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Baby Boom: The game’s best players are younger than ever, and the stats back it up

pga tour players ages

In the 2017 PGA Tour season, the youngest winner, at age 21, was Si Woo Kim. It was also the season that Rod Pampling won at 47, and 50-year-old Steve Stricker pocketed a million in earnings. Is there a youth movement on Tour…or not?

The problem with looking only at winners is the variability that leads to spurious results. Example: In 2009, at age 59, Tom Watson could have become the oldest winner of the Open Championship. Instead, Stewart Cink’s playoff victory over Watson reduced the winner’s age by 20 years. So rather than use winners to gauge the Tour’s youthfulness, I look at the top players in each season based on total strokes gained, a measure of season-long performance excellence that accounts for course difficulty and the strength of the field.

pga tour players ages

Then the youthquake hit. From 2004 through 2017, the average age of the top 100 players plummeted from 36.5 to 33.0 years. This run began with the success enjoyed by young-gun players like Justin Rose, Rory McIlroy, Jason Day and, later, Jordan Spieth, Justin Thomas and others.

pga tour players ages

This season, all eyes will be on 42-year-old Tiger Woods. That will no doubt include the sights of a new breed of killers taking aim at their aging hero.

Peter Kostis and Gary McCord at Pinehurst

124th U.S. Open

Pinehurst No. 2

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The real reasons golf is getting younger

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Quality Sport Images

Editor’s Note: This article originally appeared as a newsletter to Golf Digest+ subscribers. To subscribe to Golf Digest+ for exclusive content and more, click here. ​​

Your golf-hating friends might think of the sport as the domain of wealthy retirees, but at the elite level, It’s really a young man’s game. That’s never been more true than now. With Viktor Hovland’s victory in Dubai , the top three players in the World Ranking are, in order, a fiery 27-year-old Spaniard; a precocious 24-year-old American; and a smiley 24-year-old Norwegian.

The youth takeover extends beyond just the tip-top of the 1 percent. As of Monday morning, the average age of the top 16 players in the World Ranking is 28.69, and 13 of those 16 are in their 20s (Dustin Johnson, Rory McIlroy and Louis Oosthuizen are the lone geezers in the bunch, all in their 30s). Ten years ago this week, the average age of the top 16 was 31.75, and that included seven guys older than 30 and three older than 40. Twenty years ago it was 32.87, and all but three had already turned 30. For a cross-sport comparison, the average age of the 10 men starting the NBA All-Star game is 28.6—which means the best golfers in the world right now are essentially the same age as the best basketball players in the world.

So what’s behind this? It’s a multi-layered answer. The first, and perhaps most obvious, is the Tiger Effect. Woods’ emergence in the late 1990s coincided with a significant rise in participation. This, then, is the natural result of a deeper pool of better athletes choosing golf. Only it’s a bit more complicated than that. A massive reason for the kids’ success is the cauldron of college golf. Both Jon Rahm (No. 1) and Collin Morikawa (No. 2) stayed in school for the full four years. Viktor Hovland went three, and each of the top 10 Americans spent at least some time on a college campus. The collegiate game has grown so sophisticated and so competitive that it’s essentially a developmental circuit for the big tour. The top programs fly around the country, often privately, to play events on major-championship-caliber courses. And now, with Golf Channel’s increased investment in college golf, these events are getting TV time. It’s still quite a jump to the PGA Tour, but the contrast is not nearly as stark as it was, say, 20 years ago.

Younger players are also smarter than ever. The proliferation of course-management systems has given 20-somethings the type of wisdom that used to come only after a number of years on tour. Before Google Earth, a young player would need time to learn tour courses. He’d have to see the places to know start lines, where to miss, what holes to attack and where to play conservatively. But with satellite imagery, modern yardage books and math-based strategy guides, guys can do their homework before ever laying eyes on the actual course. They can know, with impressive certainty, what lines to take off tees, the scoring averages from different parts of the fairway and which parts of a green to avoid. More information leads to better-informed, mathematically optimized decisions.

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Steph Chambers

Young players also have more information about their own games. This is the TrackMan generation; these guys grew up hitting balls on launch monitors, and just as the top pros know their numbers, the top college players know what their spin rates and attack angles should look like. Moreover, they know how to fix a problem when one arises. “I think there’s more information for these young guys than we’ve ever had,” Webb Simpson said last year. “You have DECADE golf from Scott Fawcett , you have TrackMan, you have Foresight, all these tools and technology to help these high schoolers and college players get better, hit it further. We know in golf why shots go left and right or left to right and right to left more than we’ve ever known.”

