The Tiger Question: Why Champions Tour Intrigue Matters More Than You Think
Jimmy Caldwell | Senior Tour Correspondent
I’ve been around professional golf long enough to know when a story isn’t really about what everyone’s talking about. And right now, the endless speculation about Tiger Woods and the PGA Tour Champions? That’s not the real story at all.
Don’t get me wrong—Tiger potentially playing on the 50-and-over circuit is genuinely significant. But what really interests me, after 35 years covering this game, is what the Champions Tour pros are actually saying about it, and what their measured, diplomatic responses reveal about where professional golf stands in 2025.
The Diplomatic Dance
Listen to what Steven Alker, the defending Cologuard Classic champion, told reporters this week in Tucson: "Even if he gets fit and plays four or five events, who cares. It would be just great to see him out competing again and see how the game stands up as well to his."
That’s not jealousy. That’s not territoriality. That’s genuine grace, and in my experience, it speaks volumes about how much the professional golf landscape has shifted. Twenty years ago? You’d have heard a different tone entirely—more wariness, more concern about the spotlight being diverted. Today’s Champions Tour players understand something fundamental: Tiger’s presence elevates everyone.
Stewart Cink, the defending Charles Schwab Cup champion, put it perfectly when he noted:
"Anywhere Tiger chooses to play, it would be a massive benefit for that place. And for all of us, we love Tiger, love to see him play and be able to compete against him and with him again after all those years."
What strikes me most is the complete absence of ego here. These are the best golfers in the world over 50—guys who’ve won major championships, who’ve competed at the highest level. And they’re not worried about being overshadowed. They want the best version of Tiger back, period.
The Real Context
Here’s what casual fans might miss: Tiger hasn’t played on the PGA Tour since the 2024 Masters. That’s been nearly a year. He’s dealing with ongoing physical challenges—injuries and surgeries that would have ended most careers decades ago. The fact that he’s even hinting about an Augusta return speaks to his competitive fire, but it also underscores just how carefully he has to manage his schedule and his body.
The Champions Tour represents something different for him than the PGA Tour ever did. It’s lower stress, as Cink noted. There’s genuine rest built into the schedule. The fields are smaller, the travel is less taxing, and the competitive pressure, while still real, operates on a different scale. I’ve caddied for Tom Lehman on that circuit, and I can tell you—it’s golf at the highest level, but it’s golf that lets you breathe.
What Jerry Kelly’s Optimism Really Means
Jerry Kelly, the Cologuard ambassador, expressed interest in bringing Tiger to Tucson at La Paloma Country Club. His comments were gracious and realistic:
"It would be huge. I mean, I would love to be able to get Tiger to Tucson. That would be a ton of fun. I know what his schedule’s like around this time with the major, Augusta coming up, and things like that. I will certainly ask him."
What I appreciate here is Kelly’s acknowledgment of Tiger’s schedule complexity. He’s not naively expecting Tiger to show up whenever; he understands the realities of managing one of the greatest competitive minds in sports history. That maturity in the conversation matters.
The Zach Johnson Reality Check
Then you have Zach Johnson, who just won his first Champions event two weeks ago. His response was carefully measured—perhaps more than it needed to be—but there’s wisdom in it:
"I think you understand the answer to this question, I can’t speak on behalf of anybody else. That’s not fair, it’s an injustice and irresponsible. He’s a friend of mine and I’m confident saying that a lot of us, if not all of us, want him back healthy, whatever capacity that looks like."
Johnson understands something that gets lost in the breathless speculation: Tiger’s impact on professional golf extends far beyond competitive appearances. Having covered 15 Masters and spent three decades around the tour, I can confirm this absolutely. Tiger doesn’t have to play every week—or even every month—to matter enormously to the sport’s health and trajectory.
The Bigger Picture
What this week’s comments from Tucson actually reveal is a tour that’s thriving, that doesn’t need Tiger to validate its existence, but that absolutely welcomes him as part of a natural evolution. The Champions Tour has built something genuinely compelling over the past decade. The players are playing at a high level, the competition is real, and the events have character.
Tiger joining that circuit—whenever and however that happens—wouldn’t be a savior moment. It would be a natural addition to something that’s already working.
The real story here isn’t whether Tiger will play the Champions Tour. It’s that the Champions Tour has become a place where legends want to play, where there’s no desperation, where the conversation can be thoughtful and forward-looking rather than transactional.
That’s the kind of environment where Tiger Woods, at this stage of his career, might actually find exactly what he needs. And that’s worth paying attention to.

