So says Rick George, president of the Champions Tour. “… to look at everything critically. We looked at [changing] the minimum age. We looked at carts. How do we make this product better?”
When you think Champions Tour, do you still mentally substitute “Seniors Tour”? Do you think of players who’ve started to decline in their physical abilities, but who still both love to compete and are fun to watch as athletes and personalities?
Do you think to yourself, “Those old bums should be walking, not loafing about in their golf carts!”
Evidently, the Champions Tour board seems to think that’s exactly what we think, and they’re out to change our minds.
In what could best be called a counter-intuitive decision, Champions Tour president Rick George is moving forward with the decision to ban golf carts during Champions Tour events. He’s nice enough to ‘accomodate’ golfers like Casey Martin who must ride in a cart due to physical disability.

Earning enough money in 2004 to put him in the top-30 on the PGA Tour money list, Padraig Harrington will finally make it official. He plans to join the Tour next year and intends to play 16 to 18 tournaments in a bid to earn his first PGA Tour victory.
With all the talk about Vijay Singh’s historic season and his quest to win his tenth tour victory of 2004, we seem to have forgotten about the other dominant player in golfdom:
All those nice things I wrote about Vijay Singh not more than
It wasn’t exactly the script the sports world was looking for –
Going into the final round, you have to ask yourself two questions: is Jay Haas really this good, and can Tiger finally convert a win?