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Vijay Singh

Fijian professional golfer (born 1963)

Vijay Singh

Fijian professional golfer (born 1963)

FieldValue
nameVijay Singh
hif
imageVijay Singh.jpg
captionSingh in 2007
fullnameVijay Singh
nicknameThe Big Fijian
birth_date
birth_placeLautoka, Viti Levu, British Fiji (present-day Fiji)
death_date
height6 ft 2 in
weight208 lb
nationality
residencePonte Vedra Beach, Florida, U.S.
spouse
children1
yearpro1982
tourPGA Tour
PGA Tour Champions
European Senior Tour
extourEuropean Tour
Asian Tour
prowins66
pgawins34
eurowins13
asiawins5
sunwins2
champwins5
otherwins14
majorwins3
mastersWon: 2000
usopenT3: 1999
openT2: 2003
pgaWon: 1998, 2004
wghofidvijay-singh
wghofyear2005/2006
award1PGA Tour
Rookie of the Year
year11993
award2PGA Tour
money list winner
year22003, 2004, 2008
award3PGA Tour
Player of the Year
year32004
award4PGA Player of the Year
year42004
award5Byron Nelson Award
year52004
award6Vardon Trophy
year62004
award7European Tour
Golfer of the Year
year72004
award8PGA Tour
FedEx Cup winner
year82008
awardssection
module{{Infobox personembed=yes
signatureVijay_Singh_signature.jpg

hif PGA Tour Champions European Senior Tour Asian Tour Rookie of the Year](pga-tour-rookie-of-the-year) money list winner](pga-tour-money-list-winners) Player of the Year](pga-tour-player-of-the-year) Golfer of the Year](european-tour-golfer-of-the-year) FedEx Cup winner](fedex-cup) Vijay Singh ( ; born 22 February 1963) is a Fijian professional golfer. In 1982, Singh turned professional and played on the local Asia Golf Circuit. However, his early career met with controversy, as he was accused of numerous rules violations, and he was banned from the AGC. Singh turned to Africa and Europe where he had much success on the respective tours, the Safari Circuit and European Tour, winning several times on each. In 1993, he won the PGA Tour's Buick Classic, earning him tour membership and ultimately Rookie of the Years honors. In 1998, he won his first major championship, the PGA Championship, and two years later the Masters. In 2004, Singh had one of the best seasons in the history of golf, winning nine times including the PGA Championship, overtaking Tiger Woods as the #1 golfer in the world.

Early life

Singh recollected to reporters about his childhood: "When we were kids we couldn't afford golf balls so we had to make do with coconuts. My father used to say, 'Little Vijay, golf balls don't fall off trees you know,' so I found some that did!" Growing up, he played snooker, cricket, football, and the country's most popular sport, rugby. He is the son of Mohan Singh, an airplane technician who also taught golf. Growing up, he admired the swing of Tom Weiskopf, using it as an early model for his own.

Professional career

Asia Golf Circuit

Singh turned professional in 1982. Two years later, he won the 1984 Malaysian PGA Championship. However, his career was plunged into crisis after he was suspended from the Asia Golf Circuit in 1985 over allegations he doctored his scorecard. It was alleged that he lowered his score from one over to one under in order to make the cut, but Singh denies this, saying that in any case, it should only have resulted in disqualification from the event rather than a ban. After investigation by the Tour of this and other alleged violations proved true, John Bender, Asian PGA Tour president, issued Singh a lifetime ban on Asian PGA Tour play.

Singh felt he had been more harshly treated because the marker was "the son of a VIP in the Indonesian PGA." He then took a job at the Keningau Club in Sabah, Malaysia, before his move to the Miri Golf Club in Sarawak. While this was a period of hardship for him, he continued to gain experience.

European Tour

Singh saved the money he needed to resurrect his career and began to re-enter tournaments. In 1988 he teamed up with a sponsor, Red Baron, which funded a trip to Africa to compete on the now-defunct Safari Circuit, an offshoot circuit of the European Tour. Singh captured his first event, the 1988 Nigerian Open, as locals cheered him loudly. At the end of that year he entered the European Tour Qualifying school for the second consecutive year, and was successful on this occasion.

In 1989, Singh won his first European Tour title at the Volvo Open Championship in Italy and finished 24th on the European Tour Order of Merit, putting his early struggles firmly behind him. He won four times in 1989, at the Volvo Open di Firenze, Ivory Coast Open, Nigerian Open and Zimbabwe Open. He also finished tied for 23rd at The Open Championship. He won on the European Tour again in 1990 and did so twice in 1992. He also won several tournaments in Asia and Africa in this period.

PGA Tour

Singh earned membership for the PGA Tour in 1993, winning his first tournament, the Buick Classic in a playoff over Mark Wiebe. That victory led to his being named the 1993 PGA Tour Rookie of the Year. After being hampered with back and neck problems in 1994, he came back to win the Buick Classic again in 1995 as well as the Phoenix Open. After playing well in 1996 (but with no victories), he won both the Memorial Tournament and the Buick Open in 1997.