Another explainer is the speed revolution. Mark Broadie’s creation of the strokes-gained statistic has taught us more about why good players score well, and the numbers tell a clear story: distance is a massive advantage. The improvements in club technology—balls that spin less, drivers with bigger and more forgiving faces —incentivize players to wallop away off the tee whenever possible. And while guys like DJ and Rory and even 51-year-old Phil Mickelson can still move it with the kids, as a general rule: the younger, the faster.

It has all combined to produce a group of fearless—but not foolish—20-somethings who are staking their claim over a sport that used to favor age over youth.

Also this week in golf

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Andrew Redington

—Viktor Hovland has developed into a Sunday killer, and he stole last week’s Slync.io Dubai Desert Classic right from Rory McIlroy’s grasp. Hovland played his final three holes in four under par, including an eagle 2 on the driveable par-4 17th. He then birdied the par-5 18th to post 12 under for the week and was asked shortly thereafter if he thought it might be enough. No, he said, for McIlroy was also at 12 under and still had 17 and 18 to play. Whereas Hovland made magic, McIlroy made a mess, pulling his drive way left on 17 and scrambling for par, then dumping his second on 18 into the water and failing to get up-and-down to get a spot in the playoff with Hovland and Richard Brand. It’s the second time in three months that McIlroy failed to close a tournament in Dubai—he also stumbled down the stretch of the DP World Tour Championship in November. He did, however, climb a few spots in the World Ranking and now sits No. 6, and can be generally encouraged by his form with the Masters just two months away.

—On Saturday night, the list of potential winners and potential storylines at the Farmers Insurance Open would’ve excited even the crankiest editor. There was World No. 1 Jon Rahm looking to write the next chapter in his long love story with Torrey Pines. Justin Thomas and caddie Jim “Bones” Mackay were contending for their first win  as a permanent duo . Jason Day found himself in position for a comeback win out of nowhere. Will Zalatoris had a chance to bury his putting demons and pick up a much-anticipated first PGA Tour victory. So, of course, Luke List ended up winning. In all fairness the 37-year-old delivered a solid narrative of his own, winning on the PGA Tour for the first time in 206 starts. The Augusta, Ga., resident will now return to the Masters for the first time since 2005, when he played after finishing runner-up to Ryan Moore in the previous year’s U.S. Amateur.

—Jason Day flashed some encouraging form this week—both for him and for Trevor Immelman, who faces the unenviable task of putting an International team together to combat the American behemoth at this year’s Presidents Cup. Assuming Day continues to play well, Captain Immelman’s pool of candidates is probably deeper than any International crop in recent years. If the cutoff were today, and the team were decided solely by World Ranking, this would be the squad at Quail Hollow: Hideki Matsuyama, Louis Oosthuizen, Cameron Smith, Abraham Ancer, Sungjae Im, Joaquin Niemann, Marc Leishman, Corey Conners, Adam Scott, Lucas Herbert, Mackenzie Hughes and Min Woo Lee.

—The Farmer’s Wednesday-Saturday schedule went off without a hitch. Fans were treated to a highly compelling show in prime time on the East Coast on Saturday then had no football conflicts on Sunday afternoon. Perhaps this will serve as a template for other fall-early winter events moving forward. Competing with the NFL is never a good idea. Only it’s not that simple: Viewership tends to be higher on weekends than weekdays, and finishing fall tournaments on Saturdays just means the final round is competing with college football rather than professional. Much for the powers that be at Ponte Vedra to consider.

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—On Sunday at Torrey Pines South, Patrick Newcomb won the first Advocates Professional Golf Association Tour event to be televised and its $30,000 grand prize. The tour was founded to give minorities a platform to play professional golf, but roughly 15 percent of the players on the tour are white. That includes Newcomb.

— Lydia Ko held off Danielle Kang to win the Gainbridge LPGA at Boca Rio. Because Ko has been around for what feels like forever, it’s hard to believe that she is still just 24 years old. And because she went through some seriously barren times a few years ago, it’s easy to lose sight of the fact that she now has 17 LPGA Tour wins before her 25th birthday. This latest renaissance comes after serious work on her swing and her mindset with Sean Foley. She’s now all the way up to World No. 3, behind only Jin Young Ko and Nelly Korda.

