How a 16-year-old golf phenom will approach his tournament with the pros

Savannah Country Day golfer Reed Lotter is no stranger to Deer Creek Golf Course. He’s set to play with pros in the Club Car Championship.

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Playing in a Korn Ferry Tour event still feels surreal for Reed Lotter.

It was just a few weeks ago when the 16-year-old Savannah Country Day golfer found out he had received a sponsor’s exemption into the field of the Club Car Championship at The Landings Club, which begins Thursday at the Deer Creek Course.

Lotter will step onto the No. 10 tee at 2:30 p.m. in the last group to go off in the first round, ready to live his dream and embrace everything that comes with it.

It’s just another tournament. Except it isn’t. Lotter is one of just 13 people under 17 years old to ever play in a Korn Ferry Tour event and is only the fifth in the past 10 years. He’ll play alongside professional golfers who travel week in and week out throughout the year, some of whom have won on the PGA Tour.

He has played a four-day tournament only one other time in his life, and that was not anywhere close to the Korn Ferry level.

That’s the challenge facing Lotter this week: how to treat this as another tournament when it is anything but.

“The way I look at it, I still have to hit a round ball and get it into the hole,” Lotter said. “It’s an unbelievable experience, but I’ve been given this experience, and I still have to come out and play like it’s another golf tournament.”

No matter what happens this week, Lotter knows he wants to play someday on the PGA Tour, and he’ll have a lot to glean from playing in the Club Car Championship — from how to prepare to how to conduct himself during the tournament to how to handle the media spotlight.

Getting prepared

In October, Lotter played in the Billy Horschel Junior Championship, an AJGA event held on Fleming Island, Florida. Reed’s father, Chris Lotter, recalled how Horschel gave a speech to each of the participants about what they could expect if they ever hoped to turn pro one day, and what they need to start doing now to make that happen. He said young golfers have to deal with three things: golf, social life and academics, and someone can only be good at two of those things.

“I always ask him, ‘Do you like that?’ ” Chris Lotter said. “Is that something you want to do? It’s hard work. You wake up at 5:30 in the morning and go to the gym, then you go to the course and warm up. You eat, come back and practice again, then you go play, go to an early dinner, go to bed early. It’s a job. There are times when you don’t go to a prom or some social event that you want to do.”

Savannah Country Day golfer Reed Lotter will be playing with the pros in Club Car Championship later this week at the Landings Club. (Savannah Morning News)

It’s a lifestyle that Reed Lotter is already embracing. He wakes up early each morning and goes for a run and works out before starting his school day, then he gets in as much practice at the range as he can before he does homework and goes to bed.

Chris Lotter said he never had to instill any kind of discipline for Reed to develop this routine. It has always come naturally to him.

“He always loved the game,” Chris Lotter said. “It wasn’t anything for him to have to go to the course and practice for hours. I didn’t have to ask him, ‘Hey did you practice today?’ ”

Lotter has plenty of people to go to for advice about how to play in a professional tournament. He is friends with Savannah native and resident Tim O’Neal (also playing in the Club Car Championship), has strong relationships with The Landings’ professional staff, and works on his swing with Savannah Harbor director of golf instruction Andrew Rice.

Rice said he isn’t surprised to see Lotter in the Club Car field this year. Lotter almost made it in October, when the 2020 event was held, after falling one stroke short of making a playoff in the Monday qualifier.

“He’s truly a joy,” Rice said. “He gets up early and works out before he goes to school. He loves the challenge of the game. He knows how to work hard at everything he does. He’s always shown a passion for the game. He loves golf so much, he cannot go a day without doing anything to further grow his golf game.”

Staying positive

Preparation can only go so far. Some things can only be handled through experience, and landing in a difficult situation during the tournament may be one of them.

“As long as I feel prepared on that first tee, like I couldn’t have done anything more, then I’ve got to live with the results,” Reed Lotter said. “My only goal is to stay positive through the whole thing. I know there’s going to be some doubts and gremlins that come in, but if I can keep positive thoughts going through my mind, I know this course better than anybody, so I think that’s going to be key to me.”

