There are still days Kenny Perry doesn't feel like getting out of bed. When you battle bad knees and rely on anti-inflammatory medication, it becomes a common pre-dawn thought.
Six years after his right knee was repaired, Perry had left knee surgery in February. He missed eight weeks of competitive golf, leaving him unsure how well he'd play when he returned to the Champions Tour.
The answer to that question for Perry, who is in town to play this weekend in the 3M Championship at the TPC Twin Cities in Blaine, sits on his mantle: a pair of major championship trophies, rewarding his motivation to leave the pillow behind each morning.
Perry came back in April, collected a few paychecks in no-cut tournaments and set his sights on the Tour's run of four stateside majors.
Long known for playoff losses in the 1996 PGA Championship in his home state of Kentucky and at the 2009 Masters, Perry won the Senior Players championship and the Senior U.S. Open in a span of 14 days this summer. He shot weekend rounds of 63 and 64 in both of his come-from-behind victories.
He skipped last week's Senior British Open to attend a family gathering. But he comes into Friday's opening round of the 3M Championship not just the hottest golfer over 50, but maybe across the sport.
"He has the amazing ability to catch fire five, six weeks a year and shoot scores that make you go, 'What are you thinking about?' " Rocco Mediate said. "And it's on amazing golf courses. And he's doing it again right now."
Yes, the surgically repaired Kenny Perry can still play.