—The controversial Saudi International is this week, and the Asian Tour—buoyed by millions in investment from the Greg Norman-fronted LIV Golf Investments—has successfully lured a number of the game’s top stars to the desert with massive appearance fees, including Phil Mickelson, Bryson DeChambeau, Dustin Johnson, Xander Schauffele, Tony Finau and Matthew Wolff. The PGA Tour decided to grant these players conflicting-event releases to play in the event, and Norman and Co. will surely use the spotlight to take a victory lap and suggest that this is but the first of many international events that will draw stronger fields than the coinciding PGA Tour event. Time will tell. Meanwhile, the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am managed to cobble together a stronger field than last year , with defending champion Daniel Berger, Patrick Cantlay, Jordan Spieth, and Matt Fitzpatrick all competing.

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—Collin Morikawa, Nelly Korda and Phil Mickelson were named  players of the year by the Golf Writers Association of America. Not to brag, but I voted for all three. I also would have voted for Barry Bonds for the Baseball Hall of Fame, but that’s neither here nor there.

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These are the eight golfers who won on pga tour after turning 50, share this article.

pga tour players ages

Since January 1, 1900, more than 16,800 players have teed it up on the PGA Tour. There have been more than 4,300 official Tour events. More than 900 individual winners have grasped championship hardware.

Of those, there are now eight who were 50 years or older.

The only players to roll through the elderly roadblock were Craig Stadler, Fred Funk, John Barnum, James Barnes, Davis Love III, Art Wall, Jr., and Sam Snead and, at the 2021 PGA Championship, Phil Mickelson.

Snead was 52 years, 10 months and 8 days old when he won the 1965 Greater Greensboro Open, making him the oldest to win on the PGA Tour. Mickelson’s PGA win made him the oldest major champion.

Here’s a look at those eight players.

Golfweek’s Steve DiMeglio contributed to this article .

Craig Stadler

Craig Stadler

Craig Stadler won the 2003 B.C. Open. Photo by Craig Jones/Getty Images

50 years, 1 month, 18 days

Became the first PGA Tour Champions winner to earn a PGA Tour victory. In 2003, he won the Senior Players Championship and then the following week won the B.C. Open, which was held opposite the British Open. Stadler became the first player 50-and-older since Art Wall in 1975 won the Greater Milwaukee Open.

Fred Funk

Fred Funk makes a birdie putt on the 7th hole during the final round of the Mayakoba Golf Classic at El Camaleon at Mayakoba in Playa Del Carmen, Mexico on Feb. 25, 2007. Photo by Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images

50 years, 8 months, 11 days

Won the 2007 Mayakoba Golf Classic, which was opposite the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship that season. Funk was the first winner of the Mayakoba event and the first to win a PGA Tour event in Mexico. He shot a course-record 62 in the second round. Funk was 50 years, 8 months and 12 days old when he won the tournament.

Phil Mickelson

Phil Mickelson

Phil Mickelson gives a thumbs up during the Wanamaker Trophy presentation ceremony after winning during the final round of the 2021 PGA Championship held at the Ocean Course of Kiawah Island Golf Resort on May 23, 2021 in Kiawah Island, South Carolina. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images)

50 years, 11 months, 7 days

Clobbering Father Time, bullying big bad Brooks Koepka and getting the better of Pete Dye’s bruiser hard by the sea, Phil Mickelson etched his name in golf’s historical record Sunday with a staggering victory in the 103rd PGA Championship. While doubters waited for Mickelson to falter, seeing as he hadn’t won since 2019, hadn’t had a top 10 finish in a major since 2016 and recently sought out meditation to deal with focus issues, he didn’t lose his concentration nor his balance during a rollercoaster round on the harsh, windswept Ocean Course at Kiawah Island to become the oldest men’s major champion.

John Barnum

John Barnum

John Barnum, 50-year-old pro from Belmont, Michigan, poses in front of the PGA scoreboard at Aronimink Golf Club at Newtown Square, Pennsylvania on July 20, 1962, where he leads the field with a four-under-par 66 at the start of the second round of play in the 44th annual tournament. Photo by Associated Press

51 years, 1 month, 5 days

Was the second player to win on the PGA Tour after turning 50. He’s also the only player to ever to win his first Tour event after turning the big 5-0. His win came in the Cajun Classic Open Invitational on Nov 11, 1962. He won by six strokes over Gay Brewer.

51 years, 3 months, 7 days

When he won the 1937 Long Island Open, he became the first player older than 50 to win a PGA Tour event. But his career was much more notable than that. He won the first-ever PGA Championship, which was played in 1916. He won another three years later. He won the 1921 U.S. Open by nine shots, a record that stood until Tiger Woods broke it in 2000 at Pebble Beach. He also won the 1925 Open Championship. He would win again in his 50s, claiming the 1939 New Jersey Open when he was 53. It was his last victory.

