Simpson was at Wakefield Golf Club from about 1900 and then at Timperley Golf Club from 1902 before moving to
Lytham & St Annes Golf Club in early 1905. Simpson was at Lytham until 1919 when he moved to Hesketh Golf Club where he remained until at least 1926. He played again in 1901, missing the cut by 2 strokes, and in 1902 where he missed the cut by 7 strokes. In 1903 Simpson qualified for the final stages of the
first News of the World Match Play, taking one of the five paces allocated to the Northern Section of the P.G.A. He met
J. H. Taylor in the first round, losing 3 & 1. He qualified again
the following year, losing to
Alfred Toogood at the last-16 stage. After moving to Lytham, he entered the
1905 Open Championship. He had an 88 on the second day but still made the cut. Final-day rounds of 78 and 81 lifted him into a tie for 9th place. In 1906 he finished tied for 15th in the Open Championship and he was third in the
Leeds Cup. Qualifying was introduced for the 1907 Open. Simpson entered but failed to qualify. Simpson entered again in 1908 and qualified with two rounds of 81. In the Championship itself, he had rounds of 75-77-76-79 to finish in a tie for seventh place. Simpson failed to qualify for the
1909 Open Championship, but did reach the final stage of the
1909 News of the World Match Play after finishing joint runner-up in the northern section qualifying event. He lost to
Charles Mayo in the first round of the final stage. Tom Simpson, the professional golfer, is not to be confused with Tom Simpson, the leading golf architect of the 1930s. ==Results in major championships==