SAN DIEGO — Justin Rose doesn't pay attention to his age no matter how much he gets reminded.
His victory Sunday in the Farmers Insurance Open was historic on a couple of fronts. At age 45, he became the oldest winner of a tournament that dates to 1952. He became the first wire-to-wire winner at Torrey Pines in 71 years. He broke the 72-hole tournament record at 23-under 265, beating by one the mark held by Tiger Woods (1999) and George Burns (1987).
He also moved to No. 3 in the world, making him the second-oldest player behind Vijay Singh to be ranked that high.
Rose must not have received the memo. The PGA Tour is supposed to be a young man's game.
''Yeah, listen, I don't read into it,'' Rose said. ''I don't buy into the narrative of it, but I take the pride out of it, that I'm doing something that's not easy to do. But I don't wake up in the morning and believe that narrative, either.''
He left Torrey Pines a year ago at No. 55 in the world. He ended the year at No. 10 having lost another playoff at the Masters (to Rory McIlroy), won the FedEx Cup playoff opener and qualified for his seventh Ryder Cup appearance. He was the oldest player on the team by seven years.
There's that age thing again.
But it's no less remarkable considering how the numbers are dwindling. Rose is among just 10 players 40 or older who have full PGA Tour status. That includes 50-year-old Tiger Woods, who last played in 2024 because of injuries, and 62-year-old Vijay Singh, who took a career money exemption and probably won't play but a few times this year.