These five golfers – four of them Aussies – earned 2024 PGA Tour Champions tour cards at Q school at TPC Scottsdale

TPC Scottsdale’s Champions Course was host for the 72-hole qualifying tournament.

The PGA Tour Champions had five tour cards for 2024 up for grabs at TPC Scottsdale’s Champions Course this week.

The final stage of Q School for the senior circuit provided 78 golfers 72 holes to snag status for next season.

By Friday, 73 of those golfers came up short, including Baseball Hall of Famer John Smoltz (dead last by eight shots at 22 over), 72-year-old Dick Mast (who shot or beat his age two times this week), Notah Begay, Shaun Micheel, Ted Purdy, Carlos Franco and Bryan Hoops, the lone amateur in the field who missed out on a playoff by a stroke.

All is not lost for those who finished sixth through 30th, as they will be eligible to apply for PGA Tour Champions Associate Membership for 2024, which would then get them into qualifiers.

But for those lucky top five, they are now fully exempt into all open, full-field events for the 2024 season on the PGA Tour Champions.

Here’s a closer look at what turned out to be an Aussie takeover, with Australian golfers earning four of the five cards.

Wide fairways, lots of birdies lead 5 things from opening round at World Wide Technology Championship

The Aussie may want to put the senior circuit on hold for a bit after the way he played on Thursday.

LOS CABOS, Mexico – Cameron Percy is 49 and already sent in his application for PGA Tour Champions Q-School in December. But the Aussie, who is still seeking his first PGA Tour win, may want to put the senior circuit on hold for a bit after the way he played on Thursday in the first round of the World Wide Technology Championship.

Percy carded eight birdies and an eagle to shoot 10-under 62 at El Cardonal at Diamante and match his career low in 632 career rounds spanning the last 20 years. When play was suspended due to darkness with 10 players still on the course, Percy held a two-stroke lead over four other golfers.

“I’m 152 I think on the FedEx Cup, so finishing Top 150 at my age would be fantastic,” he said. “I want to at least do that, but if I can keep the ball rolling like I did today, I should be able to finish a lot higher than that, and then lead into Q-School with the Champions Tour. Yeah, I’m looking forward to that.”

Percy birdied three of his first five holes and then spun back a pitch shot from 70 yards for eagle at the par-5 sixth.

“For about an hour and a half it didn’t matter where I hit it, it went in,” Percy said.

He had it to 9-under through 13 but made a three-putt par at 14.

“I couldn’t make ‘em all,” said Percy, who matched the score he shot in Las Vegas in 2010.

He drained a 15-foot birdie at the last to cap off an impressive showing and already was licking his chops to tee off again in less than 12 hours as the first off at 6:25 a.m. local time on Friday.

“I’m going to get the good greens and I need to take advantage of it,” he said.

Percy’s happy day leads off our things to know from the opening round:

If you’re in the mood for a laugh, watch this PGA Tour pro flail every limb on his body as he falls after a bunker shot

This is laugh-out-loud funny.

This is why people say golf is a hobby, not a sport.

Cameron Percy, 48, found a tough lie on the par-3 fourth at Innisbrook’s Copperhead Course in Palm Harbor, Florida, during the second round of the Valspar Championship.

Percy took his stance with one foot in the bunker and the other on the lip. After a big whack at what looked like a plugged lie, the Aussie seemed to lose control of all limbs.

Arms flying around, feet coming off the ground until his body plopped onto the grass.

I’m not sure he could have fallen in a funnier way.

Valspar: Full leaderboard | Photo gallery | Merchandise

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Chad Ramey wins first PGA Tour event in 16th start at Corales Puntacana Championship

Nine months after his first Korn Ferry Tour win, Chad Ramey now has a win on the PGA Tour.

The tiny Mississippi town of Fulton, population about 4,000, has now produced two professional golf champions.

Chad Ramey joins the LPGA’s Ally Ewing with a trip into the winner’s circle at the highest level of their professions.

In just his 16th start on the PGA Tour, Ramey had a Sunday to remember with six birdies over his last 15 holes, including four in a row on his back nine, to storm the finish line and claim the 2022 Corales Puntacana Championship.

Fulton is situated in the northwest corner of the state and is home to Fulton Country Club, a 5,700-yard course run by Ramey’s dad, Stanley. The course has no practice range, so growing up Ramey and Ewing designed their own makeshift range across fairways. They aimed at trees and shagged their own balls, trying to stay out of the way of paying customers.

“During football and huntin’ season, it kind of clears out,” said Ramey, who, like Ewing, went to Mississippi State. Ramey once shot a 27 on the course, closing with an ace on the last hole.

Sunday, Ramey shot a 67 to finish at 17 under and win by a shot over Alex Smalley and Ben Martin. Jhonattan Vegas and Cameron Percy finished tied for fourth, two back.