In 1998, Singh was victorious at the PGA Championship at Sahalee Country Club in Sammamish, Washington, playing a 70-66-67-68 over the four days (the 66 tied a course record) and earning him his first Major title. He followed this up by winning The Masters in 2000, with a three-stroke victory over Ernie Els.

Singh did not win on the PGA Tour in 2001, but finished the year with a Tour-best 14 top-10 finishes and was fourth on the money list with $3,440,829 for the year. In 2002, he won at the Shell Houston Open at TPC at The Woodlands, setting a new tournament 72-hole scoring record with a 266, and at the Tour Championship, winning by two strokes over Charles Howell III.

2003 proved to be a very successful year for Singh. He won four tournaments, had 18 top-10 finishes and was the PGA Tour's money leader (and had the second-highest single-season total in PGA Tour history) with $7,573,907, beating Tiger Woods by $900,494, though Singh played 27 tournaments compared to Woods' 18 tournaments. Singh also tied a 9-hole scoring record at the U.S. Open with a 29 on the back nine of his second round. His victories came at the Phoenix Open, the EDS Byron Nelson Championship, the John Deere Classic and the FUNAI Classic at the Walt Disney World Resort. He narrowly lost the vote for the PGA of America's Player of the Year to Tiger Woods.

However, the 2003 season was also spotted with controversy involving Singh surrounding the year's event at the Bank of America Colonial. LPGA star Annika Sörenstam became the first woman to play at a PGA Tour event since Babe Zaharias at the 1945 Los Angeles Open. Surrounding this fervor, Singh was misquoted as having said that Sörenstam "didn't belong" on the men's tour and that he would not play if he were paired with her. What he actually said is that he would not be paired with her because his playing partner was being selected from the past champion's pool. Singh later clarified, "There are guys out there trying to make a living. It's not a ladies' tour. If she wants to play, she should—or any other woman for that matter—if they want to play the man's tour, they should qualify and play like everybody else."

Singh began 2004 by winning the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am at −16 and winning $954,000 in prize money. This was his first win on tour in 2004 and his 16th all-time on the PGA Tour. It was his 12th consecutive top-10 finish, which is two shy of Jack Nicklaus' all-time record.

Singh won the final major of 2004, winning the PGA Championship, his third major, in a three-hole aggregate playoff over Justin Leonard and Chris DiMarco. Singh was the leader by one shot over Leonard going into the final round, but made no birdies in the final round, finishing regulation at 67-68-69-76=280. His final round of 76 was the highest winning score by a major champion since 1955. The playoff was a tense affair, and Singh's birdie on the first playoff hole, his first birdie of the day, proved to be the difference.

On 6 September 2004 (Labor Day), Singh won the Deutsche Bank Championship in Norton, Massachusetts. With the win, he overtook Tiger Woods at the top of the Official World Golf Ranking, ending Woods' streak of 264 weeks at the top of the golf world.

Singh finished the 2004 season with a career-best nine victories, 18 top-10s, and a record $10,905,166 in earnings and was named the PGA Tour's and PGA of America's Player of the Year. The former award is decided by a vote of active PGA Tour players.

Despite picking up a win early in 2005, Singh lost his world number 1 ranking when Tiger Woods won the Ford Championship at Doral on 6 March, but just two weeks later he took it back again after notching up top-three finishes in three consecutive weeks. Following Woods' win at the 2005 Masters, Singh once again lost his place as World No. 1 in the Official World Golf Ranking and finished tied for fifth place. In April, he became the youngest living person elected to the World Golf Hall of Fame, garnering 56% of the ballot. Thirty-year-old Karrie Webb was inducted into the Hall of Fame in October 2005, but Singh remained the youngest living electee, as Webb qualified for the Hall without an election process. (The 19th century great Tom Morris, Jr., who was elected in 1975, died at age 24.) Singh deferred his induction for a year, and it took place in October 2006.

In 2006, Singh played enough European Tour events to be listed on the European Tour Order of Merit title for the first time since 1995.

At the start of the 2007 season, Singh won the Mercedes-Benz Championship which was the first FedEx Cup event in PGA Tour history. This win got Singh his 18th tour win over the age of 40, surpassing Sam Snead as most over 40 wins, and making all-time over 40 tour winner. He won again at The Arnold Palmer Invitational in March, but did not win for the rest of the year which turned into a disappointing year for Singh. He did not finish in a top ten of a major for the first time in ten years and finished 10th in the FedEx Cup race. He went through swing changes during the end of 2007 which resulted in weeks of missed cuts and staying outside the top ten through the Presidents Cup.

