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PGA Tour Q-School competitor says he ‘cried before leaving the house’ ahead of decisive final round

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Mike Ehrmann

December 15, 2025
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Although golf fans are treated to high-stakes drama week-in, week-out on the PGA Tour, the sport’s most pressure-packed moments happen far away from the spotlight. That’s where pros, such as 36-year-old Colombian journeyman Marcelo Rozo, vie not for trophies and accolades, but their very livelihoods.

On Sunday, Rozo fired final-round 69 to clinch his PGA Tour card at the 2025 Q-School final. After a decade of chasing the dream, Rozo had finally had finally made the show. But as he told reporters after his round, it didn’t come easy. In fact, the pressure was so great, Rozo admitted he cried before even stepping out the front door on Sunday morning.

“I cried before leaving my house this morning,” Rozo told reporters, “Emotions were running, but I told myself, ‘you have to see the emotions, recognize them, hug them and then just move on,’ because they are there. I cannot lie to myself, it probably—it was the biggest round of my golfing career. But I cried it out. I told myself I was prepared, that I was ready for this, that I always play for this moment and that it was going to be my day.”

Almost as refreshing as Rozo’s vulnerability, however, was his confidence in the face of it. As Golf Channel’s Brentley Romine reported on Monday, Rozo scrawled “PGA Tour member ‘26” on the steam of his shower door on Sunday morning. A few hours later, he made that message a reality.

For Rozo, that will be the headline. Next year, he will play on the most prestigious (and lucrative) professional golf tour on earth. In doing so, he will realize a lifelong dream. For the rest of us, though, Rozo’s comments—much like Scottie Scheffler’s introspective monologue at Royal Portrush this summer—show there’s incalculably more to being an elite professional golfer than range sessions and holing putts. While the players we marvel at on a weekly basis may seem like machines on the course, they are merely human beings off it. In the end, their ability to conquer those inherent fallibilities—or in Rozo’s case, embrace them—is what makes all the difference.