Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Hoffmann says he’s playing with muscular dystrophy

-

NEW YORK » PGA Tour player Morgan Hoffmann says he has been diagnosed with muscular dystrophy and that his right pectoral muscle is nearly gone.

In a story Hoffmann wrote for The Players’ Tribune website, he says he started to notice his right pectoral deteriorat­ing about five years ago. He saw more than 25 doctors as his weakness progressed and his swing speed decreased.

He says he was diagnosed 2016.

“Even though the type of muscular dystrophy that I have doesn’t pose an immediate threat to my life, there is a good chance that it will shorten it,” Hoffman wrote. “I don’t know when that will happen, because there’s no way to gauge the speed at which the disease will spread. But please know this: This disease won’t keep me from achieving my dream in November of winning on the PGA Tour — and it shouldn’t keep anyone else from chasing their dreams either.”

Hoffmann kept his PGA Tour card and made it through two rounds of the FedEx Cup playoffs last season, finishing at No. 81 in the FedEx Cup. He has yet to win in his five years on the PGA Tour, though he was a runner-up behind former Oklahoma State teammate Rickie Fowler in the Honda Classic last season.

Hoffmann grew up in New Jersey and played at Oklahoma State with Fowler, Kevin Tway and Peter Uihlein, who all are on the PGA Tour.

He said the characteri­stics of his type of muscular dystrophy — facioscapu­lohumeral — are atrophy of the chest, back, neck, arms and sometimes the legs.

“Each case is different, and some muscles degenerate more quickly than others,” Hoffmann wrote. “As of now, the disease has progressed slowly ...”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States