A new swing brought big changes for Singh in 2008, although he had good opportunities at Pebble Beach and Bay Hill, he was not competing at a high level for the first half of the year. His game was plagued by poor putting for the better part of two years, but his season started to turn around with a tie for fifth at the Travelers Championship. After missing the cut at The Open Championship, Singh won the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational in early August for his first win of the year and first World Golf Championship. His win had been a relief after missing short putts throughout the week. He missed the cut the following two weeks including at Oakland Hills for the PGA Championship and entered the PGA Tour FedEx Cup playoffs ranked 7th in the standings. At the first playoff event, Singh prevailed for his first FedEx Cup win defeating Sergio García and Kevin Sutherland in a playoff. On the first playoff hole García and Singh matched long birdie putts before Singh won with birdie on the second playoff hole. Singh was propelled into first place in the FedEx Cup race with three events remaining. At the second event of the playoffs, he triumphed once again, this time at the Deutsche Bank Championship bewildering the field with a five strokes victory and a final round 63. He had won three times in his last five starts and created an almost insurmountable lead in the points race. He would not contend in the remaining two events, but by playing in both the 2008 FedEx Cup title belonged to Singh. His season which looked to be a major disappointment in July turned into an historic year for Singh: he won the PGA Tour money list for the third time in his career and he surpassed Harry Cooper for most PGA Tour wins of all time for a non-American.

Singh has won 22 times on the PGA Tour since turning 40 – beating the record previously set by Sam Snead. He is the second man to reach $60 million in PGA Tour career earnings, after Tiger Woods. His 34 career victories are the most on the PGA Tour by a non-American player and place him 14th on the all-time list. He has spent over 540 weeks ranked in the top 10 of the Official World Golf Ranking.{{cite book

Kenny Perry, another player who found success at a late age is good friends with Singh, who calls him "Biggie". Of Singh, Perry said "Vijay has always been good to me. We talk a lot. He wants to know how my family is doing. I think the world of him."

After the 2008 playoffs, Singh announced his withdrawal from a couple of Asian Tour events because of a nagging back injury and was advised by doctors to rest. He missed two and a half months, returning to win Tiger Woods's tournament, the Chevron World Challenge at Sherwood Country Club in California in December. It was his first victory in the event. During the start of the 2009 season Singh announced that he would miss three weeks after undergoing arthroscopic surgery to repair a torn meniscus in his right knee. Singh had a mediocre 2009 season, with no top 5 finishes and ended the year with his lowest ever ranking on the PGA Tour money list in 68th.

Singh at the [[2010 PGA Championship

His poor form continued into 2010, resulting in him being 66th on the PGA Tour money list. He dropped out of the top 50 in the world rankings for the first time since the early 1990s.

After returning from knee surgery, Singh started the 2011 season making five out of his first five cuts. In February, Singh was in contention to win his first PGA Tour Title since 2008 at the Waste Management Phoenix Open in Scottsdale, Arizona. Despite shooting a final round 66, Singh finished two shots behind Jason Dufner and eventual winner Mark Wilson. A couple of weeks later, Singh was in contention again, this time at the Northern Trust Open at Riviera Country Club. However, he came up short again, not helped by back-to-back bogeys on holes 12 and 13. He would eventually finish two shots back of the winner Aaron Baddeley, although he did secure second spot on his own. This early season form however was not enough to secure a spot at the opening World Golf Championship of the year, the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship the following week. However, at number 10 in the 2011 FedEx Cup standings, it was just enough to secure a spot at the WGC-Cadillac Championship in March.

On 6 June 2011, Singh missed his tee-time for the U.S. Open qualifying in Columbus, Ohio. At the time, this ended the longest active streak of consecutive majors played by a professional golfer, at 67.

On 30 January 2013, Singh admitted to using deer-antler spray while not knowing that it is a banned substance. The PGA Tour later dropped its case against him. On 8 May 2013, Singh sued the PGA Tour for exposing him to public humiliation and ridicule during a 12-week investigation into his use of deer-antler spray. On 20 November 2018, the PGA Tour and Singh announced that the lawsuit had been settled. The PGA Tour confirmed that it does not believe that Singh intended to gain an unfair advantage over his fellow competitors in this matter. Other terms of the settlement were not announced.

Singh at the [[2015 PGA Championship

PGA Tour Champions

Singh played his first PGA Tour Champions event in 2013, finishing T6 at the Pacific Links Hawai'i Championship. During this era, he still played some PGA Tour events, finishing second at the Quicken Loans National, three strokes behind winner Billy Hurley III.

In 2017, Singh won his first senior event, the Bass Pro Shops Legends of Golf with Carlos Franco. In March 2018, Singh won the Toshiba Classic. Four months later, in July, Singh won one of the PGA Tour Champions' major tournaments, the Constellation Senior Players Championship in a playoff over Jeff Maggert. At the end of the season, in November, Singh won the season-ending Charles Schwab Cup Championship in Phoenix, Arizona. The victory was worth $440,000. By winning the tournament, he also finished fourth in the season-long Charles Schwab Cup, winning an additional $200,000.

