Wyatt Worthington II earns first APGA Tour win at TPC Las Vegas

Worthington earned $7,500 for the win. 

Wyatt Worthington II earned his first APGA Tour victory Tuesday, holding off Marcus Byrd to win the APGA Las Vegas event at TPC Las Vegas.

Worthington, a PGA of America teaching professional who has competed in two PGA Championships, including last year at Southern Hills, shot 7-under 135 over 36 holes to beat Byrd by two shots. Worthington shot 7-under 64 in the first round, and an even-par 71 on Tuesday was enough to earn a two-shot victory.

Byrd carded rounds of 68-69 en route to his runner-up finish. Salvador Rocha Gomez was the only other golfer to finish under par. He carded a 1-under 141.

“It feels great and it’s also a relief,” Worthington said of his first APGA win. “It’s a notch on the belt against extremely tough APGA Tour competition. Now, I have to keep getting better and better.”

Worthington, from Reynoldsburg, Ohio, earned $7,500 for the win.

Wyatt Worthington II
Wyatt Worthington II won his first APGA Tour event in Las Vegas on April 11. (Photo: APGA Tour)

Kamaiu Johnson, who was DQ’d from the Arnold Palmer Invitational, tied for fourth at even par.

Next up for Worthington is the PGA Professional Championship April 30-May 3 in Santa Ana Pueblo, New Mexico. The top 20 finishers of more than 300 players qualify for the 2023 PGA Championship at Oak Hill Country Club from May 18-21.

The APGA Tour is back in action on April 30-May 2 with APGA Tour at PGA Golf Club in Port Saint Lucie, Florida.

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Wyatt Worthington II wins The John Shippen to earn Rocket Mortgage Classic exemption

A big comeback gave this PGA Club Pro a spot in this week’s Rocket Mortgage Classic.

As Wyatt Worthington II waited for his John Shippen Invitational trophy, he was introduced to Detroit Lions legend Barry Sanders and struck up a conversation.

Worthington notably idolizes Tiger Woods, who he received a golf lesson from as a high school freshman, thanks to a partnership between the First Tee of Columbus and Woods’ foundation. He’s also fond of Sanders, who he watched juke opposing defenders on TV growing up.

Before brandishing a sheet of notes and delivering his victory speech at the Detroit Golf Club on Sunday, Worthington jotted down the most memorable phrase from his first meeting with the former Lion: “Opportunity is disguised as hard work,” a sentiment Sanders told Worthington his father often expressed.

Worthington put in the work Sunday, firing a 7-under 65, eight strokes better than his Saturday effort. The PGA club professional totaled a 6-under 138 to clinch a Rocket Mortgage Classic exemption by one stroke. He qualified for the 2016 and 2022 PGA Championships as a club pro, so next weekend will be his first PGA Tour event without that designation, and he couldn’t be more excited for the opportunity.

“There’s great gentlemen here, and 22 players that at any given moment, they can be in this spot, and they deserve their flowers as well, too; they have the game to be on the PGA Tour,” Worthington said. “And I’m very fortunate to be a part of them with me, because at the end of the day, steel sharpens steel, and if it wasn’t for these guys pushing each other every time we put a tee in the ground, it won’t get us the opportunity to get inside the ropes like this, so it’s been amazing.”

Worthington, a teacher at the Golf Depot in Gahanna, Ohio, felt he played better than his four-bogey scorecard on Saturday indicated; he stayed patient entering Round 2 on the soggy and windy Donald Ross-designed course. Worthington birdied Nos. 4 and 5 and shook off a wayward tee shot that led to a bogey on No. 6.

2022 The John Shippen
Tournament winner Wyatt Worthington II hits from the 18th tee during the final round of the John Shippen National Invitational at the Detroit Golf Club on Sunday, July 24, 2022. (Photo by Kirthmon F. Dozier/Detroit Free Press)

He rebounded to birdie Nos. 7, 8, 10 and 12 and stayed strong in the home stretch, adding birdies on Nos. 16 and 17 while strolling down the fairways with caddie Andy Gibson, one of his best friends from college.

“I kind of just told him, I was like, ‘Let’s try to capitalize on the par fives,’” Worthington said. “We didn’t do a good job with that the first day, and the main thing (is) you’re not done after 17. I was like, ‘We gotta get the ball in play and we gotta give ourselves opportunities for birdie on 18.’ And if anyone’s seen the 18 green or been able and fortunate to play it, that’s one of the toughest greens that I’ve witnessed.”

Michael Herrera, who finished one stroke behind Worthington with a 5-under 139, discovered the difficulty on No. 18 when he missed a birdie putt to tie for the lead. He thought the putt was for the win after having last checked the score following a birdie on No. 15. Ryan Alford, his friend and competitor, informed him otherwise as he walked off the course.

2022 The John Shippen
Tournament runner-up Michael Herrera on the fairway at No. 17 during the final round of the 2022 John Shippen National Invitational at the Detroit Golf Club on Sunday, July 24, 2022. (Photo by Kirthmon F. Dozier/Detroit Free Press)

Herrera wasn’t able to rekindle the magic of his APGA win at TPC Scottsdale in April, when he victoriously sank a putt on No. 18. But the Southern California native still went home with $2,000 and was pleased with how he competed.

