logo
Jack Nicklaus Thinks Tiger Woods Is Teeing up His Next Chapter in Golf

Jack Nicklaus Thinks Tiger Woods Is Teeing up His Next Chapter in Golf

Yahoo12-04-2025
Tiger Woods is skipping this year's Masters Tournament to nurse an injury, but legendary golfer Jack Nicklaus isn't worried. The 85-year-old athlete thinks that Woods is already planning the next stage of his golf career.
At 49 years of age, Woods has had his share of injuries. This year, a torn Achilles has hampered his progress this season, but there is another chapter he could begin once he turns 50 in December. That's where Nicklaus entered the chat.
Advertisement
"I think Tiger will get well and Tiger will be back and play,' Nicklaus said at the opening of the Masters, via the Independent. "I believe he'll probably play the senior tour, and I believe he'll probably dominate the senior tour. Tiger is too much of a competitor to not play. I don't believe he will not play. I believe he will play."
Jack Nicklaus of the United States takes part in the first tee ceremony prior to the first round of the 2024 Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club on April 11, 2024 in Augusta, Georgia.The minimum age to participate in the PGA Tour Champions, formerly known as the Senior PGA Tour, is 50. There are five major championships in the tour: The Tradition, Senior PGA Championship, U.S. Senior Open, Senior Players Championship, and The Senior Open Championship. In 2025, there are 28 official events, and they are quite lucrative.
Woods is fine financially and that's why Nicklaus thinks he will "play for competition" because he's got that drive in him. Still, he may not be ready to jump from the PGA Tour to the PGA Tour Champions just yet.
Advertisement
In July 2024, Woods pushed back in any retirement talk after the former world's No. 2 golfer, Colin Montgomerie criticized his game ahead of The Open Championship in Troon, Scotland.
"Well, as a past champion, I'm exempt until I'm 60," Woods said, referring to his privilege of competing at The Open until he's 60, per Newsweek. "Colin's not. He's not a past pioneer, so he's not exempt. So, he doesn't get the opportunity to make that decision. I do."
Related: Paulina Gretzky & Dustin Johnson Prove They're Golf's Ultimate Power Couple
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Will this PGA Tour Champions event be forced away from its current home? It's possible
Will this PGA Tour Champions event be forced away from its current home? It's possible

USA Today

time3 hours ago

  • USA Today

Will this PGA Tour Champions event be forced away from its current home? It's possible

It's been four months since healthcare company Grail announced it was opting out of its sponsorship deal for the Galleri Classic, the PGA Tour Champions event played at Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage since 2023. That also means tournament organizers are one month past what they saw as a deadline – an admittedly soft deadline – to find a new sponsor for the senior golf event for 2026 and beyond. It would be easy to think the situation for the tournament is dire, but that might not be the case, organizers insist. 'We are hopeful that the PGA Tour Champions will stay in the desert,' said Michelle DeLancy, the tournament director for the event for the last three years. 'It is something that the tour and the players would love to continue. At this time, we don't have a sponsor that has stepped up to be the title for the next five years. We are currently talking with one.' Talking is a good thing. In fact, it is the best thing when it comes to sponsorship of golf tournaments. It means there is interest from both sides, and interest can sometimes lead to a deal. So hearing that the PGA Tour Champions and Wasserman, the company that produces the local senior PGA Tour event, are still talking to a potential sponsor is encouraging. If the tour and Wasserman want to press their point with any potential sponsor that the PGA Tour Champions should be in the Coachella Valley, they need only let the players for the last three years speak out. The players in each of the three years of the tournament at Mission Hills loved being back in the Coachella Valley, the first senior event in the desert in more than 30 years. The players were most effusive about the Dinah Shore Tournament Course, which had hosted an LPGA major championship for 51 years. When that women's major left after the 2022 playing, it opened the door for the PGA Tour Champions to find a first-quarter home in the desert. Earlier this year one of the tour's biggest names, Fred Couples, went so far as to say the PGA Tour Champions was lucky to be back in the desert and playing the Shore Course. The winners of the tournament, first David Toms, then Retief Goosen and this year Steve Allen, all echoed Couples' comments. And why not? Despite some uncharacteristic weather hiccups – rain in 2024, for instance – the weather, the desert scenery and the golf-centric nature of the desert all scream that tournaments should be played here. The PGA Tour Champions isn't the PGA Tour, but it has a place in the desert. Still, for all of the praise and for all of the history of golf in the desert, the PGA Tour Champions event in the Coachella Valley is without a sponsor. That's not a situation that can continue much longer, DeLancy said. 'There is a deadline. We want to be sure that if the tournament stays that we do have a spot on the PGA Tour Champions schedule, which is firming up right now,' DeLancy said. 'So we have extended the conversation into August, but it won't go much further past August to be able to do what we need to do, selling sponsorships and selling pro-am spots and signing up volunteers and getting on the PGA Tour Champions schedule for that slot that we had (the end of March).' That means an answer, one way or the other, should come in the next few weeks. For desert golf fans, hopefully there is good news at the end of the long wait. Larry Bohannan is the golf writer for The Desert Sun. You can contact him at (760) 778-4633 or at Follow him on Facebook or on X at @larry_bohannan.

