Business Day

Dunlap out of Farmers

• History maker takes time out to ponder his future

- Agency Staff

Nick Dunlap has withdrawn from this week’s Farmers Insurance Open to return home and ponder his future. The announceme­nt came less than 24 hours after the 20-year-old became the first amateur to win a PGA Tour event since Phil Mickelson in 1991.

Dunlap rose 4,061 spots to No 68 in the official world golf ranking, the biggest jump yet.

“After a life-changing last 24 hours, I’ve decided to withdraw from the Farmers Insurance Open,” Dunlap said in an announceme­nt by the PGA Tour. “I plan to return home to Alabama to be with family, friends and teammates. Thank you to Farmers Insurance and American Express for giving me these opportunit­ies.”

Dunlap beat SA’s Christiaan Bezuidenho­ut by a shot on Sunday to claim The American Express in La Quinta, California. He joined Mickelson (1991 Northern Telecom Open) and Scott Verplank (1985 Western Open) as only the third amateur to win on tour since 1957.

As an amateur, Dunlap was ineligible to claim the $1.512m (R28.8m) winner’s cheque. He is now eligible for PGA Tour membership and to enter all seven of the PGA Tour’s remaining signature events in 2024.

However, the Alabama sophomore would need to turn pro to claim prize money at those events.

The prospect of going from a sponsor invite at the Amex to profession­al golfer in a matter of weeks was not something Dunlap was willing to tackle immediatel­y after Sunday’s round.

“If you would have said, ‘Hey, in five days you’re going to have a PGA Tour card or an opportunit­y [to be exempt] for two years,’ I would have looked at you sideways,” he said.

“It’s a conversati­on I need to have with a lot of people before I make that decision.”

Dunlap is going back to Alabama to soak in his historic win and have those conversati­ons. Could that include a huge offer from LIV Golf?

Jon Rahm, the 2023 winner of the Amex who signed with LIV in December, is still looking to fill out his new team. Another headline-stealing signing such as Dunlap would be the latest public relations coup by the Saudi-backed league.

“Such an impressive performanc­e by Nick Dunlap. Congratula­tions on an incredible win. This is just the beginning,” Mickelson posted on X on Sunday.

Dunlap is the secondyoun­gest PGA Tour winner in 90 years, behind Jordan Spieth’s win at the 2013 John Deere Classic as a 19-year-old. He was also the first amateur to win the US Junior and the US Amateur since Tiger Woods.

“I have had a little experience leading golf tournament­s, but nothing to this extent,” Dunlap said after draining a six-foot putt to win on Sunday.

“The PGA Tour’s extremely different. So that whole process was different for me, and whether it had turned out the way I was looking or not, I was just going to try to learn from it. “

 ?? ?? Conversati­ons: Amateur golfer Nick Dunlap. /Ray Acevedo-USA TODAY Sports
Conversati­ons: Amateur golfer Nick Dunlap. /Ray Acevedo-USA TODAY Sports

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