In March 2019, Singh shot his way into the final group of the final round of the Honda Classic. Singh shot even-par to finish sixth, three strokes behind winner Keith Mitchell.

In 2026, Singh returned to the PGA Tour using a one-time exemption for those in the top-50 in career earnings. Singh, whose career earnings are over $71 million, is eligible for most full-field events and the Masters as a former winner.

Personal life

An Indo-Fijian practising Hinduism, Singh was born in Lautoka, Fiji and grew up in Nadi. A resident of Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, he is known for his meticulous preparation, often arriving hours before, and staying long after his tournament rounds to work on his game on the driving range and putting greens.

Singh has a brother named Krishna who is also a professional golfer.

Media relations

Singh at a press conference in 2014

Controversy surrounded Singh in 2003 before the Bank of America Colonial. Annika Sörenstam was scheduled to play the event, and Singh was quoted as saying, "I hope she misses the cut ... because she doesn't belong out here." He later said that the substance of his interview to an Associated Press reporter was that she would be displacing some other struggling male player, for whom he had his sympathies. However, the media focused on this statement. Golf Digest wrote that Singh had become "pro golf's bad guy".

After Singh's win at the Masters, Ernie Els took issue with some of the negative press his friend received. He wrote an article in Sports Illustrated to defend him, saying, "Golf should be proud of Vijay Singh." Later Els said of Singh "He's a wonderful guy. I've known him for the better part of 10 years now. He's a great competitor. I think people have a misconception of Vijay. He's a really good guy."

In May 2005, Singh was appointed a goodwill ambassador for Fiji. He said that he did not expect anything in return from the Fijian government for representing his country. At a press conference on 18 May 2005, Singh commented on what he said was a deterioration in race relations in Fiji, saying that for such a small country, people of all races should live together, put their differences aside, and get on with life. Relations between Indo-Fijians and indigenous Fijians had been more harmonious when he was younger, he said.

Awards and honors

  • In 1993, Singh won the PGA Tour's Rookie of the Year honors.
  • In 2003, 2004, and 2008 he finished atop the PGA Tour's money list.
  • In 2004, Singh was voted by his colleagues to be PGA Tour Player of the Year.
  • In 2004, he also earned PGA Player of the Year honors, based on a points-based system, from the PGA of America.
  • In 2004, Singh also earned the PGA Tour's Byron Nelson Award and the PGA of America's Vardon Trophy. The honors respectively go the player with the lowest adjusted scoring average over the course of the year and the overall leader in scoring average, non-adjusted.
  • In 2004, Singh was European Tour Golfer of the Year, dispensed by the golf media figures in Europe.
  • In 2006, Singh was elected to the World Golf Hall of Fame.
  • In 2008, he won the season-long FedEx Cup.

Professional wins (66)

PGA Tour wins (34)

