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A stress-free Sunday at PGA Tour Q School? It comes with a catch as bad weather pushes final round to Monday

December 17, 2023
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Blaine Hale Jr. has no status on any tour for 2024 but sits in second place entering the final round of PGA Tour Q School. The top five players and ties after 72 holes earn full PGA Tour cards.

Keyur Khamar

Competitors at PGA Tour Q-School can put the Pepto Bismol on hold for another day as officials announced Sunday morning that the final round had been postponed until Monday.

TPC Sawgrass’ Valley course and Sawgrass Country Club, the two courses jointly holding the event in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., received more heavy rains overnight after getting several inches on Saturday. With more wet weather in the forecast, along with gusts expected to blow in the 40 m.p.h. range, the decision was made to wait a day partially out of fairness to the competitors who are playing for the livelihoods in 2024 and partially because of the work needed to get the courses back into playing shape.

The top five finishes and ties earn full PGA Tour status, the first time there has been direct qualifying for the PGA Tour since 2012. The next 40 finishers and ties earn full Korn Ferry Tour cards, with the next 20 and ties guaranteed starts on the PGA Tour Americas.

Holding the 54-hole lead at 12-under 198 is Australia’s Harrison Endycott, a rookie a year ago on the PGA Tour who finished outside the top 125 on the FedEx Cup points list (139th) and thus has only conditional status on the PGA Tour in 2024. The remaining players in the top five, however, are on the outside looking in when it comes to the PGA Tour.

Blaine Hale Jr., a 25-year-old former University of Oklahoma golfer who has shot three rounds of 67 or better to sit at 10 under, two back of Endycott. “I mean, this is a dream. To get to play professional golf. It's been my dream since I was 3 years old,” said Hale, who has no status on any primary tour. “Just to get the opportunity to continue my dream is emotional. It should be.”

Tied for third is Spencer Levin, a 39-year-old who played several years on the PGA Tour, making 227 starts but hasn’t had full status since 2017. 

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Keyur Khamar

“I've been a pro now for almost 20 years, so there's been a lot of golf, a lot of miles traveled,” said Levin, who won a KFT event earlier this year for his first victory in 15 years. “Good golf this week has got me in a good position, and I've kind of been around the block every which way with this game, so I'm looking forward to tomorrow. It'll be fun.”

Tied with Levin for third is Trevor Crowe, a 27-year-old who nearly won his PGA Tour card via the Korn Ferry Tour this season only to stumble on the weekend Korn Ferry Tour Championship. In fifth place is Raul Perada, 27, has had one PGA Tour start in his entire career (the 2023 Mexico Open) and entered Q school with no status anywhere. Earning a card would make him the only golfer of Mexican descent who would be active on tour. He’s tied with Hayden Springer, who finished first on the PGA Tour Canada in 2023, exempting him into this week’s final stage of Q School. Springer is playing just a month after the tragic passing of his 3-year-old daughter Sage, who died after battling Trisomy 18.

Suffice it to say what Springer will face on Monday pails in comparison to the trauma he’s already gone through. Rather, it will allow him to try to help move on.

Other notable names lurking just outside the top five include former PGA Tour winner Wesley Bryan (T-10), fan favorite Harry Higgs (T-13) and reigning NCAA champions Fred Biondi (T-19) among others.