Three LOCALiQ Series players, including Bryson Nimmer, earn PGA Tour starts

David Pastore won the LOCALiQ Series Championship. He along with Bryson Nimmer and Carson Young will see PGA Tour action in 2021.

The LOCALiQ Tour concluded on Friday with a Series Championship held at TPC Sugarloaf in Duluth, Georgia. When the dust had settled, three men stood above the rest having earned PGA Tour starts for 2021.

Former Clemson All-American Bryson Nimmer told Golfweek last month that he will do whatever it takes to break into the PGA Tour, and his commanding season helped him secure a berth in next year’s RBC Canadian Open. Nimmer, 24, burst out of the gate with two wins and a playoff appearance in his first four starts, establishing a dominant lead on the LOCALiQ points list.

Although the Mackenzie Tour veteran did not have his best stuff in Duluth, finishing T-53, it didn’t matter in the end. Mathematically speaking, he had claimed the points title before the Series Championship even teed off.

“It means a lot. The quality of guys out on this Tour is really, really strong, so anytime you can be at the top of something like that, you have played really well,” said Nimmer, who finished with just over 1,426 points. “It’s just been an awesome year. It’s been really cool to experience this and have the opportunity to play. Going forward it’s going to give me a lot of confidence.”

Nimmer’s Mackenzie Tour rival David Pastore claimed the LOCALiQ Series Championship, defeating Trace Crowe by a single shot. Crowe’s opportunity to force a playoff evaporated when he missed a 12-foot birdie putt on the final hole. With the win, Pastore rose into second place on the points list with 1,072.150 points and earned his spot in the 2021 Barbasol Championship.

Pastore has been a model of consistency on the LOCALiQ Tour. He scored in the 60s in 18 of his 25 rounds, missing only one cut along the way. The 28-year old has one Mackenzie Tour win to go along with his breakthrough at TPC Sugarloaf.

“It was funny that I would shoot 3- or 4-under every day whether the course was easy or hard, so it would be like where other players’ scores would go up and down but mine just stayed the same,” Pastore told the media. “It’s funny how I did the best on courses that where I shot the same scores as I did on the easier courses.”

Carson Young, 26, had been second on the points list but was overtaken by Pastore in Duluth, where he finished T-8. The South Carolinian finished third with just over 845 points and also punched a ticket to the PGA Tour. Young will start at the Puerto Rican Open next February, an event that his fellow Clemson Tiger Nimmer has played twice.

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Toni Hakula’s globe-trotting golf journey spans Europe and the Americas

Former Texas Longhorn national champ Toni Hakula was born in Finland, and his golf career has taken him all over the world.

Toni Hakula considers himself “fully Texan.” After all, he’s lived in Austin, Texas, for a decade. Hakula attended the University of Texas, graduating in 2014 with a degree in economics. Curiously, his sports allegiances lie with the Pittsburgh Penguins, Denver Broncos and incumbent NBA champion Los Angeles Lakers.

Unlike most of his fellow Austinites, however, Hakula (pronounced HOCK-you-luh) grew up in Espoo, the second-largest city in Finland. The 29-year old speaks four languages: English, Finnish, Swedish and German. In another life, he might have wanted to turn pro in hockey or tennis.

In this world, however, golf is — and always has been — his true love.

“I believe I started (playing golf) when I was about four years old,” Hakula said. “I played a couple other sports growing up too, but I think when I was around 13 is when I had dropped everything else. I definitely had a lot of success growing up as a kid. I’ve always been very competitive in that sense.”

After high school, Hakula became a member of the Texas Longhorns men’s golf program. He admits that his first few months in the United States were “absolutely a little tricky” as he got used to living in a culture worlds apart from the one in which he was raised.

So what made acclimatization easier for the team’s lone freshman in 2010? It was the people around him, from teammates to coaches to academic staff. Hakula credits them all with helping him settle in and get his new life rolling.

And he rolled indeed.

In 2011, Hakula was named Big 12 Newcomer of the Year. A season later, he was part of the Texas national championship team alongside a trifecta of current PGA Tour players: Jordan Spieth, Dylan Frittelli and Kramer Hickok. Hakula went 2-1 in the 2012 championship run as Frittelli clinched the Longhorns’ third NCAA title with a 30-foot putt on the 18th hole against top-seeded Alabama.

