Where to play golf around Orlando and Central Florida: Golfweek’s Best 2023 public-access courses

Thanks to Golfweek’s Best rankings, we break out the top courses around Orlando and Central Florida.

Looking for a break from the theme parks around Orlando? Whether you want to stay close or you’re willing to drive a bit, there are several courses available that appear on the Golfweek’s Best rankings of top public-access layouts in Florida.

But it’s not as easy as pulling up our state-by-state rankings, which lists Florida courses that might be a full day’s drive away from Central Florida. We wanted to focus on the eight top-ranked courses that, while they might require golfers spend up to 90 minutes in the car, are within reasonable driving distance.

For the purpose of this exercise, we limited driving time to within 90 minutes of Disney World. Why 90 minutes? Because it can take a while to get anywhere around Orlando, especially if you’re stuck on Interstate 4, so 90 minutes seemed like a reasonable amount of time in a car to reach great golf.

And why Walt Disney World Resort? Because chances are if you’re visiting Orlando, you will be bunking up not far from that entertainment giant’s theme parks or Universal Orlando nearby.

We used Google Maps for its drive times, keying in Walt Disney World Resort at a time with no significant traffic slowdowns. Take all drive times around Orlando and Central Florida with a grain of salt, of course, as backups frequently happen.

None of this is to say there aren’t plenty of other worthy places to play around Orlando. As a nearby resident, this author will attest to the simple pleasures to be found at Winter Park Golf Course – frequently called WP9 – just north of downtown Orlando. The short nine-holer is one of the most fun two hours you’re likely to spend on a golf course.

Included with this list is a general map of where to find all these courses. Each one on the list below is represented with a number on the map – keep scrolling to see the numbers.

Included with each course is its position in Florida on the Golfweek’s Best public-access list. For any course that appears on our other popular rankings lists, those positions are included as well.

A little background: The hundreds of members of our course-ratings panel continually evaluate courses and rate them on 10 criteria on a points basis of 1 through 10. They also file a single, overall rating on each course. Those overall ratings are averaged to produce all our Golfweek’s Best course rankings.

The courses on this list allow public access in some fashion, be it standard daily green fees, through a resort or by staying at an affiliated hotel. If there’s a will, there’s a tee time – no membership required.

Orlando map where to play 2023
(Google Earth/Golfweek)

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2023 Masters: LIV Golfers weigh in on going from an overplayed, scruffy public course to Augusta National

“I don’t think you could have those in the same sentence, other than I played there last week and I’m playing here this week,” Johnson said.

AUGUSTA, Ga. – Dustin Johnson didn’t bother to sugarcoat the difference between Orange Country National’s Crooked Cat Course, the site of last week’s LIV Orlando event, and Augusta National Golf Club, site of this week’s 87th Masters.

“I don’t think you could have those in the same sentence, other than I played there last week and I’m playing here this week,” Johnson said.

They do both have National in their name but that’s about where the similarities end. Orange County National, a 36-hole public facility in Winter Garden, Florida, ranks No. 20 in Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list in Florida, which is two spots behind the second course at TPC Sawgrass. Augusta National ranks third in the Golfweek’s Best Classic Courses list. To make matters worse for LIV golfers, Crooked Cat, which has hosted PGA Tour Q-School in the past, was looking pretty scruffy last weekend for the likes of Johnson, Phil Mickelson and 54-hole tournament winner Brooks Koepka.

“A golf course that potentially wasn’t ready for us,” is how Graeme McDowell delicately put it. “Aesthetically not very pleasing.”

Crooked Cat, one of the courses at Orange County National in Florida, hosted a LIV Golf event.

Sources tell Golfweek that Isleworth Golf Club, in the Orlando town of Windermere and where Tiger Woods once lived and LIV member Charles Howell III is a longtime resident, had agreed to host the Orlando LIV stop but pulled the plug and Crooked Cat stepped in as a late replacement. (Isleworth was never officially announced as a tournament site by LIV. It is a sister property with Lake Nona, where LIV golfers McDowell, Ian Poulter and Henrik Stenson all call home.)

“Some places don’t want us,” Harold Varner III. “This is a great place, great layout, it’s just not in the best of shape right now. That’s going to take time to get courses that accept LIV. Some people are gun shy about sponsoring it because you don’t want to mess up relationships that existed before.”

But Johnson, the 2020 Masters winner, isn’t too worried about the quality of the course he played last weekend ahead of playing arguably the best-manicured course with some of the fastest greens in the country. He was just happy to get some reps before he tries to win a second Green Jacket.