Legend
Major championships (3)
World Golf Championships (1)
Tour C'ships/FedEx Cup playoff events (3)
Other PGA Tour (27)
No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victoryRunner(s)-up
113 Jun 1993Buick Classic−4 (72-68-74-66=280)PlayoffUSA Mark Wiebe
229 Jan 1995Phoenix Open−15 (70-67-66-66=269)PlayoffUSA Billy Mayfair
321 May 1995Buick Classic (2)−6 (70-69-67-72=278)PlayoffUSA Doug Martin
42 Jun 1997Memorial Tournamentname=weatherShortened to 54 holes due to weather.}}2 strokesUSA Jim Furyk, AUS Greg Norman
510 Aug 1997Buick Open−15 (67-73-67-66=273)4 strokesUSA Tom Byrum, USA Russ Cochran,
ZAF Ernie Els, USA Brad Fabel,
JPN Naomichi Ozaki, USA Curtis Strange
616 Aug 1998PGA Championship−9 (70-66-67-68=271)2 strokesUSA Steve Stricker
723 Aug 1998Sprint International47 pts (15-12-6-14=47)6 pointsUSA Phil Mickelson, USA Willie Wood
814 Mar 1999Honda Classic−11 (71-69-68-69=277)2 strokesUSA Payne Stewart
99 Apr 2000Masters Tournament−10 (72-67-70-69=278)3 strokesZAF Ernie Els
1031 Mar 2002Shell Houston Open−22 (67-65-66-68=266)6 strokesNIR Darren Clarke
113 Nov 2002The Tour Championship−12 (65-71-65-67=268)2 strokesUSA Charles Howell III
1226 Jan 2003Phoenix Open (2)−23 (67-66-65-63=261)3 strokesUSA John Huston
1318 May 2003EDS Byron Nelson Championship−15 (65-65-69-66=265)2 strokesZWE Nick Price
1415 Sep 2003John Deere Classic−16 (66-68-69-65=268)4 strokesUSA Jonathan Byrd, USA J. L. Lewis,
USA Chris Riley
1526 Oct 2003Funai Classic at the Walt Disney World Resort−23 (64-65-69-67=265)4 strokesUSA Stewart Cink, USA Scott Verplank,
USA Tiger Woods
168 Feb 2004AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am−16 (67-68-68-69=272)3 strokesUSA Jeff Maggert
1726 Apr 2004Shell Houston Open (2)−11 (74-66-69-68=277)2 strokesUSA Scott Hoch
183 May 2004HP Classic of New Orleans−22 (70-65-68-63=266)1 strokeUSA Phil Mickelson, USA Joe Ogilvie
191 Aug 2004Buick Open (2)−23 (63-70-65-67=265)1 strokeUSA John Daly
2015 Aug 2004PGA Championship (2)−8 (67-68-69-76=280)PlayoffUSA Chris DiMarco, USA Justin Leonard
216 Sep 2004Deutsche Bank Championship−16 (68-63-68-69=268)3 strokesAUS Adam Scott, USA Tiger Woods
2212 Sep 2004Bell Canadian Open−9 (68-66-72-69=275)PlayoffCAN Mike Weir
2326 Sep 200484 Lumber Classic−15 (64-68-72-69=273)1 strokeUSA Stewart Cink
2431 Oct 2004Chrysler Championship−18 (65-69-67-65=266)5 strokesUSA Tommy Armour III, SWE Jesper Parnevik
2516 Jan 2005Sony Open in Hawaii−11 (69-68-67-65=269)1 strokeZAF Ernie Els
2624 Apr 2005Shell Houston Open (3)−13 (64-71-70-70=275)PlayoffUSA John Daly
278 May 2005Wachovia Championship−12 (70-69-71-66=276)PlayoffUSA Jim Furyk, ESP Sergio García
2831 Jul 2005Buick Open (3)−24 (65-66-63-70=264)4 strokesUSA Zach Johnson, USA Tiger Woods
2911 Jun 2006Barclays Classic (3)−10 (70-64-72-68=274)2 strokesAUS Adam Scott
307 Jan 2007Mercedes-Benz Championship−14 (69-69-70-70=278)2 strokesAUS Adam Scott
3118 Mar 2007Arnold Palmer Invitational−8 (70-68-67-67=272)2 strokesUSA Rocco Mediate
323 Aug 2008WGC-Bridgestone Invitational−10 (67-66-69-68=270)1 strokeAUS Stuart Appleby, ENG Lee Westwood
3324 Aug 2008The Barclays (4)−8 (70-70-66-70=276)PlayoffESP Sergio García, USA Kevin Sutherland
341 Sep 2008Deutsche Bank Championship (2)−22 (64-66-69-63=262)5 strokesCAN Mike Weir

PGA Tour playoff record (8–4)

No.YearTournamentOpponent(s)Result
11993Buick ClassicUSA Mark WiebeWon with birdie on third extra hole
21995Phoenix OpenUSA Billy MayfairWon with par on first extra hole
31995Buick ClassicUSA Doug MartinWon with birdie on fifth extra hole
41998The Tour ChampionshipUSA Hal SuttonLost to birdie on first extra hole
52004PGA ChampionshipUSA Chris DiMarco, USA Justin LeonardWon three-hole aggregate playoff;
Singh: −1 (3-3-4=10),
DiMarco: x (4-3-x=x),
Leonard: x (4-3-x=x)
62004Bell Canadian OpenCAN Mike WeirWon with par on third extra hole
72005The Honda ClassicIRL Pádraig Harrington, USA Joe OgilvieHarrington won with par on second extra hole
Ogilvie eliminated by par on first hole
82005Shell Houston OpenUSA John DalyWon with par on first extra hole
92005Wachovia ChampionshipUSA Jim Furyk, ESP Sergio GarcíaWon with par on fourth extra hole
García eliminated by par on first hole
102006Mercedes ChampionshipsAUS Stuart ApplebyLost to birdie on first extra hole
112008AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-AmUSA Steve LoweryLost to birdie on first extra hole
122008The BarclaysESP Sergio García, USA Kevin SutherlandWon with birdie on second extra hole
Sutherland eliminated by birdie on first hole

European Tour wins (13)