Lotter said shaking off a bad shot or a bad hole can sometimes be a struggle for him, but one of the players he looks up to in that area is Rickie Fowler and the way he goes about his business, able to put each shot behind him and move onto the next one.

Savannah Country Day golfer Reed Lotter reacts after his chip shot finds the cup during the Club Car Championship Pros vs Pros Challenge Monday at the Landings Club Deer Creek Course. (Savannah Morning News)

The good news is, if Lotter does wind up in a tight spot, he’ll have someone standing next to him to go to for advice. Phil Haug, a Landings resident who often plays with Reed, will be his caddie.

“It’s going to be a nice comfort,” Lotter said. “Not only are you looking for a caddie who knows how to read greens and give yardages and carry the bag, you want someone who in stressful situations you can talk it through, and he’s going to give you the best advice to hit the shot. I’ve played a lot of golf with Phil. He knows how far I carry my clubs because he’s about the same distance as me. And he knows me as a person, too.”

Haug, a 40-year-old regional manager for an insurance company, had planned on trying to get into the Club Car Championship through the Monday qualifier, but he backed out when he heard Reed had received his exemption. He approached him on the range one day and asked if needed a caddie, Haug said.

“I’m more honored to have the opportunity to be a part of it,” Haug said. “I don’t think he’s going to need (much advice) because mentally he’s wise beyond his years the way he approaches the game. Having a friendly face will help, but mentally and physically he’s ready.”

Handling the spotlight

Thanks in large part due to junior tours like the American Junior Golf Association and the rise of young players ascending to stardom, Lotter is growing up in an age of golf in which the best junior golfers get plenty of coverage from the media. Golf writers and analysts are always on the lookout for the next Justin Thomas, Jordan Spieth or Rory McIllroy.

The Rolex AJGA rankings currently has Lotter as the No. 154th ranked junior player in the world, and he’s being recruited by some of the top college golf programs in the country. But Rice said it doesn’t matter much where Lotter is ranked now, and that’s the biggest reason for Lotter to enjoy the moment and learn what he can from the experience.

“I’ve said to him for a long time, you don’t want to be the best 15-year-old golfer in the world,” Rice said. “You want to be the best 25-year-old golfer in the world. That works out much better.”

Lotter isn’t afraid of any of the attention. In fact, he thinks it makes him a better player.

“The good thing about it is, it prepares you,” Lotter said. “If you look at (Jordan) Spieth, and Rory (McIllroy), some of those big names, they’re so good when they’re under the mic. They’re trained. It helps you learn how to talk in front of people. That’s part of it. You kind of have to just embrace it.”

And when it comes to the gallery, the bigger the better, Lotter said. He expects to have the largest following he’s ever played in front of this week.

Savannah Country Day golfer Reed Lotter gets some practice in at the Landings Marshwood course as he prepares for the Club Car Championship later this week.

(Savannah Morning News)

“I feel like I thrive when there’s people watching,” he said. “I just focus more. Instead of intimidating, I kinda like it. I don’t want to play bad, so much to the point that it makes me play better. I’m just a little bit sharper.”

Lotter also owned the Deer Creek course record of 63, which he carded at age 14, until October when Julian Etulain shot a 62 in what was then known as the Savannah Golf Championship.

With a home crowd on his home course, it would seem Lotter has a lot going for him coming into Thursday. But he won’t know anything for certain until he steps onto the No. 10 tee.

“You don’t want to set the bar too high, but I think for the first day my expectations are to just feel it out, embrace that you’re in this, and not let it get to your head and just take it one shot at a time,” Lotter said. “If I’m right there with the leaders, that’s great, but if I miss the cut and bomb it, I’m going to learn from it.”

Roberto Diaz holds on to win Chitimacha Louisiana Open, his first Korn Ferry Tour title

Roberto Diaz claimed his first Korn Ferry Tour title by winning the Chitimacha Louisiana Open.

