Despite turning 50 next year, Stewart Cink has no plans to make a switch to the seniors next year as he still feels he can mix it with the young guns on the PGA Tour.
The 49-year-old will hit the half-century mark next May, when he’ll be eligible to join the PGA Tour Champions, but for now he’s still focusing on playing the main PGA Tour.
Cink hit the PGA Tour in the late 1990s but despite being the world number 150 he’s shown he can still pick up tournament wins, having claimed his seventh on the PGA Tour at the Safeway Open in 2020 and then his eighth at the 2021 RBC Heritage.
The 2009 Open champion still feels he’s swinging the club as fast as ever and, although he says he will play a few events on the PGA Tour Champions, he’ll be sticking to the main PGA Tour mostly – especially with the big increase in prize money in 2023.
“I will probably sprinkle in a few events (On the PGA Tour Champions) but my plan is to focus on PGA Tour golf for a while, Cink said at the PNC Championship. “They keep elevating these events and making the prize even more rich, so sounds like a pretty good experience to me.
“I still have a lot left I think in my tank and I have a lot of years for Champions tour golf and so my plan is to sick stick to PGA Tour for a while and Champions tour will be there but I’m going to dip a toe in the water, too.”
Cink says he’s had advice off another former Major champion who has been an instant hit on the PGA Tour Champions, Padraig Harrington, to play as much PGA Tour golf as possible.
“Padraig Harrington encouraged me to continue playing on the PGA Tour for some reason. Maybe he thinks I’ve got some potential out there, I don’t know. He wants me to stay out there, I don’t know what to read into that. But hopefully if I do come out and play I get to play a lot with Padraig the next few years.”
Harrington has played so well on the senior circuit that he believes he can get back into contending at the Majors in 2023, and both the Irishman and Cink point to the likes of Phil Mickelson becoming the oldest Major champion at 50 at the 2021 US PGA Championship as motivation and encouragement.
Cink also has first-hand experience of how the old head in golf can challenge in Majors, as he became the pantomime villain in his sole Major triumph as he pipped a 59-year-old Tom Watson to the Claret Jug at Turnberry.
It’s another reason why Cink has no reason to be thinking of a full-time move into the…
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