Golf Legend Vijay Singh, 62, Makes Inspiring PGA Tour Comeback
Three-time major champion Vijay Singh is proving age is just a number by returning to the PGA Tour at 62, thanks to a special rule rewarding his incredible $71 million career. The Fijian legend's dedication to the game continues to inspire generations of golfers.
When Vijay Singh first stepped onto a PGA Tour course in 1992, he was a relatively unknown 29-year-old from Fiji playing on a sponsor's exemption. Fast forward more than three decades, and the now 62-year-old is preparing for an inspiring return to golf's most competitive stage, proving that passion and dedication know no age limits.
Singh's remarkable career speaks for itself: 34 PGA Tour victories, an astounding 80% made-cut percentage, and over $71 million in career earnings, placing him sixth on the all-time money list. Those impressive numbers have earned him something special, a little-known PGA Tour rule that allows players among the top 50 all-time earners to regain full membership for one season of their choosing. This year, Singh is taking advantage of that opportunity, and golf fans couldn't be more excited.
Beginning with the Sony Open in Honolulu next week, Singh will be back competing on Tour fairways for the first time since 2021. While some might view this as a nostalgic victory lap, Singh's continued dedication to the game tells a different story. Even at 62, he maintains his legendary work ethic, known throughout his career for marathon practice sessions that younger players could barely match.
His recent performance on the PGA Tour Champions circuit shows he's still got game. With an average driving distance of 292.4 yards, Singh ranked 16th among his peers last year and notched six top-10 finishes. He's approaching this return with realistic expectations but unwavering determination, qualities that made him great in the first place.
Why This Inspires
Singh's comeback represents something beautiful about golf and sports in general: the celebration of excellence earned over a lifetime. While he'll be competing against players four decades his junior, his presence on Tour serves as a living masterclass for younger competitors. His story reminds us that greatness isn't just measured in recent victories but in sustained excellence and love for the craft.
The Tour spokesperson confirmed Singh will be eligible for the vast majority of full-field events in 2026, giving him plenty of opportunities to showcase the skills that made him one of golf's all-time greats. Can he still compete at the highest level? That's the exciting question everyone will be watching to answer.
Singh joins an elite group of athletes who've defied Father Time. Sam Snead made a PGA Tour cut at 67, while Jack Nicklaus and Fred Funk both did so at 64. On the right course, on the right week, there's every reason to believe Singh could surprise us all.
Whether he's making cuts or not, you can bet Singh will be giving it everything he has. And if things don't go as planned on the course, you'll probably find him right where he's always been: on the practice range, grinding away with the same dedication that carried him from that first tournament appearance in 1992 to his place among golf's immortals.
His return is a beautiful reminder that in golf, as in life, it's never too late for one more great chapter.
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Based on reporting by Yahoo Sports
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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