Roberto Diaz set up his Chitimacha Louisiana Open win on the front nine on Sunday. Diaz, a 34-year-old from Veracruz, Mexico, opened his final round at Le Triomphe Golf Club in Broussard, Louisiana, with birdies on his first two holes. From there, he eagled the par-5 seventh hole and he was well on his way.

As the day wore on, Peter Uihlein chased but never could do enough to prevent Diaz from claiming his first Korn Ferry Tour title. Uihlein’s closing 67 was one shot better than Diaz’s 68, but ultimately a bogey on No. 17 left Uihlein one shot short of the title.

Diaz finished the week at 18 under after rounds of 69-65-64-68.

“You have to stay in the moment, I started getting ahead of myself on No. 12,” Diaz noted while talking to reporters after the round.

He had a four-shot lead at that point, and admitted that his mind began to wander toward the win and what it would bring. When his chasers started pressing late in the back nine – Uihlein, for example, eagled No. 12 then birdied No. 14 to tie Diaz – it actually helped Diaz buckle down and close.

This is his Diaz’s first sanctioned tour win. He lost in a playoff at the 2017 Club Colombia Championship on the Korn Ferry Tour. In February 2020, Diaz was runner-up at the Panama Championship.

“It’s a lot of emotions,” he said. “This is for my mom. She passed away a long time again and it’s just, amazing.

“I can’t explain how bad I wanted to win. . . . It’s a monkey off my back. I wanted this for so long and now that I have it, it’s like, it’s awesome.”

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COVID-19 delayed the PGA Tour dream of this former Georgia golfer, but he’s still smiling

He sat on the hotel balcony, kicked his feet up, looked out at the ocean and settled in for an hour of media interviews. Didn’t happen.

Former University of Georgia golfer Greyson Sigg has a happy-go-lucky demeanor that he carries wherever life takes him.

Like last Tuesday, two days before playing in the Puerto Rico Open, the third career PGA Tour event of his career.

Sigg sat on the balcony of his hotel, kicked his feet up on the rail, looked out at the ocean and settled in for an hour of media interviews.

His first appearance on SiriusXMs PGA Tour Radio was canceled because of breaking news of Tiger Woods’ car accident that severely injured the 15-time major champion. The station apologized, and Sigg understood.

“I mean, it’s the greatest golfer of all time, of course, nobody wants to hear from me about playing in Puerto Rico,” said Sigg, poking fun at himself while understanding the gravity of the situation.

Or during his four-year career at the University of Georgia while playing golf for Chris Haack.

Greyson Sigg eyes a putt on the 18th green during the final round of the Korn Ferry Tour Championship presented by United Leasing & Finance at Victoria National Golf Course in Newburgh, Ind., Sunday, Aug. 30, 2020.

The 26-year UGA coach knew Sigg’s personality better than anyone as Sigg has been around the Haack household often during a nine-year relationship with Haack’s daughter, Katie.

But Sigg’s carefree disposition allowed their coach-player relationship to blossom and earn him All-SEC honors his senior season.

“He’s got a really laid back personality and he just tries not to put a whole lot of emphasis on things and make them more important than they really are,” Haack said. “Don’t make it more important than it is, it’s just golf. He’s always going to embrace that and is very laid back. He just kind of rolls with the punches better than anybody.”

Sigg has played some of the best golf of his life on the Korn Ferry Tour, the PGA Tour’s breeding ground for golfers vying to reach the sport’s top level. But adversity hasn’t escaped the easygoing 25-year-old.

Sigg contracted COVID-19 last October and was forced to quarantine for 14 days. Fortunately, his only symptoms were a loss of taste and smell.

Where the virus had its largest impact on the Sea Island resident was delaying his claim to a PGA Tour card. When the tours had to take a hiatus for three months last year, the PGA Tour announced in April that the Korn Ferry Tour wouldn’t have its annual graduation of the top 25 players on its money list.