Ramey, 29, is the eighth first-time winner this season. He’s the first rookie to win on Tour since Garrick Higgo claimed the 2021 Palmetto Championship at Congaree.

Ramey tracked down Ben Martin, who led after each of the first three rounds. Martin opened the week with back-to-back 66s but posted back-to-back 70s over the weekend, opening the door for Ramey.

Alex Smalley briefly grabbed the clubhouse lead Sunday. He followed his second-round 65 with a third-round 73 and closed his week with another 65, but it wasn’t enough to keep up with Ramey.

“I always had the self-belief that I could get it done,” Ramey said after his fourth top-20 finish of the season. “I proved that today.”

Ramey started the week ranked 203rd in the Official World Golf Ranking. His first professional win came nine months ago at the Korn Ferry Tour’s Live and Work in Maine Open, with his dad serving as his caddie. His last win before that was nine years ago when he was a junior on the Mississippi State golf team. He earned $666,000 for his win Sunday.

Martin, 34, was angling for his first win on Tour in eight years. He is playing out of the past champion category thanks to his victory at the 2014 Shriners Hospitals for Children Open.

Golfweek’s Beth Ann Nichols contributed to this report.

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Scott Harrington is the 40-year-old virgin at the Players

Scott Harrington and Cameron Percy are both making their debut at TPC Sawgrass after long and winding roads to get their after age 40.

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – Matthew Wolff, Joaquin Niemann and Collin Morikawa are all examples of the PGA Tour’s youth movement. Wolff and Niemann won before they were eligible to celebrate legally with an alcoholic beverage while Morikawa won the PGA Championship at age 23. At the opposite end of the spectrum is Scott Harrington, the Players Championship 40-year-old virgin.

“I definitely didn’t think it would take until now to be here,” he said.

Harrington is set to make his debut at the PGA Tour’s signature event this week. But he isn’t even the oldest first-timer here this week. That dubious distinction belongs to Australian Cameron Percy, 46.

“When you write down your goals when you’re younger than this, you think, yeah, I’ll be there, but it took a long time,” Percy said. “Everyone has been coming up congratulating me. It’s pretty cool. It’s like, ‘Is this really your first time?’ I’m like, ‘Yeah.’ They’re like, ‘Wow.’”

Wow, indeed. Both Percy and Harrington are stories in perseverance. Harrington didn’t make it to the PGA Tour until earning his card by finishing No. 19 on the 2019 Korn Ferry Tour money list after grinding for 16 years on minor-league circuits. That’s after putting his career on hold in 2018 to care for his wife, Jenn, who was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma six months after they got married and now is in remission.

He made his professional debut in 2004, but concedes that it wasn’t until his late 20s, early 30s that he thought he was good enough to do well on the Korn Ferry Tour. The low point? In 2008, he had conditional status on the Korn Ferry Tour and made only three cuts in 16 starts and earned $5,776. Meanwhile, his former college teammate at Northwestern, Luke Donald, was an established star and on his way to becoming World No. 1 in 2011.

“There were times where I was thinking I’m in my prime and I should be on the PGA Tour and I’m barely cutting it on the Korn Ferry Tour,” Harrington said.

But he never gave himself a time limit to make it. Every year he could see “micro progressions.”

“I never had a year where I lost my card and financially I was able to sustain. The difference between 50th and getting your card is so small,” he explained. “You just have to turn a fifth into a second and a 10th into a sixth. It didn’t always look like I was getting better but I always felt like I was.”

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Earning his PGA Tour card in his hometown of Portland at last was an emotional experience. When asked if he felt a bit like a seventh-year senior in college finally graduating, he smiled and said, “I’m Van Wilder,” referencing the National Lampoon’s movie starring Ryan Reynolds.

In his rookie season last year, Harrington was runner up at the Houston Open, finished No. 98 in the FedEx Cup standings and earned just under $1 million. This season his best result is a tie for 14th at the Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship, where he held a share of the first-round lead. On Wednesday, he received Tiffany cufflinks commemorating his first appearance at the Players from PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan.

“On paper it may look like I’m a 40-year-old first-time Players participant but I think my best stuff is still to come,” Harrington said.

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James Hahn, playing close to his childhood home, shares 54-hole lead at Safeway Open

NAPA, Calif. – James Hahn has a secret advantage at this week’s Safeway Open. He’s sleeping at his childhood home in Alameda, a suburb of Oakland, where his parents moved to from South Korea when he was 2 years old. “Bought it for dirt cheap and …

NAPA, Calif. – James Hahn has a secret advantage at this week’s Safeway Open. He’s sleeping at his childhood home in Alameda, a suburb of Oakland, where his parents moved to from South Korea when he was 2 years old.