“I hit the putt where I wanted to,” Herrerra said. “It just didn’t fall and we came up a shot short. … The conditions weren’t that easy the second day, the wind was up. Ball striking was great, I just needed to see a couple more putts fall.”

Tim O’Neal, the 2021 Shippen winner, shot 66 on Sunday and tied Aaron Beverly for third at 4 under. His Sunday pairing, Flint native Willie Mack III, finished three shots behind Worthington in a five-way tie for fifth along with Ann Arbor native Marcus Byrd, Detroit native and Wayne State graduate Joe Hooks and Michigan State golfer Troy Taylor II.

2022 The John Shippen
Joe Hooks hits from the No. 8 tee during the final round of the 2022 John Shippen National Invitational at the Detroit Golf Club on Sunday, July 24, 2022. (photo by Kirthmon F. Dozier/Detroit Free Press)

Taylor was honored as the top amateur finisher. He said he loved seeing the Rocket Mortgage Classic grandstands up, providing the atmosphere of a Tour event. The Westerville, Ohio, native, also enjoyed playing with Worthington, who has known and encouraged the MSU standout since Taylor was a child, much as Woods mentored Worthington.

“Seeing him win is awesome,” Taylor said. “But all these guys here kind of gave me their two cents on how to try to get to that level, and there’s little things that they can give me to grow and be ahead of them when they were my age. It means a lot and I’m just really thankful for the opportunity.”

After Taylor and Herrera were recognized, Worthington nervously gave his humble celebratory speech, which he hopes to improve upon in the future, then shot a promotional video for the Rocket Mortgage Classic with Sanders.

He told the Lions great he hoped to play a round with him soon, before learning he joined him in the field for Tuesday’s celebrity scramble. They’ll tee off with Mack, Hooks and former Lions wide receiver Calvin Johnson, among others.

Then, when the Rocket Mortgage Classic begins Thursday, Worthington will face PGA Tour stars such as world No. 4 Patrick Cantlay, No. 13 Will Zalatoris and No. 16 Tony Finau. Worthington missed the cut in both of his PGA Championship appearances, but he now has another opportunity to show how hard he has worked.

“I’m excited to play with the best in the world, because at the end of the day, that’s where I want to be,” Worthington said. “And I gotta thank the good folks over at Rocket Mortgage and Intersport and the Detroit Golf Club for having us, giving me this opportunity, because without this opportunity, I wouldn’t be here.”

Contact Mason Young: MEYoung@freepress.com Follow him on Twitter: @Mason_Young_0

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Ohio teaching pro who once got a lesson from Tiger Woods earns berth into 2022 PGA Championship

Worthington was one of 20 players to earn a berth into the 2022 PGA Championship at Southern Hills.

AUSTIN, Texas — Wyatt Worthington II stood just off the 18th green at Barton Creek Spa and Resort and shook his head slowly.

After posting a steady 73 on a blustery day, the 35-year-old teaching pro from a suburb of Columbus, Ohio, saw his name near the top of the leaderboard at the PGA Professional Championship and knew he was in the clear — Worthington was one of 20 players to earn a berth into next month’s PGA Championship at Southern Hills.

Although this wasn’t the first time he’d made the cut — in 2016, he became the second Black PGA Club Professional to earn a berth in the major, following Tom Woodard of Denver who qualified in 1990 and played in the 1991 PGA Championship at Crooked Stick — but the road back made this just as special as Worthington’s first foray.

“Looking around, to even see my name on my leaderboard, I’m still in shock. It hasn’t sunk in yet,” he said. “I know it needs to be a quick turnaround because there’s a lot of things that be done.

“But you know, I’m blessed. I definitely didn’t have my best by any means, but to finish this high and to be in the top 20, and to have another crack at the PGA Championship, I still can’t believe it.”

Worthington, who teaches at The Golf Depot at Central Park in Gahanna, is aware of the game’s need for diversity and inclusion. He hopes his story will help shed light on the need to bring more people of various races into the game, not just as players, but in the industry as a whole.

And while Worthington has made a career out of giving lessons, he once received instruction from perhaps the game’s greatest player — Tiger Woods. During his freshman year in high school at Groveport High School, Worthington was part of a Tiger Woods Foundation event at the now-shuttered Bridgeview Golf Course in Columbus.

“I’m looking at the bigger picture,” he said. “Having this type of exposure for African-Americans not only in the golf industry but it’s seeing the bigger picture in and getting more people who look like me involved in this game, that’s what it’s really about.”

During the final round, Worthington battled high winds on the Fazio Foothills course, but maintained his presence on the back nine, dropping just a single shot on the 13th hole.

“Once the wind picked up, it was like somehow the fairways just got a little tighter, some of them got a little smaller, but I think they kind of just had the trust your lines and trust your numbers,” Worthington said, crediting his caddie Andy Gibson.

Worthington finished in a tie for fourth with Ryan Vermeer at 4 under for the event, a shot behind the duo of Michael Block and Jared Jones and six shots behind champion Jesse Mueller. The low 20 scorers earned exemptions into the 2022 PGA Championship, which will be held May 16-22 in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

And how did Worthington plan to celebrate an invitation to a major?

“I need to rest,” he said. “I’m actually in agony right now, a lot of pain with my knees. I thought I was going to withdraw, to be honest. Nothing too crazy. Maybe I’ll have a milkshake.”

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