Scottie Scheffler's putting stats should scare his PGA Tour opponents
Scottie Scheffler's putting stats should scare his PGA Tour opponents

Yahoo

time10 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Scottie Scheffler's putting stats should scare his PGA Tour opponents

In 2024, Scottie Scheffler put together one of the most dominant statistical seasons the PGA Tour had seen in decades. He led the Tour in Strokes Gained: Total and Tee-to-Green, and he was remarkably consistent across the board. If there was a hole in his game, it was putting, but even that had improved over his disappointing performance on the greens in 2023. He won six times, led the money list, and topped the FedEx Cup standings. It was the kind of season that felt like a ceiling. Then Scheffler got better. The 2025 Masters and British Open winner was not in the field this week at the PGA Tour's final event of the regular season, the Wyndham Championship, so his regular-season stats are completed, and for Scheffler's competition, the outlook is not good. Based on the numbers, his 2025 season wasn't just a continuation — it was an elevation. Scottie Scheffler's putter elevated his game Scheffler took the one area of his game – putting – where he was an average player and made himself significantly better. At the same time, he remained the best ballstriker in the world. Like most modern golfers, Scheffler's game is built around a combination of power off the tee and precision with his irons, and as you can see in the chart below, his most significant edge over most PGA Tour players comes from his driver and his irons. Scheffler's short game is underappreciated and solid, but what made him better in 2025 is shown in the blue portion of the chart — putting. In 2024, less than four percent of Scheffler's Strokes Gained: Total (2.496) came from putting, but in 2025, when it went up to 2.64, the putting portion leaped to almost 14 percent. Yes, his overall performance off the tee went down fractionally, but he actually went from No. 2 to No. 1 in Strokes Gained: Off the Tee. Scheffler's performance around the greens also dipped very slightly, but he remains in the top 25 on the PGA Tour. This season, Scheffler went from No. 77 to No. 20 in Strokes Gained: Putting. It almost seems unfair for a player who leads the Tour in driving and iron play to become a top-20 putter, but that's precisely what Scheffler did in 2025. Scheffler improved on short- to mid-length putts The logical follow-up question is: If Scheffler improved so much on the greens, was he making more long putts, more short putts or just more putts overall? Digging into the PGA Tour's ShotLink system reveals that Scheffler made fewer long putts — he went from making almost 30 percent of his putts from 15 to 20 feet in 2024 to about 17 percent in 2025 — but he improved on short to mid-range putts, and that boosted his Strokes Gained: Putting overall. The table above shows that Scheffler made a higher percentage of putts overall from 10 feet and in, including a higher percentage from 10 feet, 9 feet, 6 feet, and overall from 4 to 8 feet. No one makes a lot of 30-footers, and the pros hole just about everything from 3 feet and closer, but the ability to make more putts from between 4 and 8 feet means you are making more par-saving putts and more birdie putts after great approach shots. Scottie Scheffler finished the PGA Tour's regular season ranked No. 4 in Proximity to the Hole and No. 1 in Greens in Regulation, which means he creates a lot of birdie chances. If he maintains this level of putting while remaining one of the game's most elite ball strikers, he is going to be very hard to beat in 2026 and beyond. This article originally appeared on Golfweek: Scottie Scheffler putting improvement 2025 vs 2024 PGA Tour

