Brian Harman, Harris English recall the stress of playing PGA TOUR Q-School with cards on the line
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Brian Harman, Harris English recall the stress of playing PGA TOUR Q-School with cards on the line
The source of anxiety before a final round stems from the enormity of the impending accomplishment and the singular definition of success. While winning is a life-changing experience, only one trophy is awarded.
PGA TOUR Q-School presented by Korn Ferry differs in that there were 25 PGA TOUR cards available when Harris English competed in 2011. More than two dozen men would go home happy from PGA West in La Quinta, California, that year. However, the increase in the number of prizes did nothing to diminish the stress, a testament to the height of the stakes.
English, who had recently graduated from the University of Georgia, was in the final group for the final round of that Q-School, much closer to the lead than to the cut line. He had already secured Korn Ferry Tour status for the following season by winning on that circuit earlier in the year, providing a safety net. Nevertheless, the anxiety was overwhelming.
“I couldn’t even swallow my breakfast because I was so nervous,” English recently told PGATOUR.COM. “I just needed to shoot 80 and I was in.
“I guess it was me being young and right out of college but I didn’t quite understand the magnitude of playing a … tournament for what the next year of your life looks like.”
PGA TOUR Q-School presented by Korn Ferry can launch a player directly from college, the mini-tours or the pro shop to the PGA TOUR if they play well at the right time. On the other hand, a sore back, poor night’s sleep or ill-timed triple bogey could keep a player off the TOUR, forcing them to wait another year for the opportunity to earn their card.
Fortunately, English only needed to play PGA TOUR Q-School presented by Korn Ferry once. He has gone on to a successful TOUR career highlighted by four PGA TOUR victories and an appearance at the 2021 Ryder Cup.
After being gone for more than a decade, PGA TOUR cards are once again on offer at PGA TOUR Q-School presented by Korn Ferry. The top five and ties at the end of the week will earn PGA TOUR status for the 2024 season.
The pathway to the PGA TOUR was changed this year, with the Korn Ferry Tour offering 30 PGA TOUR cards and at least another five being awarded at PGA TOUR Q-School presented by Korn Ferry. A decade without TOUR cards at PGA TOUR Q-School presented by Korn Ferry is why English is part of a rare breed. Only a handful of today’s top players endured Q-School when its stakes were highest and it had a reputation as arguably the most stressful week in the game.
Most of the game’s current stars cut their teeth on the Korn Ferry Tour. The likes of Scottie Scheffler, Justin Thomas, Max Homa, Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele spent a season on that circuit en route to the TOUR. Viktor Hovland aced his first crack at the Korn Ferry Tour Finals.
Others, such as Rory McIlroy, Jordan Spieth, Collin Morikawa and Tom Kim, earned their TOUR card by making the most of sponsor exemptions.
Brian Harman, Rickie Fowler and Si Woo Kim are the only other top-50 players in the world who earned their PGA TOUR cards from PGA TOUR Q-School presented by Korn Ferry.
Harman won his first major this year, made his Ryder Cup debut and enters 2024 as one of the highest-ranked players in the game. But even among that elite company, he stands out.
Harman called Q-School “a nightmare” but also said “there’s something really vulnerable and beautiful about” how much lives can change in that one week. Unlike English, who succeeded in his lone Q-School attempt, however, Harman has had the full spectrum of Q-School experiences.
Harman’s Q-School experiences were especially jarring considering the resume he had compiled before he even turned pro. He failed to advance out of Q-School’s First Stage in his first two attempts before earning his PGA TOUR card at the 2011 Q-School. He teared up as he thought about calling his mom, his “biggest supporter,” after tapping in and securing his PGA TOUR card.