Sigg was in the top-10 of the developmental tour’s list and well on his way to Tour membership, but the Augusta native will have to wait until later this to fulfill his lifelong dream of reaching the PGA.

Former UGA golfer Greyson Sigg tees off during a tournament in 2014. (Photo/Steven Colquitt, UGA Sports Communications)

Like most things in his life, Sigg took it in stride.

“There were a lot of people who called me to tell me how sorry they were,” said Sigg, who is sixth in the Korn Ferry Tour points standings and eighth on its money list. “But, you know, it was such a weird time and we’re out here playing golf for a living. So, I wasn’t too upset.”

Due to the coronavirus interference, the PGA Tour made an exception for players inside the top 10 of the Korn Ferry Tour points standings when the 2020 season ended.

Top-10 players like Sigg and Will Zalatoris, who finished sixth in last year’s U.S. Open, are eligible to play in “additional events” like the Puerto Rico Open, Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship, Barbasol Championship and Barracuda Championship that are played opposite of bigger events such as last week’s WGC Workday Championship.

Sigg missed the cut of the Puerto Rico Open but it doesn’t affect his status on the Korn Ferry Tour. He’s still on the path to earn his Tour card.

“I definitely always dreamt of being on the PGA Tour and it was easy to like pro golf and being able to go to the Masters every year and seeing that and made it my dream to play in a Masters one day,” Sigg said. “I’ve got a long way to go, don’t get me wrong, but it’s pretty cool how I’ve managed it so far and I’ve come a long way in the past couple years.”

Sigg says he’ll target around 15 of the final 20 events in the Korn Ferry Tour season. An average showing should secure his PGA Tour card.

If it happens, Sigg said, it will accomplish a goal he set out for in high school.

But he’s not going to sweat it too seriously.

“Obviously, I would have liked to get my card but I’m still in a really good position to get my card for the 2022 season,” he said. “That’s going to be fun this year. It’s going to be a pretty stress-free year because I’m pretty close to locking it up. I’m in a good spot, I’m not really going to get too upset about it.”

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Last man in the field Hayden Buckley wins Korn Ferry Tour event in a playoff

Perhaps the least likely golfer to win the Korn Ferry Tour’s LECOM Suncoast Classic claimed the crown at Lakewood National Golf Club.

LAKEWOOD RANCH, Fla. — Perhaps the least likely golfer to win the third annual LECOM Suncoast Classic claimed the crown on Sunday in sudden death at Lakewood National Golf Club.

After finishing 72 holes of play tied at 13-under with Taylor Montgomery of Las Vegas and Dawson Armstrong of Valdosta, Georgia, 24-year-old Hayden Buckley of Chattanooga, Tennessee, went out and birdied the par-4 18th hole to win on the first hole of sudden death.

Buckley seemed light years away from being a final-day contender after not making it through Monday’s qualifier to make it into the field. He made the list of alternates and turned out to be the 144th and final player admitted to the main draw.

Buckley was on the practice putting green at 7 a.m. when he got the call for his 7:17 a.m. tee time on Thursday. He barely made it in time to tee off.

“I know I belong out here,” Buckley said. “I’m just waiting for my chance. It’s just a matter of time. I am playing consistently.”

No one would argue that after this week. It was Buckley’s first-ever Korn Ferry championship, along with his inaugural top ten finish. Buckley takes home $108,000 of the $600,000 purse.

The final round began with Buckley and Billy Kennerly of Seattle sharing the third-round lead at 12-under. Playing in the final twosome together, Buckley took the lead when Kennerly bogeyed the par-4 second hole, one of the toughest at Lakewood National.

Kennerly retook the lead with a birdie on the par-5 sixth hole and looked like he was cruising toward the title with a two-stroke lead when disaster struck on the par-3 17th. Kennerly lost his lead with a double bogey and went on to bogey the final hole to miss the playoff by one stroke. He finished fourth at 12-under.