Legend
Major championships (3)
World Golf Championships (1)
Other European Tour (9)
No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victoryRunner(s)-up
12 Apr 1989Volvo Open Championship−12 (72-68-68-68=276)3 strokesAUS Peter Fowler
28 Apr 1990El Bosque Open−10 (66-69-74-69=278)2 strokesENG Richard Boxall, ZAF Chris Williams
316 Feb 1992Turespaña Masters Open de Andalucía−11 (72-70-69-66=277)2 strokesENG Gary Evans
423 Aug 1992Volvo German Open−26 (66-68-64-64=262)11 strokesESP José Manuel Carriles
531 Jul 1994Scandinavian Masters−20 (68-67-69-64=268)3 strokesZWE Mark McNulty
625 Sep 1994Trophée Lancôme−17 (65-63-69-66=263)1 strokeESP Miguel Ángel Jiménez
79 Feb 1997South African Open1−18 (69-66-66-69=270)1 strokeZWE Nick Price
816 Aug 1998PGA Championship−9 (70-66-67-68=271)2 strokesUSA Steve Stricker
99 Apr 2000Masters Tournament−10 (72-67-70-69=278)3 strokesZAF Ernie Els
1018 Feb 2001Carlsberg Malaysian Open2−14 (68-70-68-68=274)PlayoffIRL Pádraig Harrington
1125 Feb 2001Caltex Singapore Masters2−21 (64-63-68-68=263)2 strokesENG Warren Bennett
1215 Aug 2004PGA Championship (2)−8 (67-68-69-76=280)PlayoffUSA Chris DiMarco, USA Justin Leonard
133 Aug 2008WGC-Bridgestone Invitational−10 (67-66-69-68=270)1 strokeAUS Stuart Appleby, ENG Lee Westwood

1Co-sanctioned by the Southern Africa Tour

2Co-sanctioned by the Asian Tour

European Tour playoff record (2–0)

No.YearTournamentOpponent(s)Result
12001Carlsberg Malaysian OpenIRL Pádraig HarringtonWon with birdie on third extra hole
22004PGA ChampionshipUSA Chris DiMarco, USA Justin LeonardWon three-hole aggregate playoff;
Singh: −1 (3-3-4=10),
DiMarco: x (4-3-x=x),
Leonard: x (4-3-x=x)

Asian Tour wins (5)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victoryRunner(s)-up
12 Sep 1995Passport Open−16 (70-72-65-65=272)1 strokeIND Jeev Milkha Singh
210 Sep 2000Johnnie Walker Taiwan Open−1 (73-72-71-71=287)PlayoffRSA Craig Kamps
318 Feb 2001Carlsberg Malaysian Open1−14 (68-70-68-68=274)PlayoffIRE Pádraig Harrington
425 Feb 2001Caltex Singapore Masters1−21 (64-63-68-68=263)2 strokesENG Warren Bennett
57 Oct 2007Kolon-Hana Bank Korea Open2−6 (66-69-70-73=278)2 strokesKOR Kim Kyung-tae, KOR Yang Yong-eun

1Co-sanctioned by the European Tour

2Co-sanctioned by the Korean Tour

Asian Tour playoff record (2–0)

No.YearTournamentOpponentResult
12000Johnnie Walker Taiwan OpenRSA Craig KampsWon with par on first extra hole
22001Carlsberg Malaysian OpenIRE Pádraig HarringtonWon with birdie on third extra hole

Asia Golf Circuit wins (1)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victoryRunners-up
115 Mar 1992Benson & Hedges Malaysian Open−9 (65-67-74-69=275)3 strokesTWN Hsieh Chin-sheng, AUS Brad King,
USA Craig McClellan, SRI Nandasena Perera,
USA Lee Porter

Southern Africa Tour wins (2)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victoryRunner-up
110 Jan 1993Bell's Cup−10 (73-69-68-68=278)2 strokesZIM Mark McNulty
29 Feb 1997South African Open1−18 (69-66-66-69=270)1 strokeZIM Nick Price

1Co-sanctioned by the European Tour

Safari Circuit wins (4)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victoryRunner(s)-up
131 Jan 1988Nigerian Open−3 (281)PlayoffSCO Mike Miller
229 Jan 1989Zimbabwe Open−6 (72-67-71-72=282)2 strokesWAL Mark Mouland
319 Nov 1989Nigerian Open (2)−5 (71-68-72-68=279)1 strokeENG Gordon J. Brand, ENG Jeff Pinsent,
ENG Ian Spencer
426 Nov 1989Ivory Coast Open−14 (70-65-65-74=274)1 strokeENG Jeff Pinsent

Swedish Golf Tour wins (1)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victoryRunner-up
17 Aug 1988Länsförsäkringar Open−6 (70-70-69-73=282)1 strokeSWE Jesper Parnevik

Other wins (8)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victoryRunner(s)-up
18 Dec 1984Malaysian PGA Championship−2 (286)1 strokeMYS Nazamuddin Yusof
224 Nov 1991Hassan II Golf Trophy−7 (70-73-71-71=285)PlayoffUSA Payne Stewart
312 Oct 1997Toyota World Match Play Championship1 upZAF Ernie Els
410 Nov 1998Johnnie Walker Super Tour−19 (70-66-71-62=269)2 strokesZAF Ernie Els
524 Jul 2001Telus Skins Game$180,000$105,000USA David Duval
624 Jun 2003Telus Skins Game (2)$140,000$45,000CAN Ian Leggatt
721 Dec 2008Chevron World Challenge−11 (71-72-67-67=277)1 strokeUSA Steve Stricker
818 Dec 2022PNC Championship
(with son Qass Singh)−26 (59-59=118)2 strokesUSA John Daly and son John Daly II,
USA Justin Thomas and father Mike Thomas

