This 60-year-old cancer survivor and PGA club pro is the feel-good story of the Sony Open in Hawaii

Castillo qualified for his first PGA Tour event after winning the Aloha PGA Section in September.

HONOLULU — Michael Castillo should be coming off a stretch of 12-hour work days for the past three weeks. As head golf professional at Kapalua Resort’s Plantation Course, Castillo was busy hosting an elite field of 39 pros at last week’s Sentry Tournament of Champions.

This week, he’s among a field of 144 pros at the Sony Open in Hawaii. He played nine holes on Tuesday with former Masters champion Adam Scott and had several of the same pros that he doted upon just days ago asking him on the range, “What are you doing here?”

Castillo won the Aloha PGA Section in September, making three birdies in his final seven holes, including at 18 to qualify for his first PGA Tour event. It’s even more special because Castillo grew up on the island and his dad, Ronnie, was an assistant pro at Waialae Country Club in the 1970s, and Michael and his three brothers grew up working at the course. (Brother Joey was an assistant here, too.)

“Some of the guys I worked with in high school are still employed at the club,” Castillo said.

If that wasn’t enough to make it a special week, Castillo has dealt with colon cancer and didn’t see this day coming. At 60, he is believed to be the oldest first-time competitor at an event that has seen teen sensations such as Tadd Fujikawa and Michelle Wie compete in the tournament.

“I thought the opportunity had passed me years ago,” he said. “It’s even more special to qualify when you’re not supposed to, but that’s the game, right?”

Michael Castillo warms up for his PGA Tour debut at age 60 at the Sony Open in Hawaii. (Adam Schupak/Golfweek)

The game is life to the Castillo family, which is Hawaiian golf royalty. Castillo’s father, Ronnie Sr., 86, began caddying at Waialae at age 12 and became head professional at Hawaii Kai Golf Club on Oahu, among other places, and is a member of the Hawaii Golf Hall of Fame. Through hard work and a passion for the game, he rose to become vice president at the PGA of America, and qualified for the 1976 PGA Championship as well as 10 Hawaiian Opens. Brother Ronnie Jr., a club pro in Tennessee, played in the tournament four times himself and Joey, who is caddying for Michael this week, is a former state junior champion and the Ping equipment rep for the state of Hawaii. But Michael’s sister Lori is the most decorated golfer in the family, winning the U.S. Girls Junior Championship and the U.S. Women’s Public Links twice in 1979-80. At the time, she was the first female and one of only four golfers — Chick Evans, Bobby Jones and Jack Nicklaus being the others — to hold two USGA titles simultaneously.

As a measure of the family’s status in the game in the Aloha State, at one point, members of the family, including brother Rick, head pro at Wailea Golf Club on Maui, held the position of head professional or director of golf at courses on four different Hawaiian Islands.

Michael, who at one time also served as president of the Aloha Section of the PGA, has been a PGA pro for more than 33 years and has spent the last three years at the Planation Course on Maui. He’s also a cancer survivor after undergoing a colonoscopy that detected a tumor the size of a piece of rice five years ago. But his cancer returned not long ago, this time attacking his liver. In November, he did what he hopes will be his last radiation treatment and next month he should know if he’s in remission.

“Cancer has the changed the way I approach things,” he said.

While most pros have been playing practice rounds and toiling at the range, Castillo played his first round in four weeks on Monday. Expectations are modest. More than anything he’s excited that his family will all be together for this first time in 10 years.

“I’d love to play to my potential and see what happens but the key thing is I’m here and enjoying this experience,” he said.

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