MADISON, Miss. — Woody Austin said he feels he still has the skills and drive to play on the PGA Tour — even as his 50th birthday approaches.
He proved it Sunday, winning the Sanderson Farms Championship for his first PGA Tour victory since 2007. The 49-year-old beat Cameron Beckman and Daniel Summerhays with an 8-foot birdie putt on the first playoff hole.
"I've always told everybody I want to play out here," Austin said. "I'm one of those people who doesn't like a number. I don't like the idea that people say, 'Oh, you're 50 years old, you're not good enough to play anymore and need to go play with the old guys."
He won't have to for at least two years.
"It's been a long road and a long time," Austin said. "Now I've got a job again."
Austin is the eighth-oldest winner in PGA Tour history and the oldest since Fred Funk won at 50 in 2007. The victory gave him a two-year exemption on the PGA Tour and a spot in the PGA Championship — not to mention a $540,000 paycheck.
Not bad for a guy who hadn't even made a cut on the tour this year.
The final round was the first of the tournament that didn't involve a weather delay. But there was plenty of heat and humidity — as well as some wind for the first time all week — as players dealt with a soft course that received more than an inch of rain overnight.