For Stanford’s Michael Thorbjornsen, a PGA Tour exemption could be just a few months away

Stanford men’s golf coach Conrad Ray called Thorbjornsen the most talented player he’s ever coached.

LA QUINTA, Calif. — Longtime Stanford men’s golf coach Conrad Ray called Cardinal senior Michael Thorbjornsen the physically most talented player Ray has ever coached. That’s high praise from Ray given his tenure at Stanford has seen him coach players like Maverick McNealy and Patrick Rodgers and that Ray played on the same Stanford team as Tiger Woods.

It’s a compliment Thorbjornsen doesn’t take lightly, but one he’s willing to accept.

“It’s a little shocking, but I do feel like I can hit the ball well,” Thorbjornsen said as he prepared to lead Stanford in this week’s Prestige at PGA West tournament. “When I’m on, I’m on. I can compete with anyone in the world when I am feeling good, when the body is feeling good, when it comes to ball striking.”

The 24-team Prestige college golf tournament continues through Wednesday at the Greg Norman Course at PGA West, as well as an individual tournament being played at Terra Lago Golf Resort in Indio.

The 22-year-old Thorbjornsen comes to the desert this week as the No. 4 player in the world amateur rankings, but perhaps more importantly as the No. 1 ranked player in the PGA Tour U standings. Should Thorbjornsen keep the No. 1 ranking for the rest of the spring and through the NCAA Championships, he would gain an automatic exemption to the PGA Tour, just as last year’s Prestige individual winner Ludvig Aberg of Texas Tech did. Aberg already has wins on the PGA Tour and the DP World Tour, a path Thoirbjornsen would like to follow.

“I have my own personal goals and just starting from very young junior golf, when I was 6 or 7 years old,” Thorbjornsen said. “I wanted to be the best starting at that age. Kind of at every level, I’m trying to be the best I can possibly be and so here we are toward the end of my amateur career, trying to be the best and as we head into professional golf, I’ll try to do the same as well. So I am always setting more goals, trying to reach higher levels.”

Those goals have been difficult for Thorbjornsen in the last year. A stress fracture in his back knocked him out of the U.S. Amateur last summer and kept him off the course for months. He returned to competition last month with an 11th-place finish in the Hero Dubai Desert Classic on the DP World Tour, finishing ahead of golfers like Tommy Fleetwood and Tyrell Hatton.

Ray says it is Thorbjornsen’s performance in events outside of college golf that justifies him being considered perhaps golf’s next big thing.

“If you just look at his college record, he’s battled some injuries this year, and with COVID and all of the things he’s been faced with in the college game, he’s got some room for improvement,” Ray said. “But I feel like if you look at his full amateur record, the work he’s done in U.S. Opens, he’s obviously played great during the summers, won the Western Amateur, all of those things factor into his high world amateur ranking and that backs up the case that he is the top guy.”

That record includes eight PGA Tour starts already, including a fourth-place finish in the Travelers Championship in 2022 and a tie for 17th in the John Deere Classic last summer. He also made the cut in the 2019 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach.

Ray says one big change for Thorbjornsen has been PGA Tour U and the chance at a PGA Tour exemptions.

“I think it goes without saying the PGA Tour U has been a huge win for college golf, a huge win,” Ray said. “It is monumental. The reason for that is it keeps guys incentivized to go to school, play all four years, play for a great college team and be really ready to go. And I think the data supports that, too, that there is some compelling data that says if a guy finishes college, he’s going to be that much better.”

Ray says it is Thorbjornsen’s ability to drive the ball, as well as his unwillingness to tinker with his 10-finger grip, that makes him so talented.

“I think nowadays if you can drive it better than everyone, it is a weapon. With the way the courses are set up and just how much of an advantage it is to be 30 or 40 yards closer to the hole, I think he does that on a consistent basis,” Ray said. “He’s not the longest player I’ve ever coached, but he’s the highest combination of both length and accuracy. And so that’s special. You have to have some innate talent to do that at high speed. To me, that’s his biggest strength.”

As the spring season gets into full swing, it’s a balancing act to think about today and to think about the future, he said.

“You know what you are playing for, but you can’t always be thinking about that result while you are playing,” he said. “What’s ahead of you right now, in the moment, stay present. Nothing changes in your daily routine or practice routines. Just trying to keep it day by day.”

Who is Tyler Dennis and why was he chosen to co-lead day-to-day operations of the PGA Tour?

“We laugh about the awkwardness of that first time he had to give Tiger a ruling.”

DETROIT — A little more than two weeks ago, on June 13, Tyler Dennis officially became a person of interest when he was named to co-lead day-to-day operations of the PGA Tour along with COO Ron Price in the absence of Commissioner Jay Monahan, who is recovering from an undisclosed medical situation.

So who is Dennis and why was he selected for this lofty role?

Dennis, 46, serves as the Tour’s executive vice president and president of the PGA Tour. Before being asked to handle this critical new role, Dennis’s duties included being responsible for the day-to-day operations of Tour events and overseeing the areas of Rules/Competitions, Membership Services, Tournament Operations, ShotLink, Tournament Business Affairs and Agronomy.