“I still play golf for a living. I’m here at the Masters and enjoying this week,” Johnson said. “It’s still golf. So it doesn’t matter where you play at.”

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Brooks Koepka becomes LIV Golf’s first two-time winner with one-shot victory in Orlando

Koepka won last year’s LIV Golf Jeddah event after a playoff with former teammate Peter Uihlein in October.

Brooks Koepka is LIV Golf’s first two-time winner.

The four-time major champion held on for his second win since leaving the PGA Tour at LIV Golf Orlando on Sunday after shooting a 3-under 68 to finish at 15 under at Orange County National’s Crooked Cat.

Koepka won last year’s LIV Golf Jeddah event after a playoff with former teammate Peter Uihlein in October.

In his first year on the upstart circuit led by Greg Norman and financially backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, Sebastian Munoz gave Koepka a run for his money with a final-round 5-under 66 but came up a shot shot at 14 under. Patrick Reed finished third at 13 under.

Koepka is among a total of 18 LIV players who will tee it up next week at the 2023 Masters. LIV Golf’s next event is in Adelaide, Australia, at The Grange Golf Club, April 21-23.

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Photos: Merchandise at the 2023 LIV Golf Orlando at Orange County National

Range Goats hats, including a visor, were selling for $40.

WINTER GARDEN, Fla. — Are you a Crushers fan or a supporter of the Range Goats? At the LIV Orlando merchandise shop at Orange County National Golf Club, there was a chance to buy $40 hats of your favorite teams or $110 hoodies embroidered in their distinctive logos, that is if it ever cools off enough to wear one again. (It was 87 degrees on the last day of March when the tournament kicked off.)

Plenty of the usual suspects were for sale from head covers ($130-$170) to logoed water bottles and towels for golf bags. About the most interesting thing I noticed was Vice Golf, the direct-to-consumer maker of golf balls, was the supplier of the logo golf balls for sale by the dozen, and reasonably priced at $25.

It’s a goofy name but Bubba Watson’s Range Goats gear seemed to be selling more briskly than Sergio Garcia’s Fireballs logo, which looks as if it was stolen from a previous minor league baseball team. Here’s a closer look at some of the gear being offered at the latest LIV Golf event.

Photos: 2023 LIV Golf Orlando at Orange County National

Here’s a look at the views from Orange County National.

As the golf world prepares to head down Magnolia Lane, many of those competing at Augusta National are getting last-minute work in to try and peak next week.

For the 18 LIV golfers who will be in Augusta, Georgia, next week, they are teeing it up this weekend at Orange County National in Winter Garden, Florida, for LIV Golf Orlando, the third event of LIV Golf’s 2023 season.

Charles Howell III won the season-opening event in Mayakoba, and Danny Lee survived a four-man playoff two weeks ago to win in Tucson.

After the second round in Orlando, Brooks Koepka took the lead with a bogey-free 6-under 66. He sits at 12 under, three shots clear of Sebastian Munoz at 9 under. Munoz, who shot 9-under 62 in the first round, was stuck in neutral for most of the day.

If Koepka, a four-time major champion, were to win Sunday, he would become the first golfer to win two LIV events.

In the team competition, Koepka’s Smash GC is at 26 under and Joaquin Niemann’s Torque GC is two shots behind.

Here’s a look at some of the best photos from LIV Golf Orlando.

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Bryson DeChambeau says Tiger Woods has cut off all contact since he defected to LIV Golf: ‘I hope one day he’ll see the vision that we all have out here’

Asked if anybody had cut him off, DeChambeau answered, “Yeah, definitely, I’m sure you can guess who.”

WINTER GARDEN, Fla. – To hear Bryson DeChambeau tell it, don’t expect Tiger Woods to be inviting him to join he and Justin Thomas for a practice round at the Masters next week.

One of the drawbacks for players who have defected to LIV Golf is that it has frayed relationships between friends – Rory McIlroy, who was a groomsman at Sergio Garcia’s wedding, has gone through a falling out with his Ryder Cup teammate, and Keegan Bradley has spoken about the awkwardness of his pal Brendan Steele leaving for seemingly richer pastures recently. DeChambeau, who had just finished practicing his putting ahead of the LIV Orlando event beginning Friday, suggested he’s received some blowback for taking the Saudi-backed league’s money from none other than Woods.

