PITTSBURGH — The devilish grin and sharp tongue remain as potent as ever. It's everything else that's changed for Colin Montgomerie.
The polish and precision that made the sometimes irascible Scotsman one of the best golfers in the world for the better part of two decades has evolved into something more pedestrian. The newly minted Hall of Famer hasn't won a tournament in six years or been a factor at a major in seven.
"I've been playing the last decade against players I have children older than," Montgomerie said. "It doesn't seem fair to me."
No wonder he isn't wasting any time making his Champions Tour debut.
Four days after turning 50, Montgomerie will tee it up in the Senior Players Championship hoping to rejuvenate his career and grab the major title that he couldn't quite clutch with both hands during his prime in the 1990s. One of the near misses came in the U.S. Open 19 years ago at Oakmont, a couple of par-5s across the Allegheny River from Fox Chapel Golf Club.
Montgomerie survived four sweltering days to finish in a three-way tie with Ernie Els and Loren Roberts only to falter in the ensuing 18-hole playoff. It marked the first of five runner-up finishes in majors, though Montgomerie insists on viewing Oakmont as a memory more positive than painful.
"I was glad I survived that test more than most," he said. "Nobody beat me over 72 holes."
Something Montgomerie hasn't been able to say since capturing the European Open in 2007. He spent his late 40s toiling away in the middle of the pack, at least when he was able to make it to the weekend. Montgomerie has survived the cut just twice in seven European Tour starts this season, missing by a single shot at the BMW International in Germany last weekend.