Players have expressed their dissatisfaction after the PGA Tour Champions reduced their pension benefits by 20%. Some players believe the PGA Tour made the cut to prioritize its new for-profit structure and redirect more funds toward its top stars. The decision has sparked anger among senior players, many of whom feel disrespected after years of contributing to the sport.
The PGA Tour reduced the PGA Tour Champions’ pension pool by 20%, cutting it from $10 million to $8 million. A Tour spokesperson confirmed the cut, explaining that it was part of broader cost-cutting measures following the organization’s restructuring earlier this year.
The PGA Tour recently transitioned to a for-profit model, creating a new commercial entity and accepting investment from Strategic Sports Group (SSG) — a private equity firm that invested $1.5 billion to become a minority investor and could potentially invest up to $3 billion.
That change, while designed to strengthen the Tour financially, has also led to a tighter budget in some areas — and the Champions Tour appears to be one of the casualties.
However, PGA Tour Champions players have reacted angrily to the news that their pension benefits have been reduced. Furthermore, many say the decision sends the wrong message to those who have helped build the PGA Tour’s reputation over the decades.
“It’s disheartening,” Golf legend Peter Jacobsen didn’t mince words as he expressed his feelings.“The PGA Tour clearly has a lot of money right now and they’re spending a lot of money keeping players from going to LIV…we are giving way too much money to way too few players on the PGA Tour.”
Billy Andrade, another Champions Tour regular, went even further in his criticism of new PGA Tour CEO Brian Rolapp.
“This guy’s like Keyser Soze,” Andrade said. “He’s just slashing stuff. Everyone’s taking a pay cut except PGA Tour stars. Our pension should be $20–$25 million by now, not dropping from $10 to $8.”
The PGA Tour established the pension program for the PGA Tour Champions in the mid-1980s to reward players who continued competing and representing the sport well into their senior years. In the past, the Tour decided how much money to place into the pension fund each year, so it never guaranteed the full amount — though players claim officials led them to expect steady or increasing contributions, not cuts.
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