Conceding that he tended to be more of a lone wolf keeping to his team at tournaments, DeChambeau said, “I was always kind of a guy who did it myself so I didn’t have too much contact with too many players but we’re cordial. I’ve talked with Jordan (Spieth) numerous times at Dallas National, anybody that’s out there, Will (Zalatoris) I’ve had a couple of conversations with but no problems.”

Asked if anybody had cut him off, DeChambeau answered, “Yeah, definitely, I’m sure you can guess who.”

DeChambeau chuckled.

Bryson DeChambeau and Tiger Woods at the 2022 PGA Championship at Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Oklahoma. (Photo: Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

When asked if he was referring to Woods, DeChambeau said, “Yeah, I’m not going to throw anyone under the bus. He’s been a great friend. I texted him on his birthday. It is what it is. He has his viewpoints on it and thinks we’re potentially hurting his record. If anything, nobody is ever going to touch his record. That’s just it, that’s the bottom line. There’s a chance to grow the game even more and I hope one day he’ll see the vision that we all have out here.”

DeChambeau won the 2020 U.S. Open and a total of eight PGA Tour titles before signing with LIV in June reportedly for more than $125 million. DeChambeau still is involved in LIV’s lawsuit with the PGA Tour.

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What does he miss about playing on the Tour where Woods is tied with Sam Snead for the most career wins and ranks as the all-time leading money winner?

“I miss nothing,” DeChambeau at Orange County National ahead of the LIV Golf Orlando event which starts Friday. “I mean, I love the fans, I love the people who came to support me. I loved all that. We’re starting to get the crowds out here, slowly but surely. People are starting to get what the model is and people are starting to like the teams a bit. From what I can see, the general consensus is things are moving in a more positive direction and I’m pleased with that.”

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Gannett may earn revenue from sports betting operators for audience referrals to betting services. Sports betting operators have no influence over nor are any such revenues in any way dependent on or linked to the newsrooms or news coverage. Terms apply, see operator site for Terms and Conditions. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, help is available. Call the National Council on Problem Gambling 24/7 at 1-800-GAMBLER (NJ, OH), 1-800-522-4700 (CO), 1-800-BETS-OFF (IA), 1-800-9-WITH-IT (IN). Must be 21 or older to gamble. Sports betting and gambling are not legal in all locations. Be sure to comply with laws applicable where you reside.

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LSU’s Latanna Stone wins Orlando International Women’s Amateur to end winter break

LSU sophomore Latanna Stone won in her debut in the event, and now heads back to school looking for another win.

Every time Latanna Stone goes back to campus at LSU, it seems a little better. Next week, she’ll do the drill again – and just like a year ago, she’ll be fresh off a tournament title.

Stone keeps her golf goals on a Google Doc, like the rest of her Tiger teammates. At the top of the list? Win a college title – or two or three. She hasn’t checked that box yet, but she’s checking off other titles as she goes.

The LSU sophomore won the Orlando Women’s International Amateur on Tuesday in her first appearance in the event. Stone battled wind and intermittent rain to post a final-round 73 at Orange County National’s Panther Lakes course. Her 5-under total was good for a one-shot win over Virginia’s Haeley Wotnosky.

“I was hitting the ball really well this week,” Stone said. “A lot of my putts fell in on the first round and I was sticking everything. I was playing really solid the first round and then the second and third round, I was just skimming a lot of putts. They were barely about to go in and some tough breaks. I really can’t complain because it was playing a little tough out there.”

Scores: Orlando International Women’s Amateur

This time of year, Stone normally is teeing it up in the Harder Hall Women’s Invitational, a long-running women’s amateur event in Sebring, Florida with a distinguished list of winners. Stone, having competed in the event since she was just a kid, won it last year.

Having just represented the U.S. in the Arnold Palmer Cup, a co-ed Ryder Cup-style match for college players, before Christmas, Stone knew it would be too much to tee it up at the Harder Hall four days later and the Orlando event after that.

“This was kind of nice,” she said of the new event.

Stone played in all three of LSU’s SEC-only starts in the fall and finished fifth at the Blessings Intercollegiate. She has risen to No. 208 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking. College golf suits her, but she still craves a title on that stage.

“I think that college golf has definitely unlocked an aggressive side to me,” she said. “Just because you’re there with your team and it really hypes you up. It’s so different from being solo, junior golf. It’s just so different.”

Stone references a competitive wedge game at LSU’s facilities that involves hitting different wedge shots to concrete “pods” or targets with her teammates. But consistency is where she really feels she has an edge.

