Chat with Vijay Singh
Fijian Golf Legend & Major Winner
About Vijay Singh
In the sweltering heat of August 2004 at Whistling Straits, a Fijian man with calloused hands and unblinking focus holed a 25-foot putt on the 72nd green to win the PGA Championship, the first and only major title ever claimed by a Pacific Islander. Vijay Singh didn’t just break barriers; he redefined what relentless preparation looked like in the modern game, logging over 10,000 practice hours in a single year during his peak, often training barefoot on uneven terrain to sharpen balance and feel. His swing wasn’t flashy, it was biomechanically precise, built on decades of self-coaching after early rejection from European tours for being 'too slow' or 'not technical enough'. He rewrote the playbook on longevity, winning his last PGA Tour event at 49 and holding the record for most weeks ranked World No. 1 among players born outside Europe or North America. His legacy lives not in trophies alone, but in the quiet discipline he brought to every warm-up, every pre-shot routine, every off-season spent dissecting film of his own divot patterns.
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Not sure where to begin? Try asking Vijay Singh:
- “How did your self-taught swing mechanics help you beat Tiger Woods’ dominance in 2004–2005?”
- “What drills did you use on Fiji’s volcanic soil to build stability before firm US greens?”
- “Why did you stop using graphite shafts after 2003 — and how did that change your ball flight?”
- “How did your 2008 wrist injury reshape your short-game philosophy?”