"The story is always, a bunch of young guys go win a couple of events and all of a sudden it's the young guys, and this and that. And then Ernie wins a couple of times, I win a couple of times, and Phil wins the Masters - and, all of a sudden, the 40-year-olds are taking over. So it's just part of the cycle that everyone goes through."
Furyk will have to carry the banner for the 40-year-olds this week because neither Mickelson nor Els will be at the AT&T National at Aronimink Golf Club. He will have to do battle with 20-somethings such as Sean O'Hair, Dustin Johnson, Rickie Fowler and Justin Rose, and also contend with Tiger Woods, the leader of the 30-and-over pack.
Furyk concedes this has been a different type of season for him. In the last two years, he reached the top 10 in 20 of 49 tournaments (40.8 percent) but the consistency came without a win.
This year, he's only 4 for 13 (30.8 percent) in top-10 finishes but has two victories - the Transitions Championship in Tampa and a playoff win over Brian Davis at the Verizon Heritage at Hilton Head Island, S.C.
"When I've played well, I've gotten over the hump," he said. "I won't say luck is involved when you win, but there's always those couple of moments in an event where you have an opportunity to win, and is the other guy going to hit the key shot or knock in a key putt?
"Brian birdied the last hole at Harbour Town, which you don't see very often, to get in a playoff but then knocked it in the water, made a 6, and kind of handed over the tournament. I got a big lead in Tampa and I tried to screw it up, but things just seem to be working out and falling into play, and they hadn't done that the previous couple of years."