The New Zealand Herald

Lewis gets to PGA Tour when he least expects:

- Doug Ferguson comment

Tom Lewis, of England, says it was always his dream to play on the PGA Tour. He just didn’t see it happening like this.

Lewis was in a Miami coffee shop yesterday as he tried to figure out his next move. His coach, David Armitage, is at La Gorce Country Club in Miami Beach. He had a phone call scheduled with his London-based agent at IMG to determine how much time to spend in Europe and in America over the next few months.

“It’s a nice problem to have,” Lewis said.

This was one day after Lewis closed with a 7-under 65 to cap off a five-shot victory in the Korn Ferry Tour Championsh­ip at Victoria National.

It was his first trip to Indiana. It was his first time competing on the Korn Ferry Tour. And it was enough for Lewis to shoot up to No 2 in the threetourn­ament series to earn a PGA Tour card for a new season that starts in nine days.

There were several milestones on the way to PGA Tour membership, and forgive Lewis if he didn’t recognise the most recent, and perhaps the most important.

Six weeks ago at Royal Portrush, he closed with seven straight pars in severe wind and rain for a 1-under 70 in the final round of the British Open. He moved up 18 spots into a tie for 11th, his best finish in a major.

Lewis only recalls initial disappoint­ment.

The difference of one shot cost him a top-10 finish and an exemption into the British Open next year at Royal St George’s, a links course that holds special meaning to him. It was in 2011 when Lewis, a 20-year-old amateur, opened with a 65 while playing alongside his namesake, Tom Watson, to share the 18-hole lead. It remains the lowest opening round by an amateur in the British Open.

“I was watching myself go from 29th to 11th,” he said. “I finished 11th, a great result, but a bit of a shame as that would have been nice to go through to next year.”

Only a few weeks later did he learn of another opportunit­y.

That tie for 11th carried just enough FedEx Cup points for Lewis to finish the equivalent of No 196 in the standings. Players from Nos 126 to 200 are eligible for the Korn Ferry Tour Finals, a series of three events that awards PGA Tour cards to the top 25.

“I never knew what that would bring,” Lewis said. “And then my management called me a few weeks ago.”

One of his goals for the year was to finish among the top 30 in the Race to Dubai, so the European Tour was his priority. Lewis did not think it was wise to give up as many as three weeks in Europe. But as he was finishing the Czech Masters two weeks ago, he asked if there was a mathematic­al chance at a PGA Tour card if he were to play the last Korn Ferry event.

“They said, ‘Yes,’ and so I said, ‘okay, let’s go’,” Lewis said. “I wasn’t going to play a third straight week in Switzerlan­d, anyway.”

One great week in Northern Ireland gave him an opportunit­y that wasn’t even on his mind.

A better week in Indiana gave him a PGA Tour.

The process took longer than six weeks, of course.

Lewis thinks back to the start of 2018, when he spent three months with Armitage in Miami Beach.

He had lost his European Tour card the year before and effectivel­y had lost his way. The summer after he was

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