PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. — Lucas Glover always had a strong voice. He's at a point now where the former U.S. Open champion would rather it be heard in the PGA Tour boardroom instead of on the radio.
Glover starts his 23rd season at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. Already different about this year is that when tour officials told him his peers had voted him — for the 11th time — to be on the Player Advisory Council, he accepted.
''They have to ask you if you want to do it, and I turned it down 10,'' Glover said. ''I talked to some people and realized that at this stage in my career, it's about time to do it. So I am.''
More than serving on the PAC — the 16-player group that reports to the policy board — is the chance to run it. Glover and Adam Scott were selected to run for PAC chairman, and the winner joins the PGA Tour board in 2027 to serve a four-year term.
They would replace Scott, whose term expires this year.
Scott and Glover are examples of players taking more interest in how the tour is run, particularly amid so many sweeping changes in the last four years amid the threat of Saudi-funded LIV Golf.
It was only three years ago that Scott — much like Glover now — decided to join the PAC for the first time at age 42 as he began his 24th year as a pro. He was voted PAC chairman, joined the board in 2024 and immediately was part of conversations about private equity investing in the tour.
This is no longer about pace of play and the menu in player dining. The tour is a month away from pulling back the curtain on a radical new schedule that is still taking shape. The concern is whether the result will be a rich circuit for the haves and a lesser one for the have-nots.