Other playoff record (1–2)

No.YearTournamentOpponent(s)Result
11991Hassan II Golf TrophyUSA Payne StewartWon with birdie on first extra hole
21995Johnnie Walker World Golf ChampionshipUSA Fred Couples, USA Loren RobertsCouples won with birdie on second extra hole
32000PGA Grand Slam of GolfUSA Tiger WoodsLost to eagle on first extra hole

PGA Tour Champions wins (5)

Legend
PGA Tour Champions major championships (1)
Charles Schwab Cup playoff events (1)
Other PGA Tour Champions (3)
No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victoryRunner(s)-up
123 Apr 2017Bass Pro Shops Legends of Golf
(with PRY Carlos Franco)−15 (51-42=93)1 strokeUSA Fred Funk and USA Jeff Sluman,
USA Paul Goydos and USA Kevin Sutherland,
USA Corey Pavin and USA Duffy Waldorf
211 Mar 2018Toshiba Classic−11 (68-68-66=202)1 strokeUSA Scott McCarron, USA Tom Pernice Jr.,
USA Tommy Tolles
315 Jul 2018Constellation Senior Players Championship−20 (68-67-66-67=268)PlayoffUSA Jeff Maggert
411 Nov 2018Charles Schwab Cup Championship−22 (67-67-67-61=262)4 strokesUSA Tim Petrovic
527 Aug 2023The Ally Challenge−14 (66-68-68=202)1 strokeUSA Jeff Maggert

PGA Tour Champions playoff record (1–0)

No.YearTournamentOpponentResult
12018Constellation Senior Players ChampionshipUSA Jeff MaggertWon with birdie on second extra hole

Major championships

Wins (3)

YearChampionship54 holesWinning scoreMarginRunner(s)-up
1998PGA ChampionshipTied for lead−9 (70-66-67-68=271)2 strokesUSA Steve Stricker
2000Masters Tournament3 shot lead−10 (72-67-70-69=278)3 strokesZAF Ernie Els
2004PGA Championship (2)1 shot lead−8 (67-68-69-76=280)Playoff1USA Chris DiMarco, USA Justin Leonard

1Defeated Justin Leonard and Chris DiMarco in three-hole playoff: Singh (3-3-4=10), Leonard (4-3-x=x), and DiMarco (4-3-x=x)

Results timeline

Results not in chronological order in 2020.

Tournament19891990199119921993199419951996199719981999
Masters TournamentT27CUTT39T17CUTT24
U.S. OpenCUTT10T7T77T25T3
The Open ChampionshipT23T12T12T51T59T20T6T11T38T19CUT
PGA ChampionshipT484CUTCUTT5T131T49
Tournament2000200120022003200420052006200720082009
Masters Tournament1T187T6T6T5T8T13T14T30
U.S. OpenT8T7T30T20T28T6T6T20T65T27
The Open ChampionshipT11T13CUTT2T20T5CUTT27CUTT38
PGA ChampionshipCUTT518T341T10CUTCUTCUTT16
Tournament201020112012201320142015201620172018
Masters TournamentCUTCUTT27T38T3754CUTCUT49
U.S. OpenT40CUT
The Open ChampionshipT37T9CUTCUT
PGA ChampionshipT39CUTT36T68T35T37CUT6678
Tournament201920202021202220232024
Masters TournamentCUTWDCUTCUTCUTT58
PGA Championship
U.S. Open
The Open ChampionshipNT

CUT = missed the half way cut

WD = withdrew

"T" indicates a tie for a place.

NT = No tournament due to COVID-19 pandemic

Summary

TournamentWins2nd3rdTop-5Top-10Top-25EventsCuts madeTotals3119234210174
Masters Tournament10026113120
PGA Championship2004682719
U.S. Open00117101816
The Open Championship01024132519
  • Most consecutive cuts made – 15 (2002 PGA – 2006 U.S. Open)
  • Longest streak of top-10s – 7 (2004 PGA – 2006 U.S. Open)

Results in The Players Championship

Tournament1993199419951996199719981999
The Players ChampionshipT28T55T43T8T31T54T20
Tournament2000200120022003200420052006200720082009
The Players ChampionshipT332CUTCUTT13T12T8T44CUTT9
Tournament2010201120122013201420152016201720182019
The Players ChampionshipCUTCUTCUTCUTT63T28T16CUT

CUT = missed the halfway cut

"T" indicates a tie for a place

World Golf Championships

Wins (1)

YearChampionship54 holesWinning scoreMarginRunners-up
2008WGC-Bridgestone InvitationalTied for lead−10 (67-66-69-68=270)1 strokeAUS Stuart Appleby, ENG Lee Westwood

Results timeline

Tournament19992000200120022003200420052006200720082009201020112012
Match PlayR32R64R32R32R32R32R16R32QFR32R64
ChampionshipT16T3NT13T2T6T56T11T2T53T11T22T66
InvitationalT15T13T11T6T32T3T45T561T29T58
Champions

1Cancelled due to 9/11

QF, R16, R32, R64 = Round in which player lost in match play

"T" = tied

NT = No tournament

Note that the HSBC Champions did not become a WGC event until 2009.

