New Zealander Steven Alker began a freshly christened year on PGA TOUR Champions exactly the way he ended the last one, which was plenty fine with him. Saturday amid the postcard setting of crashing waves off the distance in scenic Ka\u2019upulehu-Kona, Alker stood on the 18th green at the Mitsubishi Electric Championship at Hualalai holding yet another trophy, his reward for yet another resounding victory.<\/p>\n
His last official start resulted in victory at the Charles Schwab Cup Championship in Phoenix in November, so this made two wins in a row for Alker, whose once-pedestrian golf life started anew at 50.<\/p>\n
The 52-year-old has seen the other side of professional golf, knowing what it’s like to barely survive. He missed 21 cuts in 21 starts on the Korn Ferry Tour a little more than a decade ago (2010) and never made an impact on the PGA TOUR, failing to record a single top-10 finish. But he kept in shape and kept working on his craft, hoping his day would come.<\/p>\n
During Saturday\u2019s telecast, Golf Channel analyst Lanny Wadkins wondered aloud from the tower what a lot of people have wondered about Alker, now an eight-time winner in 54 PGA TOUR Champions starts: \u201cWhere the hell have you been all this time?\u201d Wadkins asked incredulously as he watched Alker shoot 65-63-63.<\/p>\n
Alker’s winning total of 25-under 191 matched the tournament scoring record set by Loren Roberts in 2006.<\/p>\n