
James Morrison was ready for this week to be his last in the world of professional golf. Golf had other ideas.
The 40-year-old Morrison spent 15 years on the DP World Tour, winning twice, before losing his card after last season. He spent this year on the HotelPlanner Tour but entered this week’s HotelPlanner Tour’s Rolex Grand Finalneeding a good finish to at least earn conditional status on the DP World Tour in 2026. The top 20 finishers secured full cards for next season, with another 10 earning conditional status.
He was ready to walk off into the sunset. But a fairytale ending has forced him to change his plans.
“When I said this was going to be my last event, it really was going to be, 100 percent,” Morrison told Sky Sports on Sunday after a three-shot win put him in sixth place in the developmental tour’s point list and guaranteed him a spot on the DP World Tour next season. “This has completely messed that up.”
With his 13-year-old son Finley on the bag, Morrison fired a seven-under 65 on Saturday to build a three-shot lead. When he woke on Sunday, Morrison, who had been content with this week being his swan song, had a different perspective with a win with his son on the bag 18 holes away.
“It’s funny that all week I had that attitude of ‘right, this could be the last one and I don’t really care’,” Morrison said, via The Scotsman.“But then this morning I started to care a little bit and I was like ‘hang on a minute, this is not where I want to be’. I just tried to dig into the memory bank of years gone by and managed to do that.”
The nerves got to Morrison early on Sunday. He three-putted the par-5 first and then made a bogey on the second. But he steadied himself and then made three birdies in a four-hole stretch starting at the par-5 11th to stretch his lead to four. But even with a big cushion, Morrison still felt the pressure on the 72nd hole.
“That swing on the last, I couldn’t feel my arms. It went so far right.” Morrison said after bogeying the final hole to finish at 15 under to win by three. “I’m glad it’s over with, let’s put it that way. But no, I played nicely all week. Didn’t play as well today, but kind of managed my emotions, dug into my memory bank and my wins on the DP World Tour, and the wind blowing really helped me today because I knew the harder it got, the more it would play into my hands.”
Morrison’s first DP World Tour win came in 2009 as a rookie. He won the 2015 Spanish Open, which was his last win until he won earlier this season on the HotelPlanner Tour. Despite the victory earlier in the year, Morrison struggled on the developmental tour this season. He missed nine of his first 10 cuts before winning in France. He missed five cuts and carded just one top-20 finish in the 12 events since. He entered the week at No. 36 in the points rankings and had decided that spending another year grinding on the developmental tour was not in the cards.
Instead, Morrison authored a fairytale win with his son on the bag, which meant more than heading back to Europe’s top circuit.
“He did great,” Morrison said of his son Finley. “I holed a birdie putt on 11 and he let out a massive sigh. I was like ‘you nervous mate’ and he said ‘not really’ but I think he was feeling, as we all were. He did great and giving him a hug on the 18th green was the most special thing in the world.”
Morrison has made 438 starts on the DP World Tour in his career. Prior to this week, that looked like it would be the final tally. Now? There’s more to come. How much more remains to be seen.
“I haven’t got a caddie. I haven’t got a tour bag, nothing. I can cancel my email to Waitrose applying for a job. But we’ll have to wait and see,” Morrison said when asked how much he planned to play in his return to the DP World Tour.
That’s a worry for another day. A day Morrison didn’t think would come. But, as is always the case, four good rounds can change everything.
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