“Bought it for dirt cheap and it’s worth a lot more now,” he said. “But it’s good because I have my family there and the last thing I want to do is be alone in a hotel room having a million thoughts go through my mind and try to play out all the scenarios. It’s easier just to watch – what were we watching the other day? – some Peppa Pig with my daughter. You know, most guys don’t have that luxury of watching Peppa Pig, but I do.”

Hahn, 38, has been making the hour-long drive to Silverado Resort and Spa and he’ll have a late tee time on Sunday after shooting a bogey-free 6-under 66 on the North Course to share the 54-hole lead with Cameron Percy and Brian Stuard at 16-under 200.

Hahn’s father leased the driving range at Galbraith Golf Course from the city of Oakland – the facility later was renovated by Johnny Miller and re-named Metropolitan Golf Links – and it’s where Hahn took up the game at age 4 and developed his homespun swing through trial and error.

Hahn played his college golf at Cal-Berkeley but despite enjoying the Northern California hospitality, the Safeway Open has never been good to him: He missed the 54-hole cut last year, the 36-hole cut twice, making a T-41 in 2015 his best result in four previous starts.

“My wife said a couple weeks ago, ‘Why do you go to Silverado?’ I go, ‘Why not? I go see my family, it’s a great golf tournament, love supporting the local events.’ She said, ‘You never played well there, why would you want to play there?’ ” Hahn recounted. “It might have a little to do with low expectations and coming out here and finally seeing the breaks and seeing the putts go in. I think that has a lot to do with it.”

SAFEWAY OPEN: Leaderboard | Tee times, TV info

It didn’t hurt that Hahn made three of his five birdies on the par-3s during the third round.

“I mean, those par 3s are tough out there. The one that I didn’t birdie was hole 7. I skanked a 4-iron to 25 feet and hit a great putt,” he said.

Hahn has won twice previously on Tour, most recently at the 2016 Wells Fargo Championship. He’s playing this week on a major-medical exemption after being sidelined for eight months in 2019 with an elbow injury. Hahn has 14 starts remaining to retain his playing privileges, which could create added pressure, but doesn’t seem to be bothering Hahn one bit.

“It’s the same as trying to win a golf tournament, I can tell you that, because you’ve heard it before, winning takes care of itself. It takes care of a lot of problems,” he said. “You know, the medical is just something in the back of my mind, to be honest with you. I come out every week trying to win a golf tournament, so if I can keep my focus there, I think I’m doing things right.”

Hahn will have his hands full on Sunday as 28 golfers are within four strokes of the lead, ranging from 18-year-old Akshay Bhatia to a pair of 40-somethings in Percy, one of the co-leaders, and Stewart Cink, 47, who birdied six of the first eight holes en route to shooting 65 and trails by two strokes. Cink hasn’t won since the 2009 British Open playoff over Tom Watson, but said, “I remember what it’s like. I mean, it was 11 years ago when I won The Open Championship, but I feel like it was yesterday. I remember that day, after it was all said and done, looking back and thinking I really didn’t do anything all that special today, I was just myself and that’s the key.”

Stuard, 37, has one Tour title at the 2016 Zurich Classic of New Orleans. He reeled off three birdies in a row starting at the third and canned a 7-foot birdie at 18 to cap off a 66. Stuard is riding a hot putter this week – he ranks fifth in Strokes Gained: Putting – into the final round.

“I feel like if I drive it well tomorrow and, you know, get the putter rolling, then we’ll see,” he said.

Percy, 46, has never won on the Tour, coming closest when he lost a playoff when Jonathan Byrd made an ace to claim victory in Las Vegas in 2010. He was the first player in the field to get to 16 under when he canned a 32-foot birdie putt at No. 10, but he required two late birdies to cancel out two bogeys coming home.

What would victory mean to the Australian journeyman pro?

“It would mean the world to me. Yeah, it would be fantastic,” he said. “It would mean I get to go to Augusta, which is a goal. I’ve never been to Augusta, which is the biggest goal you have when you come over here. I just thought I’d get there, I haven’t got there yet, so it’s a big deal.”

Sam Burns, the 36-hole leader, struggled to shoot 72, and shares fourth with Harry Higgs (70) and Kristoffer Ventura (66); all three are seeking their first Tour title.

Russell Knox, who along with Mark Anderson has played bogey-free this week, leads a group of five golfers at 14 under. Sahith Theegala, playing on a sponsor exemption and making just his fourth Tour start as a professional, surged into contention by shooting 64 to get to 13 under.

Phil Mickelson (T-43) won’t be part of the trophy hunt on Sunday. He posted consecutive bogey-free rounds for the first time since 2016, but declared his 2-under 70 on Saturday his worst round in three months.

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