Did Vijay Singh just unlock another PGA Tour season, too?

Vijay Singh's surprising PGA Tour return opened another door, too - and raised intriguing questions about Life Members and loopholes on Tour.

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Vijay Singh at the 2026 Sony Open.Getty Images

Vijay Singh’s surprising Sony Open start got plenty of attention last week, first because of how he got there (deploying a career money-list exemption) and then because of how he played once he arrived (T40, tying or beating two-thirds of the PGA Tour’s season-starting field). It was an ode to his career longevity and an inspiring stand against time.

But did he unlock another PGA Tour season in the process?

Maybe.

And it’ll be interesting to see if the PGA Tour reacts.

Singh’s Sony Swan Song

First, a word on Singh’s Sony start: The soon-to-be 63-year-old was able to tee it up at Waialae Country Club because any player inside the top 50 on the all-time money list is given a one-time, one-season all-access card to a season of their choosing. Singh, who is No. 8 on that all-time list (No. 6 if you don’t include LIV guys) used his top-50 waiver for 2026 and played the Sony, where he became one of the Tour’s oldest-ever cut-makers and warmed up for this week’s PGA Tour Champions opener a few islands over at Hualalai.

It was also potentially his final chance to play a tournament he’s fond of (and won in 2005); Sony’s sponsorship runs out this year and the Hawaiian swing faces an uncertain future on the PGA Tour.

Now Singh could play plenty more this year, if he so chooses; his category makes him effectively eligible for every full-field event. But he’s unlikely to do so. In an interview with Sports Illustrated’s Max Schreiber he suggested he’ll play no more than a couple in preparation for walking Augusta National.

"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,” he told SI.

Singh said a couple other interesting things in the interview, too. “I went in there to play well, to compete,” he said, pushing back on the idea that he was a field-filler. “It's the first time I walked 18 [holes] in a long time,” he added, a reminder of the perks of the Champs tour. And then there was this: “I got the lifetime exemption … [and] I should get my exemption back for next year, so if I wanted to play next year, I could.”

That caught my eye. Whoa - next year, too?

What’s a “Life Member,” anyway?

A little digging unearthed more specifics around lifetime membership on the PGA Tour; let’s check ’em out. When a player wins his 20th PGA Tour event, he joins an elite group called Life Members who have access to PGA Tour fields via special category. Singh has 34 wins in all, the most of any non-American in history. But to remain eligible for Life Member access you need to do two things:

1. Play at least one PGA Tour event the previous year

2. Maintain a scoring average within three strokes of field average for the rounds you play

And here’s where things get interesting. Singh’s four-day average at Sony was 68.75, actually better than the 69.26 field average. That means he’s good on the first criteria and three-and-a-half shots clear on the second. If he didn’t play at all the rest of the year? That’s right, he would be eligible as a Life Member for 2027. On the other hand, if he plays poorly at the Masters or in other spot starts here and there, his scoring average could balloon and he’d play his way out of eligibility for 2027.

Who else could this potentially affect? Fewer golfers than you’d think. The 20-plus group is rarified air; just 34 men have ever crossed the threshold and just 15 of them are alive. Of those 15, only six-ish are active players on any tour, and two of them (Phil Mickelson and Dustin Johnson) play on LIV. Nobody played out of the Life Member category in 2025.

That leaves us with four names: Tiger Woods, who hasn’t played in a while but has his own category (80 wins gets you special access) should he try to return; Rory McIlroy, who has plenty of eligibility at the moment (being reigning Masters champ will do that); Davis Love III, who plays a partial PGA Tour Champions schedule plus the occasional PGA Tour start (he’s been serving as player-host at the RSM Classic); and Singh.

This is a fun oddity of the Tour more than it is any sort of problem; we’re talking about two players in their 60s who are legends of the Tour and wouldn’t be interested in playing many events, anyway. There aren’t boatloads of pros who will suddenly be 20-time winners, either; Scottie Scheffler (19) could get there this week and Justin Thomas (16) is within shouting distance but nobody else from the current competitive set is within five. Still, in an era where the Tour is cutting back on the sizes of its fields and its fully exempt card-holders, every available start is under scrutiny.

Opening the side door

What’s strange and fascinating about this particular eligibility is how quickly it can be unlocked. For instance, when Love played the RSM last fall he shot 71-76 and missed the cut. Scores were low at Sea Island that week (67.78 and 67.92 stroke averages on the courses he played each day) but if he’d shot two-under 34 instead of four-over 40 on his second nine Friday and posted 71-70 he would have suddenly regained Life Member eligibility for the entire 2026 season.

That would probably be no big deal. Golf fans love Davis Love III, and would he actually add any other starts anyway? But it’s worth thinking through the implications of the rule. A slightly more plausible case: If Phil Mickelson stops playing LIV Golf at some point, serves some sort of PGA Tour suspension or an agreement is reached between the two sides, a few good rounds at the majors could have him back on Tour in the Life Member category.

To push the boundaries of your imagination, here’s a scenario that won’t happen but theoretically could: If 70-year-old Greg Norman (20 career PGA Tour wins) qualified (or received some sort of fence-mending special exemption) back into the Open Championship and hovered around the cut line, suddenly he’d be eligible to play the Tour full-time again, too. (In fairness, serving as commissioner of a rival startup league may trigger a different bylaw. Let’s get this thing back on the rails.)

Closing the side door

What’s the point of all of this? Mostly that, as the Tour redesigns its future, there are little side-doors everywhere that they’ll have to decide whether to leave ajar or lock for good.

It’s easy to laugh at the idea that somebody has to explain this sort of thing to Brian Rolapp, the Tour’s new CEO, who comes from the NFL and has no real golf background. It’s safe to say no pro-football equivalent exists to a 63-year-old side-dooring his way back into a PGA Tour card, which may violate each of Rolapp’s three stated principles of parity, scarcity and simplicity. And as the Tour rethinks its schedule - and its eligibility criteria - for 2027 and beyond, it’s easy to imagine this sort of category getting more formally restricted.

There’s plenty to like about the direction of the Tour as it seeks to get bigger, and splashier, and more efficient. Rolapp is already leading that charge with Woods and others by his side. But there will be some quirks we’ll miss as it happens, some intriguing subplots, like the thrill of Singh teeing it up on Tour at his pleasure - and out-maneuvering golfers half his age when he does.

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