Davis Love III

Davis Love III

Davis Love III poses with the Sam Snead Trophy after winning the Wyndham Championship at Sedgefield Country Club in Greensboro, North Carolina. Photo by Rob Kinnan/USA TODAY Sports

51 years, 4 months, 10 days

DL3 was 51 years and four months old when he won the 2015 Wyndham Championship in Greensboro, North Carolina, making him the third oldest PGA Tour winner behind Snead, who was 52 years, 10 months at the 1965 Greater Greensboro Open, and Art Wall, who was 51 years, 7 months when he won the 1975 Greater Milwaukee Open.

Art Wall, Jr.

Art Wall, Jr.

Art Wall, Jr., and Arnold Palmer at the presentation ceremony after the 1960 Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club on April 10, 1960 in Augusta, Georgia. (Photo: Augusta National/Getty Images)

51 years, 7 months, 10 days

Had a storied career and in particular, a most remarkable season in 1959. That year he won the Masters as well as four PGA Tour titles. He was named Player of the Year, won the Vardon Trophy and won the money title. Credited with 45 holes-in-one in his career, Wall won his final tournament in 1975 at the Greater Milwaukee Open when he was 51 years and 7 months old.

Sam Snead

Sam Snead in 1962 at The Walton Heath Golf Club in Walton on the Hill, United Kingdom. Photo by Don Morley/Getty Images

52 years, 10 months, 8 days

The oldest player to win a PGA Tour event. He won his 82nd and final Tour victory when he was nearly 53 years old in the 1965 Greater Greensboro Open. Snead won the inaugural event in 1938 and then won it again six more times over the years. By 1965, it had been four years since Snead won on Tour. At 52 years, 10 months and 8 days, Snead still holds the mark for oldest player to win. The 27-year stretch between his first and last win is also still the PGA Tour record.

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  1. PGA TOUR Player Stats, Bio, Career

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  2. 2024 PGA TOUR Complete Player Rankings - ESPN

    The complete rankings of all 2024 PGA TOUR players on ESPN. Includes the leaders in every category from earnings, wins and other golf stats.

  3. The top 100 players on the PGA Tour, ranked | Golf News and ...

    Andrew Landry. Age: 34 / OWGR (as of Jan. 3, 2022): 187 / ’22 FedEx Cup (entering Sentry TOC): 40. Landry came out on the business end of the 2020-21 “super season,” missing the cut in half of...

  4. PGA TOUR Player Stats, Bio, Career

    Most golf historians trace the “formal” beginning of the PGA TOUR to late 1968, when the “Tournament Players Division” split from the PGA of America and hired Joe Dey as its first ...

  5. The best golfers at every age, by world ranking | Golf News ...

    In searching, we chose to combine the men’s and women’s rankings, thus Scheffler covers age 26 and Ko age 27. Not surprisingly, the older you go, the less likely you’ll find players ranked ...

  6. Golf's best players are younger than ever, and the stats back ...

    In the 2017 PGA Tour season, the youngest winner, at age 21, was Si Woo Kim. It was also the season that Rod Pampling won at 47, and 50-year-old Steve Stricker pocketed a million in earnings.

  7. The real reasons golf is getting younger | Golf News and Tour ...

    As of Monday morning, the average age of the top 16 players in the World Ranking is 28.69, and 13 of those 16 are in their 20s (Dustin Johnson, Rory McIlroy and Louis Oosthuizen are the lone...

  8. List of golfers with most PGA Tour wins - Wikipedia

    Sam Snead is the oldest to win a PGA event, at age 52, in 1965. Others who have won PGA Tour events past age 50 include Jim Barnes, John Barnum, and Art Wall Jr. The list is complete as of July 16, 2023.

  9. PGA Tour - Wikipedia

    It organizes most of the events on the flagship annual series of tournaments also known as the PGA Tour, as well as the PGA Tour Champions (age 50 and older) and the Korn Ferry Tour (for professional players who have not yet qualified to play on the PGA Tour), as well as the PGA Tour Canada, PGA Tour Latinoamérica, and formerly the PGA Tour China.

  10. These are the eight golfers who won on PGA Tour after turning 50

    Of those, there are now eight who were 50 years or older. The only players to roll through the elderly roadblock were Craig Stadler, Fred Funk, John Barnum, James Barnes, Davis Love III, Art...