Defending champion Andrew Novak, who won last year in dramatic style with lengthy birdie putts on the final two holes of the tournament, failed to make the cut this week. He missed the mark by a single stroke, playing the first two rounds at 2-under par.

The Wofford College alum credits his first and only Korn Ferry victory with changing the trajectory of his career, at least for a while. Like so many others on the tour, the four-month hiatus taken due the coronavirus had an impact on his game.

“Winning here was a good confidence boost for about five months,” Novak said. “But the quarantine really kind of messed up the momentum of it.”

As for his performance at this week’s Suncoast Classic, the first tournament since the long break, he said, “I didn’t execute the game plan that I wanted. It was tough making putts.”

Last year’s runner-up by a single stroke, John Chin of Virginia, also missed the cut with the same 2-under total.

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Two-time All-American Phillip Knowles takes his shot at LECOM Suncoast Classic as KFT returns

The two-time All-American at the University of North Florida will be among the field of 144 at the third annual LECOM Suncoast Classic.

LAKEWOOD RANCH, Florida — In an area flooded with golf courses, 24-year-old Phillip Knowles has played just about all of them.

Growing up in nearby Bradenton and playing on the Bradenton Christian School golf team gave Knowles the opportunity to tee it up at some of the most elite facilities around.

And as a two-time All-American at the University of North Florida, he expanded his list of A-list golf venues considerably during his four years as an Osprey.

But this week will be different.

First, there is the matter of getting a fair shake of a $600,000 purse. Second, the allure of a coveted PGA Tour card awaits at the end of the Korn Ferry Tour season.

Knowles, who received a sponsor’s exemption, will be among the field of 144 golfers set to begin first-round play Thursday at the third annual LECOM Suncoast Classic at Lakewood National Golf Club, the circuit’s first event since October. The tournament field is headlined by nine of the top-10 in Korn Ferry Tour standings, as well as defending champion Andrew Novak.

“This is so much fun,” Knowles said while working on his short game at Lakewood National’s practice area. “This is where I was born. I played my junior and high school golf around the area.

“There is a huge comfort in being able to play at home. Being with my family is very special. I have spent a lot of my time, lately, alone with everything that is going on.”

North Florida’s Phillip Knowles hits his tee shot on the second hole during the final round of the 2017 Tavistock Collegiate Invitational golf tournament at the Isleworth Country Club. File photo by Reinhold Matay-USA TODAY Sports.

In high school, Knowles finished third in the state, won an individual region title and also captured the coveted championship at the Donald Ross Invitational. He also played on the high school baseball and soccer teams and won the Manatee County Golf Championship along the way.

But he credits his time in Jacksonville, where he still lives, with his true maturation as a golfer.

“I was terrible my freshman year,” Knowles said. “But I learned so much there. By my senior year I was a completely different player. My college career was a great evolution.”

Knowles won three college tournaments and finished ninth at the 2018 NCAA Golf Championships and UNF was a consistent Top 25 team during his tenure in Jacksonville.

“You were all probably the best player on your high school teams,” Knowles said. “You spend every day together. It’s great competition.  And that is what makes people better. It was awesome.

“I learned to think my way around the golf course. I also learned how to relax on the golf course and trust myself. That was a big part of it.”

Knowles has earned $13,185 thus far as a professional. His ultimate goal is the same as the other 143 golfers playing at Lakewood National.

“The goal is to get to the PGA Tour,” he said. “That’s the goal. That’s the dream. To get there you got to go through this tour.

“This is another start, another opportunity. I am grateful to have an opportunity at all.”

LECOM Classic notebook

Other local players in the field include Bradenton residents Erik Barnes and Sean Kelly; Stephen Stallings Jr., a resident in the Lakewood National community; David Perritt, who won a qualifier among head golf pros to earn an exemption into the tournament (Perritt is the Regional Director of Operations for Lakewood National Golf Club); and Michael Colgate, who grew up in Sarasota and played golf at Sarasota High, earned late entry to the field after Monday qualifying … If Davis Riley or Jared Wolfe win it would be their third win on the Korn Ferry Tour which comes with an immediate promotion to the PGA Tour. … Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, no PGA Tour cards were awarded in 2020 and the 2020 season has been combined with the 2021 season to form an extended Korn Ferry Tour 2020-21 super-season. … The LECOM Suncoast Classic kicks off two consecutive weeks of professional golf in the area as the PGA Tour’s World Golf Championships-Workday Championship at The Concession will take place Feb. 25-28 at The Concession Golf Club in Bradenton.