Scottie Scheffler's putting stats should scare his PGA Tour opponents
Scottie Scheffler's putting stats should scare his PGA Tour opponents

USA Today

time10 hours ago

  • USA Today

Scottie Scheffler's putting stats should scare his PGA Tour opponents

The world's No. 1 player has made some significant improvements on the greens and and ShotLink stats could give other pros nightmares. In 2024, Scottie Scheffler put together one of the most dominant statistical seasons the PGA Tour had seen in decades. He led the Tour in Strokes Gained: Total and Tee-to-Green, and he was remarkably consistent across the board. If there was a hole in his game, it was putting, but even that had improved over his disappointing performance on the greens in 2023. He won six times, led the money list, and topped the FedEx Cup standings. It was the kind of season that felt like a ceiling. Then Scheffler got better. The 2025 Masters and British Open winner was not in the field this week at the PGA Tour's final event of the regular season, the Wyndham Championship, so his regular-season stats are completed, and for Scheffler's competition, the outlook is not good. Based on the numbers, his 2025 season wasn't just a continuation — it was an elevation. Scottie Scheffler's putter elevated his game Scheffler took the one area of his game – putting – where he was an average player and made himself significantly better. At the same time, he remained the best ballstriker in the world. Like most modern golfers, Scheffler's game is built around a combination of power off the tee and precision with his irons, and as you can see in the chart below, his most significant edge over most PGA Tour players comes from his driver and his irons. Scheffler's short game is underappreciated and solid, but what made him better in 2025 is shown in the blue portion of the chart — putting. In 2024, less than four percent of Scheffler's Strokes Gained: Total (2.496) came from putting, but in 2025, when it went up to 2.64, the putting portion leaped to almost 14 percent. Yes, his overall performance off the tee went down fractionally, but he actually went from No. 2 to No. 1 in Strokes Gained: Off the Tee. Scheffler's performance around the greens also dipped very slightly, but he remains in the top 25 on the PGA Tour. This season, Scheffler went from No. 77 to No. 20 in Strokes Gained: Putting. It almost seems unfair for a player who leads the Tour in driving and iron play to become a top-20 putter, but that's precisely what Scheffler did in 2025. Scheffler improved on short- to mid-length putts The logical follow-up question is: If Scheffler improved so much on the greens, was he making more long putts, more short putts or just more putts overall? Digging into the PGA Tour's ShotLink system reveals that Scheffler made fewer long putts — he went from making almost 30 percent of his putts from 15 to 20 feet in 2024 to about 17 percent in 2025 — but he improved on short to mid-range putts, and that boosted his Strokes Gained: Putting overall. The table above shows that Scheffler made a higher percentage of putts overall from 10 feet and in, including a higher percentage from 10 feet, 9 feet, 6 feet, and overall from 4 to 8 feet. No one makes a lot of 30-footers, and the pros hole just about everything from 3 feet and closer, but the ability to make more putts from between 4 and 8 feet means you are making more par-saving putts and more birdie putts after great approach shots. Scottie Scheffler finished the PGA Tour's regular season ranked No. 4 in Proximity to the Hole and No. 1 in Greens in Regulation, which means he creates a lot of birdie chances. If he maintains this level of putting while remaining one of the game's most elite ball strikers, he is going to be very hard to beat in 2026 and beyond.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store