At 62 years old, Vijay Singh returned to the PGA Tour at the Sony Open in Hawaii, using a rare career money-list exemption to secure his spot. He finished tied for 40th place with rounds of 68-70-68-69, outperforming two-thirds of the field. His performance has sparked discussions about potential eligibility for another full season via Life Member status.
Vijay Singh, the former world No. 1 and holder of 34 PGA Tour victories—the most by any non-American—made a notable comeback at the Sony Open at Waialae Country Club. Ranked No. 8 on the all-time career earnings list with $71.2 million (No. 6 excluding LIV Golf players), Singh invoked a one-time exemption available to top-50 earners, granting access to a full season of his choice. He selected 2026 and promptly made the cut, posting a four-round scoring average of 68.75, which surpassed the field's 69.26 average by nearly three and a half strokes.
This achievement not only highlighted Singh's enduring skill and fitness but also raised questions about PGA Tour eligibility rules for Life Members. Life Members, an elite group requiring at least 20 PGA Tour wins, gain special access to events provided they play at least one tournament the prior year and maintain a scoring average within three strokes of the field. With just 34 players ever reaching 20 wins and only 15 alive today, few are affected. Active possibilities include Singh, Davis Love III, Tiger Woods, and Rory McIlroy, though most like Phil Mickelson and Dustin Johnson are on LIV Golf.
In an interview with Sports Illustrated's Max Schreiber, Singh emphasized his competitive intent: "I went in there to play well, to compete." He noted the physical challenge, adding, "It’s the first time I walked 18 [holes] in a long time," contrasting with the cart-allowed PGA Tour Champions. Looking ahead, he plans limited starts: "Maybe if I’m fit enough to walk the Masters because that’s a hilly golf course, I may play San Antonio a week before that and Phoenix is a pretty flat golf course, so I could play that."
Singh's strong showing potentially restores his Life Member exemption for 2027, as he met both criteria at Sony. However, additional poor performances could jeopardize this. The PGA Tour, under new CEO Brian Rolapp, faces scrutiny over such "side doors" amid efforts to streamline fields and eligibility for 2027 onward, balancing legacy access with modern efficiency.