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Where does competitive golf start in 2021? Answers are here

The PGA Tour kicks off Jan. 7-10 in Hawaii. Three weeks later, the LPGA, PGA Tour Champions and European Tour get their 2021 seasons going.

It’s time. We have finally put 2020 in our rearview mirrors and turned the calendar to 2021.

After a few weeks off, golf returns to action this week.

For the PGA Tour, it’s the continuation of its super season of 50 events, which will include six major championships. For the PGA Tour Champions, it’s the second half of a combined season. There was no 2020 Charles Schwab Cup champion after the tour decided to merge ’20 and ’21 into one season. For the LPGA, a brand new season will start in 2021.

Over the next few months, many college golf programs are likely to return to action after a hit-and-miss fall where some teams played and some teams – and even some whole conferences, like the ACC, Big 10 and Pac-12 – didn’t.

The American Junior Golf Association managed to stage more than 100 events in 2020 and has already released its 2021 schedule (though COVID protocols remain in place for the time being).

Here’s a closer look at when tournament play, on all levels, will return in 2021.

Korn Ferry Tour’s Alex Beach got a late start on pro golf and now wonders where he can end up

The grind isn’t easy. So said Alex Beach, a self-taught golfer who competed in his third PGA Championship last summer. Beach is a member of the Korn Ferry Tour, a playing and teaching professional at Westchester Country Club, a two-time PGA national …

The grind isn’t easy. So said Alex Beach, a self-taught golfer who competed in his third PGA Championship last summer.

Beach is a member of the Korn Ferry Tour, a playing and teaching professional at Westchester Country Club, a two-time PGA national champion and assistant national champion. 

Beach has a few PGA Tour qualification exemptions for the rest of the year. He’s excited to see how his passion and dedication translates to the leaderboard.

“You’ve got to put a little road map together, a little work into it, or nothing is ever going to change,” he said on the “WHY YOU SUCK AT GOLF!” podcast.

The 31-year-old got into the professional golf world later than most pros as he was not a collegiate golfer. Beach is incredibly humble about getting his competitive start only five years ago.

“I’ve heard enough people say that I’m good, I know that I’m good, but if I really work at it where can I end up?” he asked.

He knows that he is still in the middle of this process and believes he is capable of coming out on top in his upcoming tournaments. 

“It takes so much failure in order to learn how to be successful in this game. I think it is the most rewarding game when you have a good week or when you play a good round, maybe you make your first par, whatever your next level of success is. The work that goes into it and achieving it is the greatest feeling ever,” Beach added. 

After six months off from competitive golf due to the coronavirus pandemic, Beach’s first tournament back was the prestigious 2020 PGA Championship at Harding Park in San Francisco. 

Beach thought the PGA Tour did a great job of “policing” the event and keeping players safe and healthy.

“Part of the protocol being in San Francisco, was to eat our food at our own table [in the locker room. Every locker was six feet apart from each other with a high top table.] and it sort of felt like high school or maybe grade school where you grab your food, you walk along, you have your mask on, say ‘hi’ to your friends and then you have to go sit in your little corner,” he added with a laugh.

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Korn Ferry Tour announces new event for 2021-24 seasons at Sandestin Golf and Beach Resort

The Korn Ferry Tour announced a new event for 2021-24 to be held at the Sandestin Golf and Beach Resort.

A new event is coming to the Korn Ferry Tour schedule in 2021.

On Monday morning, in partnership with Global Golf Management, the tour announced a three-year agreement for the Emerald Coast Classic at Sandestin to be played at Sandestin Golf and Beach Resort’s Raven Golf Club in Florida.