“Oh, that year was absolutely amazing,” Hakula said. “Really all four years that I was at school, we had solid teams, we had a lot of good guys. The guys who played on that team are PGA Tour winners.”

Spieth is obviously the most decorated of Hakula’s former teammates. His recent struggles have been well-documented, but the 2015 FedEx Cup champion still has 11 PGA Tour victories under his belt. Frittelli owns one PGA Tour win (the 2019 John Deere Classic) and four international triumphs. Hickok is still seeking his first breakthrough on the big circuit, but has one Korn Ferry Tour win and two Mackenzie Tour titles.

“Seeing their success gives you more belief in your own doings,” Hakula said of his former teammates. “You know, it’s possible to (have success as a pro), and I can do that too.”

The Family Connection

Not every athlete gets to live out his dream with family by his side, but Hakula has been fortunate. In 2013, his younger sister Anne (pronounced AW-knee) flew across the pond to join him at the University of Texas. Father Tommi and mother Helena moved stateside that year as well, and the whole family has since put down roots in Austin.

Anne herself became a Longhorn and joined the women’s golf team, where she played all four years until graduation. In 2015, she made the Big 12 Commissioner’s Honor Roll.

Toni and Anne Hakula
Siblings Toni and Anne Hakula are both former members of the Texas Longhorns golf program. Provided by the PGA Tour

“You know, when we were little kids, we were always very close,” said Hakula, who also attended the same high school as Anne. “She’s really followed me through the school system from elementary onwards to everywhere I’ve gone. It’s been really nice to have her around the whole time.

“Hopefully I was able to help her out a little bit when she got in (to Texas). Kind of got her through especially the first few months of school, knowing that it was a pretty tough transition.”

Along the way, Anne fell in love with Hickok, her big brother’s former teammate. In a few weeks, she will move from Austin to Dallas to join her fiance ahead of their planned December wedding.

Hakula and Hickok became friends during their three years together on the Longhorns roster. Since then, Hickok (a two-time All-Big 12 honoree) needed only three years to go from the Korn Ferry Tour to the PGA Tour. The teammates have stayed in touch and play golf together when they are able.

Hakula looks forward to Hickok and Anne’s wedding. “When they get married, we’ll have actual extended family who are all golfers as well so it kind of brings us all together.”

Travelin’ Man

Finland is not a big golf country, and that meant Hakula’s junior golf career took him abroad on a regular basis. As an amateur, he pulled off two runner-up finishes against professional opponents in Denmark and finished T-18 at the 2008 Junior Players Championship at TPC Sawgrass in Florida.

The bulk of Hakula’s pro experience has since come on the PGA Tour Latinoamerica, where he won the 2018 Bupa Match Play and has a pair of top-10s to go with it. He feels that being accustomed with international travel has helped him make the most of his opportunity.

“Most golfers, or all of us, our goal is to be on the PGA Tour, and the PGA Tour plays all around the world,” said Hakula, who has already competed in Peru, Mexico, Jamaica, Chile and Brazil. “So having the chance to play PGA Tour Latinoamerica and traveling a lot I think will bode well when hopefully I get on the big tour.”

Toni Hakula Bupa Match Play
Toni Hakula during the final match of the Bupa Match Play on June 10, 2018 in Playa del Carmen, Mexico. Enrique Berardi/PGA TOUR

Hakula rode out the COVID-19 shutdown at home in Austin. He practiced his skills at the familiar University of Texas Golf Club, which was able to operate during the shutdown with health protocols in place.

COVID-19 did force several PGA Tour affiliates, including the Mackenzie Tour and PGA Tour Latinoamerica, to cancel or postpone their seasons. When news arose of a novel U.S.-based tour that would operate in lieu of them, Hakula was “fully in, 100 percent”.

Enter the LOCALiQ Tour, which materialized due to a collaboration between the PGA Tour and it’s management partners to bring back golf for players at all levels of the pro game. It kicked off in early August with the Alpharetta Classic in Georgia and was originally scheduled to conclude in late October with a season finale in the Bahamas. Due to logistical and health-related issues, the series championship was moved back three weeks to TPC Sugarloaf in Atlanta.

