The Players Championship’s Missing Legends: What Golf’s Biggest Absence Says About the Sport Today
I’ve been covering professional golf for 35 years now, and I’ve never seen The Players Championship—the PGA Tour’s flagship event—look quite like this. Don’t get me wrong; the tournament itself remains the best 72 holes of golf on the calendar. TPC Sawgrass is still brutally fair, the field is still loaded with talent, and the drama on the island greens never gets old. But there’s something different in 2026, and it’s not the course setup.
It’s who’s not showing up.
A Generation of Champions Sidelined
When I caddied for Tom Lehman back in the ’90s, The Players Championship represented something sacred in professional golf. It was the tournament that separated the best from the rest—a week where you couldn’t hide, couldn’t rely on home-course advantage, couldn’t game the system. Winners at TPC Sawgrass became instant legends. They earned five-year exemptions that kept them coming back, competing, testing themselves against the best.
Now, that tradition is being quietly rewritten. And the absence list reads like a who’s who of recent champions.
“Tiger Woods has won The Players Championship twice, first in 2001, when he got the better of great rival Vijay Singh by one, and then in 2013, when he saw off the challenges of three players by two strokes. He won’t be playing in 2025, though, and not just because he has yet to make his comeback after undergoing back surgery in October.”
Tiger’s absence stings for obvious reasons, but it’s also understandable—the man’s dealing with legitimate physical recovery. What strikes me more is the systematic nature of the departures. This isn’t random. This is structural.
The LIV Exodus: A League Apart (Literally)
Let’s be honest about what’s really happening here. Four major winners who claimed Players Championships are now suspended from the PGA Tour due to their LIV Golf commitments. That’s not coincidence. That’s a fundamental fracture in professional golf that’s affecting the Tour’s signature event.
Cameron Smith won in 2022—one of the best fields, one of the best performances. Four months later, he won the Open Championship at St. Andrews. Then he joined LIV, and we haven’t seen him at TPC Sawgrass since.
Phil Mickelson won the title in 2007 and would’ve been eligible through his 2021 PGA Championship victory, but his LIV membership and subsequent PGA Tour suspension put him in the gallery instead of the field.
Sergio Garcia won in 2008 and remained one of the tournament’s most consistent competitors until his move to LIV in 2023. He’s just signed a new multi-year deal with the Saudi-backed league.
Henrik Stenson claimed the trophy in 2009 and was essentially the last of his generation competing regularly there. After joining LIV, he played his final Players in 2022—a first-round withdrawal.
Martin Kaymer won in 2014 during a career year that included a U.S. Open. He joined LIV in 2022 and hasn’t appeared since 2019.
“Like Smith, Mickelson and Garcia, that move meant his PGA Tour career came to an abrupt halt and, as a result, we have not seen him at The Players Championship since 2022, when he withdrew after the first round.”
In my three decades around this sport, I’ve never witnessed anything like this—an entire tier of elite players systematically removed from the Tour’s most prestigious events because of a business dispute. You can debate the merits of LIV Golf all you want, but there’s no debating the impact.
Beyond LIV: The Quiet Declines
What’s equally telling is that LIV isn’t the only story. Matt Kuchar won in 2012 and competed regularly for years, but his form has deteriorated to the point where he couldn’t crack the top 100 in the FedEx Cup standings. He’s been a fixture at TPC Sawgrass for nearly two decades. Now he’s out.
Webb Simpson dominated this tournament’s conditions when he won by four shots in 2018. His five-year exemption just expired after last year’s cut miss. He hasn’t won on tour since 2018—nearly six years of professional drought.
KJ Choi won a playoff here 15 years ago, but he’s transitioned to the Champions Tour and regional circuits. Father Time catches everyone eventually.
These aren’t tragedy stories necessarily—professional sports careers have natural arcs. But they remind us that even the best don’t stay at the top forever.
What This Actually Means
“In the 51 editions of the PGA Tour’s flagship event, the likes of Jack Nicklaus, Lee Trevino, Raymond Floyd, Fred Couples, Greg Norman, Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson, Sergio Garcia, Rory McIlroy and Scottie Scheffler have all won at least once.”
The Players Championship will survive this exodus. It always does. Scottie Scheffler will likely win it multiple times. New champions will emerge. The Island Green will continue to produce dramatic moments that define careers.
But there’s a real cost to what’s happening. The Tour loses continuity, narrative, and the kind of championship lineage that made The Players feel permanent. When Mickelson or Garcia or Stenson can’t return to defend their legacy at a place they conquered, something intangible is lost.
Having covered 15 Masters and countless weeks at TPC Sawgrass, I’ve learned that golf’s greatest tournaments are built on memory and tradition as much as competition. Tiger defending his title. Mickelson coming back for another run. These storylines matter. They’re part of the fabric.
The 2026 Players Championship will be excellent golf, no question. But it’ll be different—missing voices, missing competitors who earned their place through brilliance. That’s not a criticism of anyone; it’s just the reality of where we are. And like everything else in professional golf right now, it’s complicated.