“Being consistent is really important,” Stone said. “I feel like if you’re consistent and you don’t make a lot of mistakes, you can really outplay the people that you’re playing against too in a sense.”

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Kyle Cox rides new ball flight to six-shot Orlando International Amateur victory

Kyle Cox’s six-shot victory on Dec. 30 at the Orlando International Amateur is a good indicator that swing changes are paying off.

Aspiring Tour players are always looking for ways to measure their games against those already playing at the next level, and Kyle Cox is no different.

When Cox, a sophomore at Texas-Arlington, sat down with his swing coaches a few months ago to take a hard look at where he was losing strokes, he found himself in the trees.

“You’re trying to find really little things and how to improve,” Cox said of preparing for that next level. “We immediately looked to the tee ball. I’m way out of position too many times. It’s costing me too many strokes.”

Cox has always hit a long draw but worked to refine his go-to ball flight into a simple, repeatable and more accurate cut. Cox’s six-shot victory on Dec. 30 at the Orlando International Amateur is a good indicator that the process has been worth it.

Leaderboard: Orlando International Amateur

Cox, a native of Carrollton, Texas, started the final round at Orange County National’s Panther Lake course in Winter Garden, Florida, trailing by one shot. He was 2 under on the front and added two more birdies – plus his only bogey of the day – in the opening few holes of the back nine. By the time he closed with back-to-back birdies, he had far and away outpaced the rest of the field.

“I was always in position with an iron and I was just making some putts,” Cox said. “I was always in the fairway.”

A final-round 66 was his second-lowest score of the week, following his opening 65 on the Crooked Cat course, and got him to 15 under for the tournament.

Cox’s closing charge is another indicator of hard work paying off. He hasn’t always been so good about ignoring the scorecard and playing a round shot for shot.

Kyle Cox with the Orlando International Amateur trophy at Orange County National. (Photo submitted)

“I’ve been playing golf quite a while and I’ve been playing years of tournament golf,” Cox said. “I’ve been in all different kinds of spots.”

Regardless, this is Cox’s self-described biggest victory and his first major tournament win since he claimed won an AJGA event as a junior in high school.

Cox was keenly aware of the history at Winter Garden. Two weeks ago, the place hosted the final stage of Korn Ferry Tour Qualifying School. At the 54-hole mark, the leader were also 15 under. Cox knows, of course, that conditions can be vastly different on any given day, but he was still proud to know he could win on a Korn Ferry Tour venue – and in a field of 200 players.

The Orlando International Amateur, which is a relatively new (yet increasingly deep) amateur event on the winter schedule, is Cox’s second off-season tournament start. He also played an All-Pro Tour event at River Plantation Country Club in Conroe, Texas, last week and finished T-6, second best among the amateurs in the field.

Cox gets invaluable perspective from swing coaches Cameron McCormick and Andrew Lewis, too. He has worked with McCormick, who also instructs a bevy of professionals and high-level college players, since the middle of his eighth-grade year.

“No one’s swing looks the same, everything is different,” Cox said of McCormick’s talented stable. “It’s catered to the player. He makes it super easy to play good golf.”

At Texas-Arlington, Cox’s whole is team is motivated to play well. Plenty of his teammates are chasing winter starts the same way Cox is. The Mavericks are ranked No. 126 in the Golfweek/Sagarin college rankings after the first half of the season.

Cox and company have a collective eye on a Sun Belt Conference title that would bring an automatic qualifying berth into the NCAA postseason. It’s full steam ahead to that goal, even as the college season is on pause.

“We as players know we need to do this and how much it helps out,” Cox said of staying sharp in the off-season.

That’s a popular line of thinking. At Orange County National, Cox’s closest pursuers were Justin Tereshko, the assistant men’s golf coach at Louisville, and Paul Swindell, a Lipscomb junior.

Luke Gifford, a Florida native who is in his sophomore season at South Florida, was solo fourth at 9 under followed by Blake Dyer, an Englishman who is halfway through his senior season at Florida, was fifth, another shot back.

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Pair of collegians soak up Korn Ferry Q-School experience, hoping for breakthrough

Both will have a decision to make if they finish the week among the top 40 and ties and thus lock in guaranteed Korn Ferry starts for 2020.

WINTER GARDEN, Fla. – For many of the players who enter Korn Ferry Tour Qualifying School, a PGA Tour career is a pipe dream. Chandler Eaton uses that phrase to describe a science outreach program he imagines one day developing with his dad Scott, who works as a computer scientist.