Hakula finds himself third in the LOCALiQ points standings with 675.667 (less than a single point ahead of fourth-place Hayden Shieh). Despite missing two consecutive cuts from late August to early September, he proved that he could hang with the best.

The Finn’s finest moment came during The Challenge at Harbor Hills in late September. There, Hakula carded a final-round 7-under 63, made only one bogey on his last 46 holes and broke a four-way tie to emerge victorious.

“I was very happy to obviously get the win,” said the former Longhorn, who also owns a T-5 finish on the LOCALiQ Tour. “I felt like my game was in great shape all summer, and just hadn’t quite closed out a tournament yet, so having done that at Harbor Hills, especially the way the last day went. We were all going after it, birdieing, and having to really clutch up to win the event was very cool.”

Hakula would have welcomed going to the Bahamas, but he doesn’t mind playing the series championship in Atlanta either. “It’ll be fun,” he said. “I still have the goal to be top two and hopefully get a PGA Tour exemption for next year. The whole series has been so great so far, I’m sure the last event’s gonna be icing on the cake.”

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New LOCALiQ Series to begin in August; purses to start at $100K

New events that will allow those who planned to play on the Mackenzie Tour, PGA Tour Latinoamerica and PGA Tour China will begin in August.

A series of events that will allow those who planned to play on the Mackenzie Tour, PGA Tour Latinoamerica and PGA Tour China will begin in August and run through October, it was officially announced on Tuesday.

The new series, which will be named the LOCALiQ Series, begins Aug. 4-7 with an event at the Golf Club of Georgia in Alpharetta, Georgia.

The champion of the final tournament and the top two players on the Series long points list will receive sponsor exemptions into a 2021 PGA Tour tournament. The Tour plans to announce other performance benefits for players in the future, according to a release.

“We couldn’t be more pleased to make this announcement. We have so many gifted, hardworking players who were anxious to play this season on their respective Tours before the effects of COVID-19 caused us to change our plans. To be able to provide this Series and these quality playing opportunities is very gratifying,” said Rob Ohno, PGA TOUR Senior Vice
President, International Tours. “And we’re thrilled to be working with a TOUR partner in LOCALiQ on a series of events that we know is going make a difference for these players.”

The tournaments will consist of 54 holes with 144-player fields and a 36-hole cut to the top 55 and ties. A minimum of $100,000 purses will be awarded with a winner’s share of $16,000. The entry fee per event is $675.

LOCALiQ, the sales and marketing arm of Gannett Co., Inc., works with the communities in their network and helping them build relationships with their local businesses. Gannett is the owner of Golfweek and the USA Today Network.

“We could not think of a better way to leverage our relationship with the PGA Tour than to bring professional golf to local communities,” said Michael Flanagan, President and General Manager of LOCALiQ’s Sports and Entertainment division. “As a comprehensive provider of digital marketing services, LOCALiQ enables local businesses and their communities to thrive.”

The series begins the first week of August, with three events in Georgia—with two in Alpharetta and the third in Callaway Gardens. The fourth is in Auburn, Alabama. The fifth and sixth events are in the Florida cities of Jacksonville and Lady Lake.

The seventh tournament is at The Club at Weston Hills in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, previous host to PGA TOUR Latinoamérica Qualifying Tournaments. The series concludes on October 26-30. The closing tournament will be a limited-field tournament with the top-78 eligible players from the points list invited.

LocaliQ Series Tournament Schedule

August 4-7: The GC of Georgia, Alpharetta, Georgia
August 10-13: Echelon GC, Alpharetta, Georgia
August 25-28:Callaway Resort and Gardens, Pine Mountain, Georgia
August 31-September 3: Auburn University Club, Auburn, Alabama
September 22-25: Hidden Hills GC, Jacksonville, Florida
September 29-October 2: Harbor Hills CC, Lady Lake, Florida
October 6-9:  The Club at Weston Hills, Fort Lauderdale,
Florida
October 26-30: TBD