapidly becoming one of golf’s greatest second acts. Alker earned his PGA Tour card three times but never recorded a top-10 finish in a PGA event. He won four events on the Korn Ferry Tour but also endured a stretch where he missed the cut in 21 consecutive starts.
As he approached 50, Alker stayed in excellent physical condition and continued to work on his game in preparation for the Champions Tour. After becoming eligible in July 2021, he played his way into his first Champions event via a Monday Qualifier, which launched a run of six consecutive top-10 finishes.
Since then, he’s been one of the senior tour’s most successful players. In 2022, Alker was named the Champions Player of the Year after winning four times and finishing top-3 in 13 of his 23 starts. Overall, he’s ended up first (8) or second (10) in exactly one-third of his 54 Champions events with 40 top-10 finishes.
Along the way, Alker’s become a golfing example of the power of perseverance.
“It just goes to show if you just kind of keep dreaming and just keep chasing it then yeah, good things can happen,” he said. “I’ve been around the game a long time and gained a lot of experience. If I can pass some of those experiences on to help people speed up the process, all the better.”
Alker, who carded top-10 finishes in his two previous Chubb Classic appearances, said while the long layoff between his recent wins has been challenging from a momentum standpoint, it also has some benefits.
“It’s a little bit tough with the start-and-stop schedule at the moment, but I think having that break rather than just mentally being kind of worn down … that’s probably a good thing,” he said.
Langer, the winningest player in PGA Tour Champions history, congratulated Alker on the 18th green following his victory last month in Hawaii. Alker said he’s picked up a few key lessons competing alongside the legendary Hall-of-Famer the past three seasons.
“He’s always just striving to get his game in shape every week to try and have a chance to win,” Alker said. ”He just does that very well.
“He’s got everything, and mentally he’s very strong, so that’s a good thing to learn from, too.”
Alker hopes to utilize those lessons gleaned from Langer at this year’s Chubb Classic to make a little history of his own.
He wrestled second place away from defending champion and 2023 Player of the Year Steve Stricker.
If his first start of the new year is any indication, former University of Texas star Harrison Frazar might be in for a mighty big 2024.
The Dallas native, who captured his first PGA Tour Champions victory at the end of 2023 in the Dominion Energy Charity Classic at the Country Club of Virginia when he edged Richard Green in a playoff, picked up where he left off last week at the season-opening Mitsubishi Electric Championship at Hualalai.
Although New Zealander Steven Alker cruised to a four-stroke win, Frazar came through in the clutch as he needed a birdie on the tournament’s final hole to wrestle second away from defending champion and 2023 Player of the Year Steve Stricker. His reward was a handsome $200,000 check for being runner-up.
For Frazar, whose lone victory on the PGA Tour came in Memphis, the win in October has been a big boost.
“I’ve always had confidence in my ability to play, but doing that in October has given me confidence to know that I can close it when it matters,” Frazar said in Hawaii. “These guys out here, they’re called champions because they know how to win, they’re not going to make mistakes. I need to not make mistakes. So yeah, I feel like I can do it.”
Although his PGA Tour was plagued by numerous injuries, Frazar still played in 409 events on Tour, posting 19 top-5 finishes and cracking the Top 10 on 37 occasions. Not bad for a guy who was an honorable mention All-American three different times while with Texas, but didn’t plan to pursue a pro career until fellow Longhorn Mark Brooks convinced him to do so.
Of course, playing in Hawaii also isn’t a bad way to spend a week in January.