Eaton is a Duke senior majoring in environmental science. He and Kansas senior Andy Spencer are the only two amateurs in the 154-man final-stage field of Korn Ferry Tour Q-School. Both will have a decision to make if they finish the week at Orange County National among the top 40 and ties and thus lock in some number of guaranteed starts on the developmental tour for the 2020 season.

Regardless, Eaton plans to finish his degree at Duke. He arrived in Durham, North Carolina, with the goal of playing professionally but also knowing it may not be a sustainable way to live.

“I always worked like I was going to (play professionally), and I still know I’m going to be fine whatever I do,” he said.

KORN FERRY TOUR: Q-school leaderboard

Collegians at Q-School are received differently in men’s and women’s golf, probably because it’s not as popular a path for the men as for the women. Five of the top female players in the nation entered the LPGA Q-Series in October, and all five are headed to the Symetra or LPGA tours at the start of 2020. Stanford got dinged twice in that process, losing a pair of senior All-Americans in Albane Valenzuela and Andrea Lee.

Changes to the PGA Tour’s qualifying structure in 2013 made it much more difficult for a player to come straight out of college and onto the PGA Tour. Matthew Wolff, who won a Tour event 41 days after claiming the NCAA individual title, is the exception. The vast majority of players are funneled up through the Korn Ferry Tour.

Still, the women have the option to defer status they earn at their Q-Series. Eaton wouldn’t mind that route, if it were available to him. He won’t have to turn professional immediately if he does finish among the top 40, but he must do it relatively soon or risk getting lost in the reshuffle that happens after every four events once the 2020 season starts.

There aren’t many ways for an amateur to skip the pre-qualifying and first stages of Q-School, but Eaton got a pass straight to the second stage when he made the cut at the U.S. Open this summer. That was a life-changing week in itself.

“I got a lot of confidence in my game from that, but most importantly I just learned those guys are playing with so much pressure to make a living,” Eaton said. “They are so calm and relaxed and have so much belief in themselves, that was the biggest thing I learned. When things are going bad, just keep believing.”

Eaton and his family viewed this as an opportunity he may not get again. Duke coach Jamie Green agreed, likening Eaton’s situation this week to “playing with house money.”

Eaton becomes his first active player to go through Q-School. As he watches the process unfold, Green acknowledges that a deferment option (allowing a player to pick up the status he earned at the end of the college season without getting lost in reshuffles) would be the best of both worlds – at least from where he’s sitting.

“I think it’s awesome,” Green said of Eaton’s path to final stage. “A couple of people have asked me how I feel about it, and obviously we want the best team with the best players every semester we have a chance, but our team is based on individuals and we care about each one of those guys.

“If this is his dream job, I want him to get it.”

There are different ways to approach Q-School as a college player. Ohio State graduate Will Grimmer did this dance last year as a senior, but only made it as far as second stage.

“When you know that you’re in college and you’ve got a spring semester to fall back on,” Grimmer said, “I think that makes it a lot easier to go out and kind of free-wheel it this week versus guys that are pro and have been grinding out here for six to eight years and know if they don’t play well this week, they don’t have any starts and they don’t have a good alternative to fall back on.”

He’s at final stage as a professional this year.

Braden Thornberry made it to final stage a year ago as a senior at Ole Miss. He finished T-72, which didn’t earn him any guaranteed starts for the 2019 season, but turned professional before the spring season anyway. Thornberry is also back at final stage this week.

“I wouldn’t say there was less pressure last year, obviously there was another option,” he said. “Honestly, that probably made it a little bit tougher. You weren’t fully making up your mind either way, there’s that little bit of doubt – if I finish here what am I going to do. This year, it’s pretty clear cut.”

Spencer, the Kansas senior, played his way to this point from the pre-qualifying stage. After his junior season, the Prairie Village, Kansas, native sought advice from Matt Gogel, a former professional who was a fraternity brother of Spencer’s dad Jeff at Kansas. Gogel thought that, at the very least, the process would be great experience.

Spencer’s family, coach and teammates got on board. Q-School marks the first professional experience Spencer has had outside of the Watson Challenge, a professional event limited to players in Kansas City.

“There’s really no downside to playing,” Spencer said. “Obviously I want the best for my team at KU, but I thought if I was good enough to come out here and do this, might as well give it a shot. I’ve kind of taken the route that I have no pressure, just kind of play free.”

Asked what it would take to turn professional, Spencer said he had the top 40 circled. That would get him guaranteed starts next season.

“If I were able to do that, I’d have to weigh my options and make a pretty tough decision.”