“He’s one of the smartest if not the smartest person I’ve ever met,” said Stanford men’s golf coach Conrad Ray of his former Stanford teammate.

Growing up in Salt Lake City, Utah, Dennis learned the game at the nine-hole par-3 Cottonwood Club. There, he also developed a keen and unusual interest in the rules and longtime pro Brad Beutler took him under his wing and showed him the basics of operating tournaments. At 16, Dennis posted a perfect score on the U.S. Golf Association rules test and helped administer his first professional event at his local Korn Ferry Tour event.

“He’s got a photographic mind,” said former PGA Tour vice president of competitions Mark Russell.

One summer later, Dennis signed on as an intern with the USGA at the 1994 U.S. Amateur Public Links at Eagle Bend Golf Club in Bigfork, Montana. He assisted Ron Read, then USGA Western Region Director, in placing holes early one morning. At breakfast, he confided in Read that the pro shop guys had invited him to the bar the previous night. There was a tuba on the wall and a sign that said, ‘Blow the bugle and win a pitcher of beer.’ Dennis kept telling the guys at his table that he could blow the instrument. But the guys ignored him. Finally, after he told them he played trumpet in the band, they encouraged him to go for it.

Dennis grabbed the tuba, blew hard and out popped a cloud of five pounds of flour. When the pitcher arrived, he was an instant hero.

Dennis begged Read not to tell the USGA’s director of competitions Tom Meeks, who he feared would punish him and potentially spoil his future career aspirations working in the game. Just then Meeks called to speak to Read.

“I told Tyler that Tom had read (about him) in all the Montana newspapers,” Read recalled in an email. “Tyler leaped out of his chair, went to the cashier and got a roll of quarters. He went to the paper machine and started feeding it. Came back with The Missoulian, (Billings) Gazette and one other (local paper) and started reading. He found nothing. I just laughed. Later, I shared all with Tom. We both laughed.”

Tyler Dennis
Tyler Dennis, head of operations from the PGA Tour, at the 2017 World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship. (Photo: Ramon Trevino, Agencia EL Universal via AP Images)

Dennis attended Stanford as an undergraduate where he received a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering in just three years. He and Tiger Woods were teammates during the 1995-96 season. Wielding his trusty Bullseye putter, which he still uses to this day, Dennis qualified for nine events and recorded a T-14 as his best result.

Dennis started at the PGA Tour in 2000 as a Rules Official on the Korn Ferry Tour, later moving to the PGA Tour.

“We laugh about the awkwardness of that first time he had to give Tiger a ruling,” Ray said.

Dennis took a sabbatical to attend the University of Cambridge, where he received a master’s degree in business administration. In his Stanford golf bio, Dennis proclaimed his career goal was to be an engineer. When it came time to decide whether to return to his position at the Tour or pursue other opportunities arguably better suited for his advanced-degree skill set, Dennis, an only child, listened to the advice of his father, Leland, a former golfer at Tulane, a ski instructor and free spirit who rode motorcycles across the country.

“This sounds corny, but my dad told me to do something you wanted to do,” Dennis said. “I think this is a great job. I love the PGA Tour and what it stands for.”

Beginning in 2007, Tyler transitioned to oversight of the competitions area as well as many of the other Tour functions which manage on-site operations. He spearheaded the Tour’s return to golf after the global pandemic in 2020 and now is in the most visible and critical role of his career. In a profile in Fairways magazine, the official publication of the Utah Golf Association, author Kurt Kragthorpe wrote that “it would not surprise me if Dennis someday becomes the Tour commissioner.” Those in the know describe him as a steady hand, the person you want shaping policy but not necessarily the public face of the PGA Tour. “He’s a good No. 2 or 3 man,” one veteran player said.

With Monahan sidelined indefinitely, Dennis and Price, who joined the Tour in 1994, are left to steer the ship through the formation of a new for-profit entity with the Saudis, which could have numerous hurdles in getting approval from the Tour’s board of directors to the Department of Justice.

“Last night’s news was a jolt. Our priorities don’t change. We are full steam ahead as a business,” Dennis told Golf Channel on June 14 following Monahan’s medical situation. “Our No. 1 focus will always be our players. That is front and center as we think about the business. We are going to continue to lead the day-to-day operations of the Tour. We have a lot of exciting things ahead.”

And if needed, he can always play the tuba.

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Any Given Tuesday podcast: Conrad Ray on Stanford’s first start, Lance Ringler on connection in the rankings

In the latest Any Given Tuesday podcast, Stanford coach Conrad Ray talks about the start of the season and Lance Ringler explains rankings.

More than a year and half has passed since the 2019 NCAA Championship, and Stanford remains the defending champion.

The Cardinal are back in action this week for the first time in 349 days. Ahead of the Prestige at Coral Mountain Golf Club in La Quinta, California, head coach Conrad Ray joined the Any Given Tuesday podcast.

For anyone struggling to understand where the Golfweek/Sagarin College Rankings stand as some teams, like Stanford, just begin to dip their toe into this 2020-21 season while others have played a handful of events, Golfweek’s Lance Ringler explains the importance of connection among teams and conferences.

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