Beginning with the inaugural event March 29-April 4 2021, a field of 156 players will compete for $600,000 purse.

“Sandestin Resort is truly a remarkable location for professional golf, and we are eager to bring the Emerald Coast Classic to this community,” said Korn Ferry Tour President Alex Baldwin. “We have vibrant partners with great track records of building spectacular events, and we are confident that the future stars of the PGA TOUR will enjoy competing in this region.”

A Robert Trent Jones Jr. design, the Raven Golf Club at Sandestin is a par-71 layout and has previously hosted the PGA Tour Champions Boeing Championship at Sandestin in 2006 and 2007 and has hosted the Golfweek Sandestin Amateur since 2010.

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After helicopter ride to playoff hole, Ryan McCormick wins first annual Orange County Fall Classic

Korn Ferry Tour player Ryan McCormick took home $7,000 at the first Orange County Fall Classic this past Saturday at Osiris Country Club. 

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Korn Ferry Tour player Ryan McCormick took home $7,000 upon completion of the first annual Orange County Fall Classic this past Saturday at Osiris Country Club. 

McCormick won in a playoff after a 3-under 69 for the day. Fellow Korn Ferry Tour member Michael Miller and McCormick were escorted to their playoff hole in a helicopter overlooking the scenic fall views of the Hudson Valley. 

“I was pretty nervous for the helicopter,” said McCormick after the win. “It was awesome but definitely rattled me a little bit. I have never been in a helicopter before, but it worked out anyway.”

Ryan McCormick and Michael Miller in helicopter before flying to the tee box of their playoff hole.

John Schob, a collegiate golfer at Manhattan College, took the title as the lowest amateur of the day carding a 72. He defeated Andre Manginelli in a playoff for the title. 

“My mom caddied for me today, so having her out here with me was the highlight for sure,” Schob said. 

John Schob winner of the low amateur title at the Orange County Fall Classic.

Brian Crowell, PGA Director of Golf at Osiris Country Club, put the event together to not only showcase the club and Hudson Valley, but for a great cause as well.

“PGA Hope is ‘Help Our Patriots Everywhere’ and it’s really dedicated to helping those men and women who have served in our military and are back and looking for something to do to ease some of the pains and the distractions has been very, very helpful,” said Crowell. 

Crowell could not have asked for a better tournament and can’t wait to host this event in years to come. Mark your calendars as this event is set to take off October 16, 2021. 

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Korn Ferry Tour: Trey Mullinax prevails in Orange County

Trey Mullinax held on to win the Korn Ferry Tour’s Orange County National Championship on Sunday. It is his second career Korn Ferry win.

Despite shooting his worst round of the tournament, a 2-under par 69, Trey Mullinax held on to win the Korn Ferry Tour’s Orange County National Championship this weekend at Winter Garden, Florida. It is his second victory on tour, with the first coming back in 2016.

Mullinax, 28, had been cruising through the first three rounds carding 65, 65 and 62 respectively. But a five-birdie, three-bogey effort on Sunday made things interesting, and the former Alabama golfer would finish 23 under par: just one shot clear of the field.

California’s Brandon Wu and Germany’s Stephan Jaeger ended up T-2 at 22 under. Wu, at just 23 years of age, carded a 6-under 65 on the strength of seven birdies and one bogey to move five spots up the leaderboard. Meanwhile, the 31-year old Jaeger held position with a 67 (five birdies, one bogey). The Munich native owns five Korn Ferry Tour victories.

Greyson Sigg of Georgia and Chad Ramey of Mississippi found themselves T-4 at 20 under. The 25-year old Sigg put together an excellent final round (five birdies and an eagle at the 10th for a 7-under 64) to rocket past 15 other golfers. Ramey, 28, bettered his position by eight spots with a 66 (six birdies, one bogey).

The Orange County National Championship was the final event on the Korn Ferry Tour’s 2020 schedule.

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