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For a diverse field at Korn Ferry Tour Q-School, final stage is about the future

More than 150 players will tee it up at Orange County National’s two courses – Panther Lakes and Crooked Cat – this week in the final stage of Korn Ferry Tour Q-School.

WINTER GARDEN, Fla. – Several of the golf bags that were carted back and forth across the Orange County National driving range on Wednesday lacked the logos, sponsorship patches and embroidered names that are typical of a professional event.

Stand bags gave way to bags of a more practical weight. Qualifying School, on any tour, is about setting yourself up for the next season, and it doesn’t really matter what you look like doing it.

More than 150 players will tee it up at Orange County National’s two courses – Panther Lakes and Crooked Cat – this week in the final stage of Korn Ferry Tour Q-School. A player’s position relative to the top of the leaderboard determines the number of guaranteed starts he will receive on the developmental tour in the 2020 season. The medalist (and ties) will be fully exempt for the entire regular season. Players who finish Nos. 2-10 on the leaderboard will be exempt into the first 12 events while Nos. 11-40 are exempt into the first eight events. Both of those groups are subject to the reshuffles that occur in four-event intervals.

Winning this event isn’t necessarily a guarantor of future success, however. In the past six years of this particular qualifying format, no player who won the final stage of Q-School has been able to turn that into a PGA Tour card.

Related: Chase Koepka won’t seek big brother’s advice at Q-School

Danny Walker, last year’s winner, is back at the final stage this year, approaching it the same way he did last December in Arizona after a year of learning the ropes. That is to say, he’s trying to win.

“Obviously, in a lot of ways you don’t want to be here,” he said. “In some ways it could have been a lot worse because I didn’t have to go back to first stage.”

Walker, a 24-year-old who turned pro in 2018 after a college career at Virginia, cites learning how to travel and build his schedule as one of the steepest learning curves from a year in which he made the cut in nine of 22 Korn Ferry Tour starts. In retrospect, he thinks he could have scheduled a couple more weeks off here or there.

“It just kind of wears on you,” he said of life on the road.

There was a certain confidence that came from Walker’s Q-School win, even though the story line didn’t ultimately play out the way he had hoped. He has worked on his driving and putting as he prepares for another shot at this tournament.

Still, there’s really no right way to prepare for the final stage of Q-School. Part of that has to do with the diversity of resumes among a 154-man field.

Daniel Wetterich is among a group of players who has risen all the way from the pre-qualifying stage back in August.

“When I was at pre-qualifying, honestly that was the most nervous I ever was throughout all the stages because I’m like, ‘I’m going to be doing this for a living.’”

Korn Ferry final stage is about improving status as opposed to avoiding elimination, but Wetterich, a recent Ohio State graduate, has viewed every step as being the same – particularly after getting over that initial hump. He won the Lincoln, Nebraska, pre-qualifier by two shots.

Wetterich turned professional right after that – ending a remarkable summer of amateur golf that included a runner-up finish at the Western Amateur – and has kept himself busy ever since. He made his professional debut at the Toledo Open and sprinkled various other professional starts among the next two stages of Q-School.

He always kept in mind advice he heard during a Q&A session with Mackenzie Tour president Jeff Monday at the Players Amateur this summer.

“He said the most important thing was inside of 50 yards so and I took that to heart and that’s part of what I really practiced and mentally focused on,” Wetterich said. “It allowed me to get to where I am right now.”

Wetterich is one of several recent college graduates in the field. That group also includes Brandon Wu, the Stanford senior who was presented with his diploma at Pebble Beach after making the cut in the U.S. Open (as an amateur), plus Texas A&M standout Chandler Phillips, Barry star Jorge Garcia and Yale’s James Nicholas, who did a turn on the Bulldog football team before committing to golf.

On the flip side of that, the field also includes Martin Piller, who owns six Korn Ferry Tour titles, and Andres Gonzales, who has won twice on this tour.

There are two current amateurs in the field this week: Kansas senior Andy Spencer and Duke senior Chandler Eaton.

Will Grimmer, who was a teammate of Wetterich’s at Ohio State, knows what that feels like. He entered Qualifying School as a senior a year ago, but only advanced as far as second stage and ultimately returned to finish his spring semester with the Buckeyes.

“Knowing the biggest thing I got out of it was experience, I don’t think necessarily I’d be at final stage this year if I didn’t experience what it takes,” said Grimmer, who is now a professional.

The Korn Ferry Q-school concludes on Sunday.

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