Senior major championships

Wins (1)

YearChampionship54 holesWinning scoreMarginRunners-up
2018Constellation Senior Players Championship1 shot deficit−20 (68-67-66-67=268)PlayoffUSA Jeff Maggert

Results timeline

Results not in chronological order

Tournament201420152016201720182019202020212022202320242025
The Tradition64T19T43NT62T15T39T19
Senior PGA Championship2T19T21NTT30T8T57T8
Senior Players ChampionshipWDT181T18T43T12T31T32T49T21
U.S. Senior OpenT5T18T7T16T24NTT26T33T18763
Senior British Open ChampionshipT14NTCUTCUT3CUT

CUT = missed the halfway cut

WD = withdrew

"T" indicates a tie for a place

NT = no tournament due to COVID-19 pandemic

PGA Tour career summary

SeasonWins (Majors)Earnings ($)RankCareer*34 (3)71,236,2164
19931657,83119
19940325,95952
199521,018,7139
19960855,14017
199721,059,23616
19982 (1)2,238,9982
199912,283,2334
20001 (1)2,573,8355
200103,440,8294
200223,756,5633
200347,573,9071
20049 (1)10,905,1661
200548,017,3362
200614,602,4164
200724,728,3763
200836,601,0941
200901,276,81568
201001,334,26266
201102,371,05028
201201,586,30551
20130309,351162
20140989,02897
20150752,462124
201601,210,10488
20170337,305173
2018095,334210
20190244,800198
2020020,088234

*As of the 2020 season.

There is a summary of Singh's European Tour career here.

Team appearances

Amateur

  • Eisenhower Trophy (representing Fiji): 1980

Professional

Notes

References

References

  1. Singh was elected to the Hall of Fame in 2005 but deferred his induction until 2006.
  2. Rees, Peter. (1 November 2004). "Golf's Humble Fijian: Vijay Singh's Rise To Number One".
  3. Shapiro, Leonard. (18 August 1998). "Hard Work Finally Pays Off For Singh". Washington Post.
  4. (11 May 2015). "Vijay Singh Has Always Been Reluctant To Discuss His Early Years As A Pro, And For Good Reason". Golf.
  5. Mizell, Hubert. (10 April 2000). "Experience a good teacher". [[St. Petersburg Times]].
  6. (10 April 2000). "Singh claims US Masters". BBC Sport.
  7. Brown, Clifton. (14 June 2003). "Singh Ties Record And Shares Lead With Furyk". The New York Times.
  8. (2003-05-14). "Vijay Apologizes For Swing At Annika". CBS News.
  9. "69 Players Who Have Reached The Top-10 in World Ranking". Official World Golf Ranking.
  10. Potter, Jerry. (21 March 2005). "A surprising friendship". USA Today.
  11. (30 September 2008). "Singh sidelined two months with tendinitis". ESPN.
  12. (16 January 2009). "Singh has knee scoped". The Boston Globe.
  13. (6 June 2011). "Singh fails to show up for U.S. Open qualifier". PGA Tour.
  14. Harig, Bob. (30 January 2013). "Vijay Singh could face suspension". ESPN.
  15. Harig, Bob. (8 May 2013). "Vijay Singh Sues the PGA Tour". ESPN.
  16. Hoggard, Rex. (20 November 2018). "Tour announces it has "resolved" lawsuit with Vijay Singh following the Fijian's anti-doping suspension which was later rescinded.".
  17. (11 November 2018). "2018 Charles Schwab Cup Championship purse, winner's share, prize money payout".
  18. (11 November 2018). "2018 Charles Schwab Cup bonus pool, purse, winner's share, prize money payout".
  19. "Vijay Singh Biography". JockBio.
  20. (1992-10-18). "Golf: The Shark helps Australia cruise into semi-final". The Canberra Times.
  21. "The many sides of Vijay Singh".
  22. (18 May 2005). "Singh returns to native Fiji".
  23. (30 October 2006). "Nelson, Singh inducted into World Golf Hall of Fame". ESPN.
  24. "Vijay Singh – Performance". PGA Tour.
  25. "Official Money". PGA Tour.
  26. "Career Money Leaders". PGA Tour.
  27. "Vijay Singh – Record". European Tour.
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