People are getting mad at Vijay Singh. Thatâs an evergreen statement. People have been varying degrees of âgetting mad at Vijay Singhâ for decades.
Theyâd taken a break, though. In recent years Singh has been recast as the range-grinding, soft-spoken mystery figure hitting tires with sledgehammers and occasionally reappearing during tournaments. The Big Fijian most recently stole the show at the 2019 Honda Classic, where he played his way into the final group at age 56. Nobody was mad at Vijay Singh then.
But now people are mad at Singh again. This time itâs because Singh has signed up to play in the first Korn Ferry Tour event when the tour resumes play in June. The optics of a man with $71 million in career Tour winnings taking a spot â or a paycheck â from a bunch of golfâs hungry minor-leaguers coming off a three-months layoff is admittedly not great. But Iâd urge you to resist the knee-jerk reaction. Donât get mad at Vijay Singh. Heâs a professional golfer playing the highest-level tournament for which he is qualified, looking to sharpen his game and compete at a course he knows well. Simply put, his buy-in should be good in this â or any â card room. He’s earned that.
These words are too late for Brady Schnell, a 35-year-old Korn Ferry member who took to Twitter Thursday to call Singh a âtrue piece of trashâ and a âcomplete turdâ in tweets that have since disappeared (and Schnellâs account is now private).
Iâm not sure my words would have had much effect in any case; Schnell seemed rather set on his views here. But he was hardly the only one â and if you believe him, plenty of his peers felt the same way. Vocal golf fans took to the Twitter streets, many of them upset on behalf of the Korn Ferry pros (some others, to be fair, stuck up for Singh).
If youâre wondering how Singh is in the field to begin with, the PGA Tour resumes that same week at the Charles Schwab Challenge, but Singh’s lifetime Tour status wonât get him into the field at Colonial. As an alternative, Tour rules allow fully exempt Tour players to compete in Korn Ferry events when theyâre not qualified for that weekâs PGA Tour event. Enter Singh, playing a home game at TPC Sawgrass.
Letâs review, briefly, some of the reasons you may be predisposed to rule against Singh. We can begin in 1982, when 19-year-old Vijay left Fiji to play the Australian mini-tours and was eventually banned for making long-distance phone calls back home and sticking tournament organizers with the bill. Not cool. At the 1985 Indonesian Open, Singh was accused of stroke-shaving, which led to his expulsion from the tour (he has always maintained his innocence) and a subsequent two years’ exile as a club pro in the rainforests of Borneo.
Fast-forward to 2000, when he won the Masters and reportedly told everyone to âkiss my assâ on his way off property. Or to 2003, when he was less than enthusiastic about Annika Sorenstamâs appearance on the PGA Tour and said he hoped sheâd miss the cut, if she wasnât going to properly qualify. There was the incident in 2007, when Singh won at Bay Hill and made a point of parking in spots assigned to the media throughout the week, just because he could. There was the deer antler spray incident in 2013, too, which led to Singhâs suspension (later dropped) and Singhâs lawsuit (later settled).
In between there were less tangible accusations of Singh generally being a loner and a jerk. There’s also no discounting his role as foil to the more-popular Tiger Woods in the mid-2000s. Even then, he kept the media at armâs length, smarting from the firestorm that followed his Sorenstam comments. While stories occasionally emerged of Singhâs good humor or the ways he supported younger players â with both time and money â he didnât do much to endear himself to the public. If youâve entered this week with a less-than-favorable feeling about Singh, well, thatâs understandable and I’m not here to argue with you.
But letâs tick through the reasons you shouldnât get mad at Singh about this incident in particular. Heâs following the Tourâs rules and playing through a category reserved for PGA Tour pros. Heâs playing the best tournament he can. Heâs sure to try his hardest; he always has. More to the point, Singh has earned this. Heâs not some middling, well-connected pro on a sponsorâs exemption. Heâs one of the greatest golfers of the modern era. We should be praising his work ethic, admiring his competitive fire, lauding how far heâs made it from hopping fences to caddie, $1/day, at Nadi Airport Golf Club. We should sit back in awe that he could still summon the desire to take on golfâs rising stars. If he were more broadly beloved, we would. If this were Fred Couples the only thing we’d be figuring out is the live-streaming schedule.
Finally, while people remember Singhâs solo 6th at the Honda last season, itâs not like this is Justin Thomas coming to buzzsaw the field and take the kidsâ lunch money. Excluding the Honda, here are Singhâs eight starts on the PGA Tour since the beginning of last season: MC-MC-MC-MC-MC-MC-MC-MC. Heâs 57 years old. Heâs No. 849 in the world (Schnell is just behind him at No. 913).
Donât like that Singh’s there? Shoot a lower score than he does.
