Rory McIlroy isn't flip-flopping on
this issue: He won't be playing the PGA Tour Champions
[March 13, 2025]
By DOUG FERGUSON
Rory McIlroy has been known to take some sharp U-turns on his
opinions over the last few years, particularly as it relates to the
PGA Tour and LIV Golf. He was willing to state another position
Wednesday as strong as any.
He is not playing the PGA Tour Champions when he turns 50.
“Absolutely not,” McIlroy said with a smile.
This came up during a discussion on how difficult it can be to
retire from golf given the nature of the game that allows players to
leave when they want. McIlroy would like to retire even when he
still can win. “With a little bit left in the tank,” he said.
That's when someone brought up the 50-and-older circuit, and McIlroy
drew the line.
“Look, I've said a lot of absolutes in my time that I've walked
back,” he said. “But I do not envision playing Champions Tour golf.
Something has went terribly wrong if I have to compete at golf at
50.”
White House memories
Adam Scott had no idea when he agreed to join the Player Advisory
Council for the first time just over a year ago that it would take
him to the White House to meet with the president.
Scott was in meetings with PGA Tour Commissioner and President
Donald Trump on Feb. 4 and Feb. 20 as the tour tries to come to an
agreement with the Saudi backers of LIV Golf.
He was asked what memory he took from the experience.

“It was obvious to me very quickly when they were setting up for the
Israeli delegation right after our meeting — putting the Israeli
flag and the U.S. flag and getting that room ready — that our
conversation was pretty low in the importance of what was happening
that day,” he said.
“And really, the president had far more important things to focus
on,” he said. “And I encouraged him to go and do that well for
everyone’s sake after our meeting.”
LIV at The Players
Laurie Canter is a European tour player, a 36-year-old from England
making his debut in The Players Championship. He stands out from the
other 24 newcomers to the TPC Sawgrass.
He's the first LIV Golf player in the PGA Tour's premier event.
Canter played on the Saudi-backed circuit when it started in 2022
because the first event in the U.K. was right up the road for him.
He was an alternate in 2023, and filled in one more time in 2024 in
Las Vegas in early February. He pulled in just over $5.3 million.
And then he was back to the European tour, playing some of his best
golf. He won the European Open last year, he won in Bahrain to start
this year, and his playoff loss in the South African Open enabled
him to crack the top 50 in the world ranking to get into The
Players.
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Rory McIlroy, of Northern Ireland, hits his tee shot on the sixth
hole during a practice round at The Players Championship golf
tournament, Wednesday, March 12, 2025, in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla.
(AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)

The PGA Tour has a policy that anyone playing in
LIV must wait a year before competing in a tournament, and Canter
last played one year and one month ago.
“No, I don't feel like a trailblazer,” he said with a laugh.
What helped Canter was a poor year in 2021. He had
conditional status on the DP World Tour in Europe, meaning whenever
he played a LIV event, he had no trouble getting a release from the
tour because he wasn't eligible for the tournaments that week.
This is a big week for him, because staying in the top 50 in three
weeks will get him into the Masters. This will be his first regular
PGA Tour event, and he would welcome more.
“I think anyone who plays golf would,” he said. “Last week (Bay
Hill) I watched and where those signature events are going, if you
could play well enough to where you've got your world ranking where
you've got signature events and majors ... what a year that is for a
golfer to play those venues with those golfers for that amount of
money. It's incredible.”
The purse this week is $25 million.
Caddie ace
JJ Jakovac earned a piece of history Wednesday at The Players
Championship. The caddie for Collin Morikawa made the first
hole-in-one on the island-green 17th hole during the annual caddie
competition.
Jakovac used a pitching wedge from 131 yards, the ball landing
perfectly to catch the slope down to the front pin.
This wasn't a fluke swing. Jakovac played in the Palmer Cup in 2004
— he was roommates with Ryan Moore, for whom he later caddied — and
won two NCAA Division II titles while playing at Cal State-Chico.
The caddie competition started to honor Tom Watson’s longtime caddie
and friend, Bruce Edwards, who died in 2004 from ALS, also known as
Lou Gehrig’s Disease.
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